Cantu v. Fenner, Beane Ungerleider

160 So. 399, 181 La. 743, 1935 La. LEXIS 1529
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 4, 1935
DocketNo. 33098.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 160 So. 399 (Cantu v. Fenner, Beane Ungerleider) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cantu v. Fenner, Beane Ungerleider, 160 So. 399, 181 La. 743, 1935 La. LEXIS 1529 (La. 1935).

Opinion

HIGGINS, Justice.

This is a suit by a customer against his stockbrokers, to recover damages said to have been sustained as a result of the alleged illegal and unauthorized sale of plaintiff’s stocks purchased on margin through defendants. The petition alleges that the defendants were employed by the plaintiff under a written contract dated August 22, 1932, as his brokers and agents, to buy and sell stocks for his account on a 30 per cent, margin, the balance of the purchase price being loaned by the defendants to petitioner at the prevailing interest rate and the stock being pledged as collateral; that on March 22, 1933, April 13, 1933, May 2, 1933, and May 8, 1933, due to declines in the stock market, defendants telegraphed or telephoned plaintiff that his account was below margin and the respective amounts that it would take to re *746 store the account to proper condition; that in each and every instance plaintiff immediately complied with the request; that on July 19, 20, and 21, 1933, due to sharp declines in the market values of the stocks, plaintiff’s account was below margin to the extent of $31,082.54; that, contrary to their previous conduct in notifying plaintiff of tbe necessity of making a deposit to bring his account up to margin, defendants negligently failed to notify plaintiff, and on the evening of July 21 and on the morning of July 22, 1933, they sold out his entire holdings at the values listed on the New Orleans and New York Stock Exchanges; that defendants then notified plaintiff on July 23d that his account had been liquidated .at a deficit of $17,500, which amount they requested him to remit; that plaintiff immediately protested against the illegal actions of the defendants in selling his entire list of stocks without notice or without request being made upon him to bring his account up to margin, and demanded that his stocks be repurchased and his account reinstated, which defendants refused to do.

The written contract is annexed to the petition, and the relevant part reads as follows:

“ * * * I consent that when, in the exercise of your judgment it may be necessary for your protection to sell or buy any securities and/or contracts for commodities which you may be carrying or have borrowed for me * * *, such sale or purchase may be made on the New York Stock Exchange or such other Exchange or place where such business is then usually transacted, or at public auction or private sale without advertising the same and without prior notice to me and/or without prior demand or call of any kind upon me, it being understood that a prior demand or call or prior notice of the time and place of such sale or purchase shall not be considered a waiver of your right to sell or buy said securities as hereinbefore provided; * * *
“Having been informed that no employee of your firm has any authority to waive, modify or alter in any respect, any of the terms of this agreement,, no such waiver, modification or alteration of the terms of this agreement shall be binding upon you unless committed to writing and signed by one of the members of your firm.”

Defendants filed an exception of no right or cause of action on the ground that the contract expressly authorized the sale of the stocks without notice to the plaintiff, and further expressly stipulated that the giving of prior notice by the defendants to the plaintiff was not to be construed as a waiver of defendants right to sell the stocks without notice to the plaintiff.

There was judgment sustaining the exceptions and dismissing the plaintiff’s suit, and he has appealed.

The law is clear and the authorities are uniform to the effect that, although the broker in the written contract with his customer has reserved the right to sell, without notice, the stock carried by him on margin for his customer, the broker is estopped from setting up the right to Sell the customer’s stocks under the contract, as a defense to a suit by the customer against the broker for loss or damage claimed to have resulted from the sale of the stocks without prior notice *748 to the customer and contrary to the course of dealings between the parties, when the acts, declarations, and conduct on the part of the broker have been such as to lead the customer, as a reasonable person, to believe that the broker would not exercise his right to sell without giving reasonable notice of his intention to do so. Smith v. Craig, 211 N. Y. 456, 105 N. E. 798, Ann. Cas. 1915B, 937; Bache v. Johnson, 255 Mich. 328, 238 N. W. 250, 76 A. L. R. 1517 and cases cited; Woodward v. Schiff (1932) 236 App. Div. 598, 260 N. Y. S. 274, affirmed (1933) 261 N. Y. 670, 185 N. E. 786; Kuhn v. Simons (1932) 143 Misc. 21, 255 N. Y. S. 633; Fisher v. Dinneen (1932) 161 Md. 605, 158 A. 9; Thomas v. Updike Grain Co. (1932) 60 S. D. 419, 244 N. W. 647; Miller & Co. v. Lyons (1912) 113 Va. 275, 74 S. E. 194; Rosenthal v. Brown (1928) 247 N. Y. 479, 160 N. E. 921; Toplitz v. Bauer (1900) 161 N. Y. 325, 333, 55 N. E. 1059; Disanza v. Merrill (1930) 137 Misc. 259, 241 N. Y. S. 739; Kellerman v. Libaire (1930) 137 Misc. 363, 242 N. Y. S. 182.

This same theory of estoppel has been invoked against insurance companies which, on a number of occasions, have accepted premiums beyond the date on which they were due, and subsequently claimed that the policy was lapsed or forfeited, because on one occasion the insured failed to pay the premium within the time specified in the policy. Gunther v. Mutual Aid Ass’n, 40 La. Ann. 766, 5 So. 65, 2 L. R. A. 118, 8 Am. St. Rep. 554; Bush v. Liberty Ind. L. I. Co. (1930) 15 La. App. 269, 130 So. 839.

The identical doctrine was applied against a lessor who repeatedly accepted delinquent rent without protest and then sought to cancel and annul the lease on the ground that the tenant failed to pay the rent within the time specified in the lease. This court held that the landlord was estopped by his contrary course of conduct from relying on the strict letter of his contract. Standard Brewing Co. v. Anderson, 121 La. 935, 46 So. 926, 15 Ann. Cas. 251; Bonnabel v. Metairie Cypress Co., 129 La. 928, 57 So. 271; Shnaider v. Graffagnini, 154 La. 363, 97 So. 491; Roth v. Fabian, 7 Orl. App. 422; Bacas v. Mandot, 3 Orl. App. 324.

In Meyer on Stock Brokers and Stock Exchanges, § 108, p. 436, we find the following language:

“It is customary for brokers on opening a marginal account to require the customer to sign a written agreement defining the conditions on which the account will be carried. This agreement ordinarily contains, among others, the following important provisions: (1) that all transactions are to be subject to the rules, regulations, customs and usages of the exchange or mai’ket whex'e the transaction is effected; (2) that the broker may repledge the eustomex*’s securities in the bi'oker’s genei-al loans or otherwise, either for the amount due by the customer or for a,greater amount, or may lend the customer’s securities to other brokers or deliver them on sales for other customers; (3) that the broker may, whenever he considers it necessary for his own protection, sell the customex-’s securities or close out the customer’s short commitments or commodity contracts without demand for additional margin or notice of sale.
“These provisions, as we have demonstrated in other parts of this book, are of the ut

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Bluebook (online)
160 So. 399, 181 La. 743, 1935 La. LEXIS 1529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cantu-v-fenner-beane-ungerleider-la-1935.