Cassatt v. First Nat. Bank, West New York

168 A. 585, 111 N.J.L. 536, 89 A.L.R. 1302, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 394
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedOctober 16, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 168 A. 585 (Cassatt v. First Nat. Bank, West New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cassatt v. First Nat. Bank, West New York, 168 A. 585, 111 N.J.L. 536, 89 A.L.R. 1302, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 394 (N.J. 1933).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Campbell, Chancellor.

This is an appeal from a judgment of nonsuit in an action where the plaintiffs below, stock brokers, sought to recover from the defendant, a national bank, the purchase price and their commissions, in a transaction involving the purchase, by the plaintiffs, of one hundred shares of the common stock of the Baldwin Locomotive Works, *537 when, as and if issued, and two hundred shares of the common stock of the Crocker-Wheeler Company, when, as and if issued.

The complaint declares three distinct causes of action under six counts:

1. That the bank ordered the purchase of said stock for its own account.

2. That the bank ordered the purchase for an undisclosed principal.

3. That the bank is indebted to plaintiffs for stock sold and delivered and is likewise indebted to them for moneys laid out and expended for the purchase of such stock.

The answer was a general denial with separate defenses of the statute of frauds and that the transaction was ultra vires and therefore void.

The plaintiffs produced as a witness one Seaver, who, at the time of the transactions in question, was the manager of their Newark office.

He, at first, testified as to the Baldwin Locomotive Works stock transaction that he received the order for the purchase from Daniel Daume, the assistant cashier of the defendant, bank, and that such order was to buy the stock for the bank’s account. Later he said that in a subsequent conversation with Daniel Daume he was told by the latter that the Baldwin stock was for him. On cross-examination he testified that he knew that Daniel Daume had a personal account with the plaintiffs, but that when the order to purchase was given he had not directed that such purchase should be made for him and upon his account, although said this witness, “I might have known that the stock was for him at the time of purchase.” “This particular conversation was to buy one hundred shares of Baldwin Locomotive. My question is, ‘into whose name or into whose account shall I put the stock?’ in other words, on the ticket that I write out, I have to put the name of an account. * * * And he said, The Eirst National Bank of West New York,’ * * * I believe I asked him, ‘is it for you?’ and he said, ‘yes.’ ” The witness further *538 said that he did not look to Mr. Daume for payment although he knew that the purchase was being made for him.

It is apparent to us, therefore, giving to this proof full credence, and it was all the proof that there was, that although the original order for this stock purchase was for the account of the bank, it was known to plaintiffs’ office manager before the purchase of the stock was actually made that the order was for Daume, who had a personal trading account with the plaintiffs.

As to the Crocker-Wheeler stock purchase this same witness, upon direct examination, testified that such business was transacted with a Mr. Deyerberg, the cashier of the defendant, bank, that such transaction was by telephone, and although it does not definitely appear exactly what that order was it was one to buy at a price good until canceled; that such order was held for some days and then canceled “and there was no order existing for a number of days;” that at a later date, not fixed, there was a converastion between the witness and Charles Daume, a brother of Daniel Daume, assistant cashier of the bank, and that following this the witness was given instructions by the cashier, Dyerberg, to execute the order to purchase and the witness testified that, at some time, not fixed, Deyerberg had told him that one hundred shares of this stock was for him and the remaining one hundred shares for a customer of the bank, Charles Daume. On cross-examination the witness testified that at the time the original order for purchase was made he did not know that one hundred shares was for Deyerberg but that he understood that some of the stock was for Charles Daume and this he knew at the time of the purchase of the stock and subsequent to such purchase that one hundred shares was for Deyerberg. He further testified that he could not recollect “whether the name on the original order was the First National Bank or Mr. Charles Daume.” Still later he testified that either at the time of receiving the order or at the time of purchase he “knew that Mr. Charles Daume was to get one hundred shares and that Mr. Deyerberg was to get the other one hundred shares.” And then immediately, upon redirect examination *539 he testified that upon receiving the order to purchase he was directed by Mr. Deyerberg “to put the two hundred shares of Crocker-Wheeler stock into the bank’s account.”

Here again it appears to us that giving this proof full credit the situation was that the plaintiffs’ manager knew that the purchase was for Charles Daume and Herman T. Deyerberg, although the latter directed the transaction to be made through the bank’s account.

The nonsuit seems to have been granted upon the ground, generally, that the transaction as portrayed by the proofs, was ultra vires, the respondent, bank.

Appellants set down three grounds for reversal of the judgment, arguing them under three general points.

We will direct our attention to point three, first. Under subdivision “A” of this point appellant urges, that, aside from the question of ultra vires, the proofs were such as to make for a contract binding upon the respondent, bank, in that the order for the Baldwin stock was by Daume, the assistant cashier, approved and ratified, subsequently, by the cashier, by Exhibit P-5, and that the order for the Crocker-Wheeler stock was by the cashier, Deyerberg, who by section 21 of the bank’s by-laws (Exhibit P-6, page 114) had authority to make and execute contracts for the bank.

This seems to be neither denied nor attacked and unless the contracts as established were ultra vires would have presented sufficient proof to have overcome the motion for non-suit.

Under subdivision “B,” dealing directly with the question of ultra vires, counsel for appellants, in his brief, says, “this is the great point in the case.”

1. It is, beyond question, the important and controlling question.

Appellant’s counsel concedes by the following: “We will commence by conceding that it is well established in law that a national bank is without power to buy stock in another corporation either for speculation or investment. National banks are not expressly prohibited from so doing. Merely it is the fact that such power is not conferred upon *540 them. This has been clearly recognized and laid down by the Supreme Court of the United States in many opinions i\i * *

This admission is acquiesced in by the respondent and, in fact, must be, because such is the unquestionable holding of the federal courts.

2. But, urge the appellants, it is not in every ease that it is ultra vires

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168 A. 585, 111 N.J.L. 536, 89 A.L.R. 1302, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cassatt-v-first-nat-bank-west-new-york-nj-1933.