Chatham Security Corp. v. Williston

22 A.D.2d 260, 254 N.Y.S.2d 436, 1964 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2556
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 A.D.2d 260 (Chatham Security Corp. v. Williston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chatham Security Corp. v. Williston, 22 A.D.2d 260, 254 N.Y.S.2d 436, 1964 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2556 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinions

Breitel, J. P.

Plaintiff, a financing factor, appeals from a judgment in favor of defendant, a stockbroker, after a non-jury trial. Plaintiff sues on a check made payable to a bank, Meadow Brook National Bank, on which the broker, drawer of the check, had stopped payment. The check was given in payment of the adjusted proceeds from the sale of stock for the account of its customer, Arlee Associates, Inc. The issue is whether the broker, eoncededly having a right- of setoff against its defaulting customer, could assert that setoff against plaintiff which, unknoivn to the broker and unmentioned in the transactions in suit, had a security lien in the shares of stock for which the broker had given its check.

The judgment should be affirmed on the ground that defendant was entitled to stop payment on its check, having learned that its customer, Arlee Associates, Inc., in another transaction, had obtained bonds from it by making fraudulent payment with bad. checks drawn on nonexistent bank accounts. The right of setoff does not depend upon principles of estoppel or detrimental reliance but vests as between contracting parties in the absence of notice of any interest in third parties in the subject matter of the transaction.

The factor, Chatham, had secret arrangements with Arlee for the financing of stock purchases and sales made ostensibly by Arlee on open, cash account through stockbrokers. The financing would be for short terms, a matter of days in which [262]*262Stock Exchange rules require the clearing of purchases and sales. The liquidation of these short-term purchases or sales would be effected by Arlee making offsetting sales or purchases, similarly financed by factors: Chatham or another. The profit for Arlee was derived from the small fluctuations in the market price, and the compensation to the factor was a charge on a basis of a fixed fractional percentage of the gross price of the stock.

Chatham, in turn, financed the operations by placing the securities purchased with the Meadow Brook bank against advances by the bank, subject to its instructions as to delivery against cash or negotiable instruments. It disclosed nothing to the bank, so far as is revealed by the record, of its relations with Arlee or the purpose of the financing. The account transactions in evidence reveal the name of Arlee but not the nature of the relationship. The bank, of course, bore no meaningful risk so long as its account with Chatham was covered by deposited securities or it could look to Chatham for any failure with negotiable paper taken in exchange for deposited securities.

Arlee, in its dealings with defendant broker, acted simply like any other customer on cash account. It disclosed nothing to the broker of its secret financing arrangements with Chatham, nor, so far as this record is concerned, did it advise the broker of the kind of short-term “ clearance ” transaction which.was its practice. Offsetting transactions were handled through other brokers.

In the documents covering the relations between Chatham and Arlee it was provided that Chatham would ‘ ‘ receive and deliver certain stocks for clearance on behalf of [Arlee] through such brokerage house .as [Arlee] may from time to time indicate.” Chatham’s charge was provided to be one half (or three eighths) of 1% of the gross amount on the buy ” side of the clearance transaction. An additional fact of significance is Chatham’s written arrangement with its bank, Meadow Brook, that its name not be used with reference to advices or instructions on its accounts with the bank but that they be designated by code symbols.

The preceding facts provide the framework for the transaction out of which this action arose and detail the pains taken to conceal that Chatham was a factor for Arlee, that it acted as an agent for Arlee, that it had a security lien in securities handled and to that extent was a principal, that Arlee was financing purchases of stock with a factor which had a security lien in the stocks purchased, that the Meadow Brook bank was an agent for Chatham, of only a subagent for [263]*263Arlee, and that bank or factor credit was being used to finance stock market transactions to the full amount of sales and purchases (i.e., without margin).

On May 19, 1961 Arlee instructed defendant broker to sell securities (stocks). The aggregate sale ’price was $54,121.74. On May 26, 1961 the Meadow Brook bank, pursuant to instructions from Chatham, tendered the securities to the broker with a request for payment on account of Arlee by check payable to the Meadow Brook bank. Defendant broker issued its check drawn on its own bank payable to Meadow Brook, receiving the securities it had already sold for Arlee. The check was in the amount of $53,198.75, the net adjusted proceeds of the stock sale. On May 27 and May 28 defendant broker learned that Arlee had given it, also on May 26, 1961, four checks on nonexistent bank accounts in exchange for $200,000 worth of bonds. The broker stopped payment on its check.

Meadow Brook charged back the broker’s check on which payment had been stopped and assigned it, without recourse, to Chatham, on whose behalf it had acted. Chatham then sued defendant broker claiming that the check had been delivered for a valuable consideration and that as a holder of a security lien in the securities given for the check it was not subject to any setoff defendant broker might have against Arlee.

The entire court is in agreement that Chatham acted as agent for Arlee, albeit with an undisclosed security interest in the subject matter of the transaction. The entire court is also in agreement that Meadow Brook’s role was that of agent for Chatham and only as subagent for Arlee. There is also complete agreement that between Arlee and defendant broker there would be a right of setoff. There was, incidentally, a security lien in the securities in favor of Meadow Brook, also undisclosed to defendant broker. That lien plays no significant role in the case because Meadow Brook was made whole by Chatham, and, in any event, the undisclosed liens of Chatham and Meadow Brook stand or fall on the same footing.

The issue, then, resolves itself into the simple question whether one who deals with a purported agent for a disclosed principal may lose a right of setoff against the disclosed principal because of an intervening undisclosed security lien or interest in the purported agent with respect to which the agent is therefore pro tanto also an undisclosed principal.

Almost the precise question, involving identical principles of law and policy, was determined in the leading case of Foreign Trade Banking Corp. v. Gerseta Corp. (237 N. Y. 265). In the Gerseta case, plaintiff bank had financed an import of silk [264]*264by taking a trust receipt from the importer who undertook to sell the goods for the bank as principal and remit the proceeds to it. As here, the trust receipt arrangement was an uncommunicated private one between the bank and the importer. The importer made direct delivery of the goods to its purchaser, defendant G-erseta. The same day the bank enclosed in a letter to the purchaser trade drafts and invoices. The purchaser rejected the trade drafts and kept the goods, claiming an offset against the importer on the basis of antecedent indebtedness in excess of the price of the goods. The court held that the purchaser was not liable to the bank for the purchase price and that its right to an offset was unqualified.

In so holding, the court, citing Hogan v.

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Bluebook (online)
22 A.D.2d 260, 254 N.Y.S.2d 436, 1964 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chatham-security-corp-v-williston-nyappdiv-1964.