Childs, Jeffries & Co. v. Bright

186 N.E. 571, 283 Mass. 283, 1933 Mass. LEXIS 1006
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 26, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 186 N.E. 571 (Childs, Jeffries & Co. v. Bright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Childs, Jeffries & Co. v. Bright, 186 N.E. 571, 283 Mass. 283, 1933 Mass. LEXIS 1006 (Mass. 1933).

Opinion

Pierce, J.

This is an action of contract commenced by writ dated October 6, 1930. The action is brought for the benefit of the Massachusetts Bonding and Insurance Company to recover the proceeds of a check for $24,000 of the plaintiff corporation alleged to have been improperly used by one of its officers for the purpose of paying an individual indebtedness to the defendants. It is alleged that the defendants were not bona fide purchasers of the check. The declaration alleges in count 2 “that the defendants owe it the sum of $24,000 and interest for money had and received by defendants to the use of the plaintiff.” In their answer the defendants “admit that they received from the plaintiff a check for $24,000, but they deny each and every other allegation in the plaintiff’s writ and declaration contained.” They further answer “that they delivered to the plaintiff certain securities, the purchase price and then market value of which was $24,000; that the plaintiff thereafter either retained or sold said securities for its own account, wherefore the plaintiff cannot recover herein.” No claim of set-off or recoupment is made.

The case was referred to an auditor who filed his report on February 12, 1932, “and found for the plaintiff in the sum of $12,800, together with interest thereon from March 11, 1930.” Thereafter, the case was tried before a judge of the Superior Court, sitting without a jury, on the auditor’s [286]*286report and additional evidence. The defendants excepted to the exclusion of certain evidence offered by them and the plaintiff excepted to the admission of certain evidence offered by the defendants. On June 15, 1932, the trial judge made a “Finding” which described the procedure that followed upon the filing of the auditor’s report on February 12, 1932, as follows: “The plaintiff offered the auditor’s report, the check of the plaintiff for $24,000 delivered to the defendants on October 25, 1929, and the stub from the plaintiff’s check book describing said check. The defendants offered the testimony of the plaintiff’s accountant in the year 1929 and of C. Lawrence Macurda, its treasurer during and prior to the transaction in issue; and the plaintiff’s ledger card of the ‘C. L. M. Special’ account more particularly described in the auditor’s report.” The plaintiff submitted seasonably a “Motion to exclude findings of the auditor appearing in the auditor’s report alleged to be based upon inadmissible evidence and erroneous opinions of law.” The trial judge states: “I allow said motion with respect to findings of fact alleged therein to be based on inadmissible evidence, and deny it with respect to the findings therein alleged to be based on erroneous opinions of law.” He denied a motion of the defendants, seasonably filed, to strike out portions of the auditor’s report. The plaintiff excepted to the judge’s denial of certain of its requests for rulings, and to the denial of its motion to strike out certain of the auditor’s findings alleged to be based on erroneous opinions of law. The defendants excepted to the allowance of the plaintiff’s motion as allowed; to the denial of their motion to strike out portions of the auditor’s report; to certain findings of fact and rulings of law; to the giving of certain of the plaintiff’s requests for rulings; and to the denial of certain of the defendants’ requests for rulings.

The trial judge upon all the evidence, including the auditor’s report as modified by the foregoing rulings, and the inferences of fact reasonably to be drawn therefrom, finds the basic and subsidiary facts found by the auditor to be true. The facts found by the auditor are in substance as [287]*287follows: The plaintiff is a corporation organized in 1925 for the purpose of dealing in securities. The incorporators were Paul Dudley Childs, J. Amory Jeffries and C. Lawrence Macurda. They subscribed for all the stock and became the first board of directors. In 1929, Childs was president, Jeffries, vice-president, and Macurda, treasurer, and all three were directors. At all times until October 25, 1929, the president, vice-president and the treasurer had authority “for and in behalf of the corporation to sign notes, drafts, bills, or to draw checks upon any and all bank accounts of said corporation or to make indorsements on the paper of the corporation or its clients.” In 1928 and 1929, Macurda had three margin trading accounts with the plaintiff, one in the name of his wife, one in the name of his son, and one in his own name; these accounts were similar to the accounts of any other customer of the plaintiff. In October, 1929, Macurda was considerably indebted to the plaintiff on these accounts.

Various other officers, agents and employees of the plaintiff had trading accounts with said corporation. The accounts of the officers, agents and employees were kept on cards in the same way that accounts of outside customers were kept and were available for inspection by the officers of the corporation. All the officers knew that all the other officers had such trading accounts. Each of the officers was accustomed to give orders for the purchase and sale by the plaintiff of securities for his individual account and to sign the plaintiff’s corporate checks for such purchases. There was no rule or regulation of the plaintiff corporation forbidding its officers or employees from buying or selling any security for his own account through the plaintiff corporation until after the transaction in suit. (This paragraph is a summary of matter which was struck out of the auditor’s report by the judge upon motion of the plaintiff, and is a matter subject to the defendants’ exceptions.)

About the first of October, 1929, Macurda was personally indebted to the defendants because of operations conducted with them through the medium of his trading account in their office, in approximately $80,000. For this indebted[288]*288ness the defendants held, among other securities, fifteen hundred shares of Chain & General Equities common stock. Prior to October 4, 1929, one Jackson V. R. Bright, son of the defendant Bright, employed by the defendants as a “customer’s man,” on behalf of the defendants, made demands on Macurda to “lighten his account” with the defendants; as a result of these demands Macurda, on October 4, 1929, wrote the defendants as follows: “Please deliver today to Messrs. Childs, Jeffries & Company, the following stocks, namely: 100 shares Kroger Grocery 100 shares Safeway Stores 100 shares McLellan Stores and receive from them a check for $31,340.50, which please credit to my account.” In consequence of the letter of October 4, 1929, the defendants on October 10, 1929, delivered to one of the employees in the “cage” at the plaintiff’s office the securities mentioned in said letter, receiving a check of Childs, Jeffries & Co., Incorporated, signed by C. Lawrence Macurda as treasurer, in the sum of $31,340.50. This check was applied by the defendants to Macurda’s personal indebtedness to them. On instructions from Macurda the amount of this check was charged to his personal trading account with the plaintiff and the stock was entered on this account as collateral. On October 24, 1929, Macurda wrote the defendants as follows: “Please deliver to Messrs.

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Bluebook (online)
186 N.E. 571, 283 Mass. 283, 1933 Mass. LEXIS 1006, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/childs-jeffries-co-v-bright-mass-1933.