Cisler v. Ray

2 P.2d 987, 213 Cal. 620, 79 A.L.R. 584, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 570
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 31, 1931
DocketDocket No. S.F. 14122.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2 P.2d 987 (Cisler v. Ray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cisler v. Ray, 2 P.2d 987, 213 Cal. 620, 79 A.L.R. 584, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 570 (Cal. 1931).

Opinions

THE COURT.

After a further consideration of the merits of this appeal upon rehearing, we have concluded that the opinion written by Mr. Justice Shenk and filed herein on *622 April 30, 1931, expresses the present opinion of this court in determining the issues presented on the appeal. Said opinion is therefore adopted as the opinion and decision of this court, and is as follows:

“This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment for the plaintiff in an action to recover the sum of $8,590, which represents the difference between the price at which 100 shares of Bank of Italy stock were sold and the price at which 100 shares of the same stock were bought pursuant to orders placed by the defendant with and executed by the plaintiff’s assignors on June 12, 1928, plus commissions and interest.
“The plaintiff’s assignors are Duisenberg-Wichman & Company, stock and bond brokers, who owned at the times herein involved a seat on the San Francisco Stock Exchange and maintained offices in Oakland and San Francisco. The defendant, according to his own testimony, spent his time and effort in investing his own funds, principally in buying and selling stocks as a business for the purpose of making a profit. He had maintained a margin account with Duisenberg-Wichman & Company since April 29, 1927, and had employed them to execute his orders for the purchase and sale of stocks on the San Francisco Stock Exchange. At the commencement of his relations with that company the defendant had executed and delivered to it an agreement which, among other things, provided: ‘All transactions are subject to the rules, regulations and customs of the exchange or market (and its clearing house, if any) where executed. In all transactions wherein you act as my agent, I agree to wholly indemnify and save you free and harmless from any loss, damage or liability arising out of such transaction, howsoever same may occur. This agreement shall continue until revoked by me in writing. . . . ’ Prior to June 12, 1928, the defendant had closed the margin account, but early on the morning of that day he entered the Oakland office of Duisenberg-Wichman & Company for the purpose of resuming trading.
“At this point it should be noted that about two years previously the ‘post system’ had replaced what was known as the ‘call system’ on the San Francisco Stock Exchange. By the system in operation on June 12, 1928, the trading room of the exchange was divided into posts to each of which *623 was assigned the trading in one stock or more, each of which was in charge of a specialist who was selected from the membership of the exchange. After the commencement of this system brokers placed the customer’s order with the specialist to whom was assigned the trading in the stock desired to be bought or sold. The method of operation under the post system differs generally from the call system in that under the latter system only one security was called and traded in at a time. Under the call system, therefore, a broker was able personally to execute the orders of his customer. Under the post system, however, the order is executed through the specialist unless the broker also has an order on the other side of the transaction, which, under the rules of the exchange, he may ‘cross’ or ‘accommodate’ at the market price, if the specialist makes no objection. One of the most important functions of a specialist under this system of trading is the exercise of the privilege given to him by the rules of the exchange to make the first bid or offer at the opening of trading on each market day. The exercise of this function entails the necessity of computing an opening price. The process by which the specialist computes the opening price consists in offsetting or crossing the buy and sell orders in his hands, including so-called market orders which are orders to buy or sell at the market price, and by mathematical deductions arriving at a figure which will accommodate a majority of such orders. This process is termed ‘making up a book’.
“On June 11, 1928, trading in Bank of Italy stock had assumed such proportions that the spread between the high and low prices for a share of that stock on that day amounted to as much as $155.. Mr. Holt, who was the specialist in Bank of Italy stock on the San Francisco Stock Exchange at that time, testified that, by reason of the closing price of about $220 per share on the preceding day, on the morning of June 12, 1928, there was such a preponderance of sell orders in his hands that had he opened trading at the customary hour of 9:30 the opening price for a share of the stock would have been about $125. Accordingly, pursuant to a rule of the exchange, he announced sellers in that stock and delayed the opening until sufficient buy orders had been received by him to justify a higher market price. On that morning the defendant had been in *624 the Oakland offices of Duisenberg-Wichman & Company since about six o’clock watching the reports of proceedings on the New York Stock Exchange. At 9:30 o’clock the San Francisco Stock Exchange ticker recorded sellers in Bank of Italy stock. At 9:36 o’clock Mr. Ray in Oakland gave an order to sell 100 shares of Bank of Italy stock at the market. This order was received by Mr. Isenberg, the representative of Duisenberg-Wichman & Company, on the floor of the exchange at 9:37. At 9:55 the specialist opened trading in Bank of Italy stock at $150.25. There being no objection on the part of the specialist, Mr. Isenberg crossed the defendant’s order to sell 100 shares of Bank of Italy stock with a buy order for 100 shares at the market of the same stock, which at 9:31 he had received from a Mr. Adams, at the opening price. At 9:56 Mr. Ray in Oakland placed an order to buy 100 shares of Bank of Italy stock at the market. This order was received at the San Francisco office of Duisenberg-Wichman & Company at 9:57, and by Mr. Isenberg on the floor of the exchange at 9:58, and was immediately placed with the specialist. Between 9:56 and 10:00 o’clock, or approximately at 9:58, there being an avalanche of buying orders in Bank of Italy stock, and after consulting with members of the floor trading committee, the specialist in Bank of Italy declared a suspension in trading to enable him to make up a new book and announce another or second opening price in that stock. At 10:00 o ’clock Mr. Ray in Oakland was in the act of giving another order to buy when news was received that trading was suspended. Mr. Ray thereupon withdrew the contemplated additional buy order and at 10:12 ordered his brokers to cancel his previous sell and buy orders. At 10:13 the cancellation orders were received by Mr. Isenberg’s clerk who immediately handed them to the specialist who refused to accept them on the ground that it was ‘too late to cancel’. Trading was reopened at 10:31 and at that time the execution of Mr. Ray’s order to buy 100 shares of Bank of Italy stock was announced at the new opening price of $230. Information that both the sell and buy orders had been executed, and the terms thereof, was received by Mr. Ray at the Oakland office at 11:15, whereupon he immediately refused to confirm either of said orders. Subsequently this action was commenced to recover the loss sustained by the brokers by reason of the *625 refusal of Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
2 P.2d 987, 213 Cal. 620, 79 A.L.R. 584, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cisler-v-ray-cal-1931.