Clark v. Fisher

8 F.2d 588, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3319
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 11, 1925
DocketNo. 326
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 8 F.2d 588 (Clark v. Fisher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Fisher, 8 F.2d 588, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3319 (2d Cir. 1925).

Opinion

MANTON, Circuit Judge.

This action is based upon a claim for the conversion of certain named negotiable securities which the defendants in error purchased through the stock brokerage firm of Chandler Bros. & Co. The plaintiffs in error were also a stock brokerage firm and were the New York correspondents of Chandler Bros. & Co., whose principal office was in Philadelphia. The theory of liability on the part of the plaintiffs in error is that at the time of the alleged conversion of the stock they were acting as manager of Chandler Bros. & Co., and as such manager refused to make delivery of the securities of the defendants in error which have never been held by Chandler Bros. & Co., and which have been pledged by them. It is conceded that for 16 days from May 10 to May 26, 1921, the plaintiffs in error exercised supervision and performed acts in the management of Chandler Bros. & Co., pursuant to a contract entered into for that purpose, but it is denied that they possessed the securities in question in their capacity as managers, and they contend that, by a written agreement with Chandler Bros. & Co., the defendants in error waived the right to have possession of the securities, except in agreed monthly deliveries, and, further, that the plaintiffs in [589]*589error, as correspondent and banker for Chandler Bros. & Co., had a valid líen upon the securities in question for advances made to Chandler Bros. & Co., secured by a pledge of the securities.

Below it was held that the agreement by the defendants in error to accept monthly deliveries of the securities was unenforceable because (1) a guaranty provided for in the agreement had not been furnished; and (2) that although the plaintiffs in error, as correspondent and banker for Chandler Bros. & Co., had at the time of the demand a valid lien for advanees made to Chandler Bros. & Co., and held such securities under this pledge, still it was ruled that the plaintiffs in error were “estopped from now relying upon the actual facts,” because the faet of the pledge was not disclosed to the defendants in error at the times the demands were made. The theory of liability therefore rests upon a claim of estoppel by virtue of which the plaintiffs in error for the period of 16 days referred to supervised and participated in the management of Chandler Bros. & Co., which was then in financial difficulties and had in some way waived their lien or are estopped from asserting such lien. The waiver or estoppel is not pleaded, and the case was presented below upon the theory that the slocks were free from any lien and that consequently the defendants in error were entitled to their immediate delivery and possession. The proof established that negotiable instruments, answering the description of the securities mentioned in the complaint, had prior to May 10th been pledged with the plaintiffs in error by Chandler Bros. & Co. for the fulfillment of the latter’s orders, and, upon this appearing, the court below permitted an amendment to the complaint and liability was then sought to be imposed upon the theory of estoppel.

The defendants in error, father and son, had been buying through Chandler Bros. & Co. stock and securities on a margin account. Their broker executed his orders along with other customers, by transmitting correspondence orders in the firm name to various corresponding bank and brokerage firms in New York City. In addition to the plaintiffs in error, their correspondents included four other houses, the business of which houses the plaintiffs in error took over between December 14 and 18, 1920, paying therefor in cash the debit of Chandler Bros. & Co. to them. As a consequence of these payments, plaintiffs in error received and held as security the securities then held in pledge by those firms. By this transaction, the plaintiffs in error were substituted as pledgee for whatever securities were possessed by the several houses. It appears in the record that prior to the 25th of May, 1921, Chandler Bros. & Co. owed the plaintiffs in error sums of money as security for which they pledged all the securities purchased together with securities deposited with and transferred by Chandler Bros. & Co. from timo to time as margin. An examination of these transactions shows a variation from day to day as orders were executed and deliveries made. The account of the defendants in error with Chandler Bros. & Co. was produced in evidence, and all of the securities involved, excepting 100 shares of Arkansas Natural Gas bought April 15, 1921, had long antedated December, 1920, in lime of purchase. At this time, the defendants in error’s testimony indicated that they had sold most of the stock in December, 1920, to establish income tax losses, rebuying them subsequently, so that nearly all the stock might be said to have been purchased in December, 1920. At this time, defendants in error’s debit balance with Chandler Bros. & Co. was $68,000.

It is admitted by the defendants in error in their testimony that the stocks purchased wore used as broker’s security for other advances made to fill the orders and were subsequently pledged by their brokers to obtain moneys with which to pay for the stock by borrowing on them as collateral. They recognized the right of Chandler Bros. & Co. to pledge the stock purchased on their orders to the extent of their indebtedness for the purchase price of the shares at that time. Up to the end of March, 1921, there had been executed Cor the orders of the defendants in error and Chandler Bros. & Co. were obliged to deliver to them upon payment therefor, the following securities:

35 Ohio Fuel.

1,057.28 Sinclair Consolidated.

200 St. Paul preferred.

600 Rock Island 6 per cent, preferred.

1,000 Middle States Oil.

100 Gilliland Oil.

200 Simms Petroleum.

300 Missouri Pacific preferred.

200 Pan-American Petroleum.

As near as these securities were traced in the evidence, all off these purchases were made through stock exchange firms other than the plaintiffs in error, with the exception of 200 shares of Sinclair Consolidated and 100 shares of Arkansas Natural Gas, which were in the margin account of the plaintiffs in error with Chandler Bros. & Co. [590]*590on May 10, 1921; and were received by the plaintiffs in error from the National Bank of Commerce on April 18, 1921, with other stocks upon the payment of $12,500 for the account of Chandler Bros. & Co. It thus appears that all the securities in controversy, with the possible exception of 200 shares of Sinclair Consolidated, were held by the plaintiffs in error in pledge for the indebtedness of Chandler Bros. & Co. to the plaintiffs in error on March 10, 1921. They were received either directly from Chandler Bros. & Co. or through the accounts of other houses and purchased as referred to.

In March, 1921, the defendants in error paid Chandler Bros. & Co. $35,000, which was borrowed from their bank in Pennsylvania, thus reducing their indebtedness. On April 12th, the defendants in error learned that Chandler Bros. & Co. were in financial difficulties and the next day attended a meeting held to discuss the situation of the firm and its future program. As a result of this meeting, a plan for reorganization was agreed upon; a Delaware corporation was organized, the shares of stock of which were to be distributed among the creditors of Chandler Bros. & Co.

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8 F.2d 588, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-fisher-ca2-1925.