Davis v. Arnold

165 N.E. 885, 267 Mass. 103, 1929 Mass. LEXIS 1217
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 15, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 165 N.E. 885 (Davis v. Arnold) 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
Davis v. Arnold, 165 N.E. 885, 267 Mass. 103, 1929 Mass. LEXIS 1217 (Mass. 1929).

Opinion

Carroll, J.

The plaintiffs are stockbrokers. In 1925 [105]*105their salesman sold some bonds to the defendant; on this transaction there is a balance of $35 due the plaintiffs which is not disputed. In October of 1925, the plaintiffs’ salesman showed the defendant a circular relative to an offering of participating stock of the American Brown Boveri Electric Corporation, hereafter referred to as the corporation, offered at the price of $50 per share “if, as and when authorized and issued.” The defendant agreed to purchase one hundred shares of this stock or such lesser amount as might be allotted to him by the plaintiffs. Under St. 1926, c. 381, the plaintiffs filed a notice to admit facts, in which the defendant was asked if in October of 1925, he orally agreed with the plaintiff’s agent to purchase “100 shares of said stock of [or?] such portion of 100 shares as might be allotted to him at $50 a share.” To this the defendant replied “Yes, but misrepresentations were made.”

The plaintiffs had joined a group to sell the stock of this corporation, and had agreed to take four thousand shares or such lesser amount as might be allotted them. They were allotted less than four thousand shares, and had received orders for more shares than this allotment. The number of shares to be given to each customer was reduced proportionally below the amount he had agreed to take. On this basis the defendant was allotted seventy shares.

There was evidence that on October 13, 1925, the plaintiffs sent the defendant a ticket or confirmation slip which stated that there had been sold to him seventy shares of the corporation; that this ticket did not state when the price was payable, and was marked “Delayed,” which meant, according to the plaintiffs’ testimony, that the stock had not at that time been received by them; that on October 17 a second confirmation slip was sent the defendant, which stated that the total price of the seventy shares was $3,500, and contained the words “Cash October 20.” The defendant denied that he received either of these communications.

Between October 13 and October 17, the plaintiffs received the stock certificates of the corporation. Their agent testified that he interviewed the defendant near the end of October and informed him that he had been allotted seventy shares [106]*106of the stock; that the defendant expressed himself as pleased and stated he had purchased thirty additional shares in the market so as to bring “his holdings up to 100 shares,” and he would call at the plaintiffs’ office to “see about paying for and taking the stock”; that the plaintiffs’ agent saw the defendant several times. He further testified that in the conversations about the corporation stock the defendant did not refuse to take the stock; that “the defendant at these interviews always put him off when it came to a question of taking and paying for the stock, saying that he was busy or going away and would see about it in the near future.” The defendant denied that he ever said to the plaintiffs’ agent that he purchased thirty additional shares in the market, and testified that he told the agent “at one or more of these interviews in October, November or December, 1925, that the stock was not as represented and that he refused to take it.”

One of the plaintiffs’ bookkeepers testified that he sent to the defendant on October 31,1925, addressed to him, a paper. It was sent in blank by the plaintiffs and was returned to them signed by the defendant (marked Exhibit 11) as follows:

Blake Brothers & Co.
Founded 1858
111 Devonshire Street 5 Nassau Street
Boston New York
Members, Boston Stock Exchange New York Stock Exchange
Boston - 391
Thomas Arnold
Dear Sir: —
We enclose herewith statement of your account as shown by our books at close of business Oct. 31, 1925.
If correct, please sign this confirmation and return in the enclosed addressed envelope.
Your prompt attention will be appreciated.
Very truly yours,
Blake Bros. & Co.
[107]*107$3535.00........Dr. balance Cr. $
LONG SHORT
70 Am. Brown Boveri
The above statement of my account is correct.
(Sign here)............Thomas. H. Arnold
Note exceptions

The bookkeeper testified that this statement was not sent in connection “with an audit made by outside auditors, but was just a routine check-up or audit by the office force.” It is not disputed that this statement was signed by the defendant and returned to the plaintiffs.

There was evidence that the custom of trade in such transactions was that deliveries were to be made at the seller’s place of business and it was customary for the purchaser “to send in the money with directions when to send the securities, or to call in and take them up; that it was not customary for the sellers to go out and find the purchaser and tender the stock.”

On March 17, 1926, the plaintiffs segregated seventy shares of the corporation stock for the purpose of sending these seventy shares with draft attached to the defendant. A draft for the price of the securities, with interest, and the $35 balance remaining from the bond transactions, was drawn on this date and sent with the seventy shares of stock to a bank for collection. The defendant refused to pay the draft and ordered the stock returned. The plaintiffs received the stock and the information that the defendant refused to take it, on April 7,1926. Since that date the plaintiffs have held the seventy shares in readiness for delivery to the defendant. At the trial seventy shares were “tendered . . . to the court to be held by it pending the outcome of this litigation, but the court directed that the shares be retained by the plaintiffs.” The case is before us on the exceptions of both the plaintiffs and the defendant.

The first and fifth counts of the declaration relate to the bond transaction. The second and sixth counts are to recover the agreed price of the corporation stock, alleging that [108]*108the defendant agreed to take and pay for the stock but has refused to fulfill the agreement and that the plaintiffs have been ready to deliver the stock and have held the same for the defendant. The third and fourth counts allege that because of the defendant’s failure to receive and pay for the stock the plaintiffs were damaged. The seventh count is to recover on an account stated. The answer is a general denial, the statute of frauds, and false representations knowingly made by the plaintiffs or their agents.

The judge found that there was no delivery or passing of title as alleged in the second and sixth counts, prior to the defendant’s refusal to carry out the contract; that there was no fraud on the part of the plaintiffs, and no accounting together as set out in the seventh count. He found that the plaintiffs’ cause of action was an action for damages, and that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover the sum of $1,392.96.

1.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

New England Precision Grinding, Inc. v. Simply Surgical, LLC
46 N.E.3d 590 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2016)
Citibank (South Dakota), N.A. v. DeCristoforo
28 Mass. L. Rptr. 139 (Massachusetts Superior Court, 2011)
Janes v. Dugan
15 Mass. App. Div. 1 (Mass. Dist. Ct., App. Div., 1949)
Hall-Vesole Co. v. Durkee-Atwood Co.
35 N.W.2d 601 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1949)
Gibson v. De La Salle Institute
152 P.2d 774 (California Court of Appeal, 1944)
Berwin v. Levenson
42 N.E.2d 568 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1942)
New Bedford Contracting Co. v. Bochman
1 Mass. App. Dec. 131 (U.S. District Court, 1941)
Milliken v. Warwick
28 N.E.2d 224 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1940)
Bodell v. Sawyer
3 N.E.2d 279 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1936)
Gill v. Hornblower
200 N.E. 376 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1936)
Farr v. Fratus
178 N.E. 657 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 N.E. 885, 267 Mass. 103, 1929 Mass. LEXIS 1217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-arnold-mass-1929.