Dudley A. Tyng & Co. v. Woodward

88 A. 243, 121 Md. 422, 1913 Md. LEXIS 61
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 26, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 88 A. 243 (Dudley A. Tyng & Co. v. Woodward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dudley A. Tyng & Co. v. Woodward, 88 A. 243, 121 Md. 422, 1913 Md. LEXIS 61 (Md. 1913).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered in favor of the appellee, in a suit brought against him by the appellant, on a verdict rendered in pursuance of an instruction granted by the lower Oourt. The declaration originally included six common counts and four special counts and it was amended by adding an additional one.' The foundation for the suit is the claim by the appellant that it sold to the appellee fifty shares of the capital stock of the Burroughs Adding Machine Company at four hundred dollars per share, and upon his refusal to accept and pay for them it resold them at $301.00 per share, — the suit being for the difference between the contract price and the amount realized at the resale.

As the appellant claims that it is entitled upon the evidence in the record to recover upon the first, seventh, ninth and the additional (eleventh) counts and does not contend that the others apply, we will briefly state what they are. The first is the common count “For goods bargained and sold by the plaintiff to the defendant.” In the seventh it is simply alleged that the defendant purchased from the plaintiff the fifty shares of stock at $400.00 per share and the defendant agreed to pay said sum for the same, and the plaintiff offered *425 and tendered them to the defendant hut he refused to pay for them or any part thereof. The ninth alleges that the defendant offered to pay the plaintiff $400.00 per share for fifty shares of that stock and the plaintiff accepted the offer and tendered them, to the defendant, who thereupon refused to accept and pay for them. The eleventh count is substantially in the language of the ninth with this addition: “and the plaintiff then, after due notice to the defendant, sold said fifty (50) shares of stock in the usual and customary manner in which said stock is sold in the market for the sum of three hundred and one dollars ($301.00) per share, being the best price then obtainable for the same by the plaintiff.” The defendant filed the general issue pleas of never indebted and never promised. There are eleven bills of exception containing rulings on evidence and the twelfth contains a prayer granted at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case, instructing the jury “that the plaintiff has offered no evidence in this case legally sufficient under the pleadings to entitle the plaintiff to recover, and therefore the verdict of the jury must be for the defendant.” We will first consider that prayer.

The theory of the appellee in offering that prayer seems to have been that the resale was invalid because there was no public sale and no such notice given to the public as justified the resale. Eor that he relies on a number of decisions of this Court, which we will refer to. In Maryland Fire Ins. Co. v. Dalrymple, 25 Md. 242, the plaintiff sued the insurance company for damages for the sale and conversion of certain shares of stock of the B. & O. R. R. Co., which he had pledged to secure the payment of a sum of money lent to him by the defendant. It was agreed by the parties that if the loan was not promptly paid the president of the insurance company could, without further notice, sell the collaterals for the purpose of satisfying the loan. Notice was given the plaintiff to return the loan by the 14th of November, 1860, and on the 20th of that month the defendant procured the stock to be sold at the Board of Brokers, and became the purchaser thereof at $55.00 per share — the stock *426 having from the date of loan to November loth, varied in price from $79.00 to $56.50 per share. The stock was held by the defendant until the spring of 1862, when it was sold publicly at the Board of Brokers, fairly and in the usual wav., in parcels to different persons at prices rangiug from $60.00 to $67.00 per share — the ruling market prices. It was held that under the terms of the contract the notice given on the 13th of November was sufficient to entitle the defendant to sell on the 20th, that a sale “publicly and fairly made” at the Board of Brokers to a third person would have been a legal sale under the contract, but that the doctrine that persons holding fiduciary relations are incompetent to purchase the property held by them in trust was applicable to the relation of pledgor and pledgee. The sale on the 20th of November, 1860, therefore did not operate to vest the title in the defendant as purchaser, or to work a conversion of the stock — the plaintiff not having elected to treat that sale as a tortious conversion. But it was also held that as the bailmentcontinued and the defendant caused the stock to be sold publicly at the Board of Brokers and transferred to the several purchasers, the latter sales were valid. It was said that no further notice was required by the contract, and no valid objection could be made to the place and mode of sale — not being impeached on the ground of unfairness or bad faith.

In Balto. Marine Ins. Co. v. Dalrymple, 25 Md. 269, some of the same questions were involved. Certain of the stock held by that company was sold to other persons, after notice of such intended sales at the Board of Brokers, but 770 shares of the B. & O. R. R. Co. stock was bought by the defendant through the agency of a broker employed for the purpose. On the next day the defendant sold the 770 shares to a Mr. Denison, and it was held “the defendant had not the legal right to dispose of the stock af private sale. The sale so made to Denison on the 21st of November, 1860, was therefore contrary to the duty of the defendant as pledgee and in law tortious, for which the plaintiff is entitled to maintain his action either in trover or case.”

*427 In Bryson v. Raynor, 25 Md. 424, in which there was a hill in equity to compel the appellee to return 19 shares of stock transferred to him as collateral security for the repayment of loans, it was held that a sale of nine of those shares made hy a broker at private sale was valid — the appellant having authorized the appellee “to give the stock to any broker to sell on said day” in case they were not redeemed hy a certain time named, but as to the other shares which the pledgee purchased, he still maintained the character of bailee and they could be redeemed. It was said: “In the absence of this special authority, according to the rulings of this Court in the cases referred to (Dalrymple cases, supra), it would have been the duty of the pledgee to have disposed of the stock at public sale, after a reasonable notice to the public of the time and place of sale, or at the public stock board.”

It may be well, in order to avoid any misunderstanding, to refer at this point to Manning v. Shriver, 79 Md. 41, where it was said: “We agree that one being a trustee, executor or agent, or in any other like fiduciary relation, will not be allowed to purchase property sold by him in that character. The rule is one of general application, and the reason of the rule is, that one will not he permitted to purchase an interest where he has a duty to perform inconsistent with the character of purchaser. We agree too that both upon reason and authority the relation of pledgor and pledgee comes within the operation of this rule.” The opinion then went on to say: “But.

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Bluebook (online)
88 A. 243, 121 Md. 422, 1913 Md. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dudley-a-tyng-co-v-woodward-md-1913.