Duel v. Hollins

241 U.S. 523, 36 S. Ct. 615, 60 L. Ed. 1143, 1916 U.S. LEXIS 1732
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJune 5, 1916
DocketNos. 352 and 353
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 241 U.S. 523 (Duel v. Hollins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duel v. Hollins, 241 U.S. 523, 36 S. Ct. 615, 60 L. Ed. 1143, 1916 U.S. LEXIS 1732 (1916).

Opinions

Mr. Justice McReynolds

delivered the opinion of the court.

Hollins & Company, brokers and members of the New York Stock Exchange, went into bankruptcy November 13, 1913.

On October 13, 1912, they purchased for appellant Duel a hundred shares of Amalgamated Copper Company stock — “Copper”—and received certificates therefor which they subsequently disposed of by deliveries on account of sales for customers.

October 25, 1912, they purchased for one Bamberger thirty shares of “Copper,” received a certificate therefor and pledged this for their own benefit with the National Bank of Commerce.

[525]*525February 25, 1913; they purchased for appellants Wiener, Levy & Company fifty shares of “Copper” and received a certificate. About June 13, 1913, this passed-out of their control “for and in behalf of another customer.”

Prior to November 1,1913, they were directed to purchase for one Landau a hundred shares of “Copper,” and their books charge them as carrying this number for his account.

At the close of business November 7, 1913, they were responsible to customers for two hundred and eighty shares of “Copper” — Bamberger thirty, Duel one hundred, Wiener, Levy & Company fifty, Landau one hundred; and they held in actual possession — -“in the box”— only two certificates for fifty shares each. November 10, 1913, they used these in making delivery on a short sale. On the same day that sale was “covered” and on November 11 they received and placed in their box a certificate (No. 29373) for one hundred shares.

When bankruptcy occurred (November 13) their entire liability to “long” customers on account of “Copper” arose from purchases of two hundred and eighty shares as above narrated; and they actually held only certificate No. 29373, received two days before. To secure their own loans they had on pledge with Kings County Trust Company and National Bank of Commerce, respectively, certificates for fifty and thirty shares; and they also had an outstanding short sale of one hundred shares.

In the deposition of Allaire, bankrupts’ cashier, it is said:

“The said certificate No. 29373 was never marked or otherwise identified by Hollins & Co. as the property of any particular person or customer, or placed in any envelope bearing any indication that the said stock was held for the special account of any particular customer or [526]*526person, and ño memorandum appears upon the books or records of Hollins & Co. to the effect that said stock was purchased or held for the special or particular account of any one customer or person.
“It was the practice of Hollins & Co. to use certificates of stock on hand in making deliveries thereof, indiscriminately and without regard to particular certificates or certificate numbers, excepting only cases where customers deposited certificates of stock "standing in théir own names as margin for their own accounts, where such certificates were usually retained in kind, but at nq¡ time from the 1st day of- November, 1913, until and including the 13th day of November, 1913, were there any certificates for Amalgamated Copper stock standing in the name of any customers.
“Certificate No. 29373 representing 100 shares of Amalgamated Copper stock was not purchased or received for the account of any member of the firm of Hollins & Co., or for the personal account of said firm as a whole, but was received from the Stock Exchange Clearing House in the usual course of business as representing the balance of Amalgamated Copper stock due said firm on balance on said date.”

The record indicates that all transactions in question were made in pursuance of the usual contracts for speculative purchases and sales of stock upon margins.

By timely petitions appellants claimed that in adjusting their accounts for final settlement with bankrupts’ estate they were, entitled to have allotted to them respectively 100/280 and 50/280 of the one hundred shares of “Copper” represented by certificate No. 29373, The District Court, Southern District, of New- York (212 Fed. Rep. 317), sustained their position and ordered' accordingly, but the Circuit Court of Appeals reached a different conclusion and reversed the order. 219 Fed. Rep. 544.

[527]*527The facts of the present case differ in some respects from those presented in Gorman v. Littlefield, 229 U. S. 19; but we think-a logical application of principles there approved requires disagreement with the Circuit Court of Appeals and approval of order in the District Court.

In view of our former opinions it must be taken as settled: That bankrupts and their customer stood in the relation of pledgee and pledgor. That in their dealings stock certificates issued by same corporation lacked individuality and, like fac-simile-storage receipts for gold coin, could properly be treated as indistinguishable tokens of identical values. That as between themselves, after paying amount due brokers, the customer had a right to demand delivery of stocks purchased for his account; and such delivery might have been made during insolvency without creating a preference. Richardson v. Shaw, 209 U. S. 365; Thomas v. Taggart, 209 U. S. 385; Sexton v. Kessler, 225 U. S. 90; Gorman v. Littlefield, 229 U. S. 19.

Summing up the doctrine of Richardson v. Shaw concerning legal relationship between customer and broker in buying and holding shares, we said in Gorman v. Littlefield (pp. 23-24): “It was held that the certificates of stock were not the property itself, but merely the evidence of it, and that a certificate for the same number of shares represented precisely the same kind and value of property as another certificate for a like number of shares in the same corporation; that the return of a different certificate or the substitution of one certificate for another made no material change in the property right of the customer; that such shares were unlike distinct articles of personal property, differing in kind or value, as a horse, wagon or harness, and that stock has no earmark which distinguishes one share from another, but is like grain of a uniform quality in an elevator, one bushel being of the- same kind and value as another. It was therefore [528]*528concluded that the turning over of the certificates for the shares of stock belonging to the customer and held by the broker for him did not amount to a preferential transfer of the bankrupt’s property.”

And we there further declared (pp. 24-25): “It is therefore unnecessary for a customer, where shares of stock of the same kind are in the hands of a broker, being held to satisfy his claims, to be able to put his finger upon the identical certificates of stock purchased for him. It is enough that the broker has shares of the same kind which are legally subject to the demand of the customer. And in this respect the trustee in bankruptcy Is in the same position as the broker. Richardson v.

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Bluebook (online)
241 U.S. 523, 36 S. Ct. 615, 60 L. Ed. 1143, 1916 U.S. LEXIS 1732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duel-v-hollins-scotus-1916.