Emmons v. McCreery

160 A. 722, 307 Pa. 62, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 496
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 19, 1932
DocketAppeal, 132
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 160 A. 722 (Emmons v. McCreery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Emmons v. McCreery, 160 A. 722, 307 Pa. 62, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 496 (Pa. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Kephart,

Emmons, appellee, recovered in the court below for the conversion of certain securities sold by McCreery & Company, appellants. Emmons, who had been trading with McCreery & Company, stockbrokers, for a number of years, had in 1926 signed an agreement, in substance as follows: “It is agreed between us......that all securities carried in the customer’s [appellee’s] account ......are pledged as collateral security for any and all claims and demands that the broker may now or hereafter have against the customer, and, waiving all notice, the sale......of the above or any other securities in the customer’s account, or that may be held by the broker, is hereby authorized......whenever it is deemed necessary by the brokers for their protection.” It is clear from the terms of this agreement that he thereby unconditionally authorized the future sale of any or all securities from his account at any time without notice:

Appellee’s account during October of 1929 was admittedly far below marginal requirements, and, on Oc *66 tober 19th, 21st and 23d, be was notified to make payments or deposit additional collateral. He states that he talked to his broker on the evening of October 23d, and promised to deliver 1,000 shares Prudential Investors to the firm the following morning. At that time, Emmons notified his broker that he could not get the additional collateral shares until noon. He did deliver some of these shares to them at about 11: 45, but not in the amount promised. The market having receded continually during the day, the broker, at 12:15, sold, without notice, some shares of Emmon’s stock which they held as collateral. It is conceded at the time of this sale Emmons owed $100,000, and after the sale he made settlement for that entire amount, without protest or any notice at that time that he had any claim on account of the alleged unlawful sale of stock. It was not until over two' months later that he questioned the broker’s action. He then sent a letter to McCreery wherein he demanded payment of his supposed loss and therein stated facts setting forth a complete cause of action for that loss.

The court below admitted this letter in its entirety and without qualification as substantive proof of plaintiff’s claim. It was objected to as a self-serving declaration, and its admission is here assigned as error: Glatfelter v. Mendels, 46 Pa. Superior Ct. 562, is relied on as authority in support of its admission. This is a novel -way to seek to sustain a cause of action. If such a letter is admissible without qualifications, a suitor could have his attorney send in letter form to his adversary a statement of facts, true or untrue, setting forth a complete claim, and, on receipt of an answer, have the letter admitted in evidence as substantive proof of the claim, or, in case of failure to reply, also admit the letter. See Wigmore, section 1073.

The rule that self-serving declarations, made by a party to an action before suit is brought, whether verbal or written, are inadmissible when offered on behalf of *67 the party who made them, is established by an unbroken line of decisions: Craig v. Craig, 5 Rawle 91; Fraley v. Bishpham, 10 Pa. 320; Beach v. Wheeler, 24 Pa. 212; Cleven v. Hilberry, 116 Pa. 431; Dempsey v. Dobson, 174 Pa. 122; Kann v. Bennett, 223 Pa. 36. In Dempsey v. Dobson, supra, it was said: “The letter.......was inadmissible. It was an argumentative presentation of his view of his rights......and the grievance of which he complained.” We have i'epeatedly held that a paragraph of a statement of claim denied in the affidavit of defense is not admissible in evidence, that the plaintiff, by competent evidence, must prove his case to sustain his statement; but here we have a letter, which, if competent according to the ruling of the court below, would step in and render the above rules meaningless. The letter was clearly a self-serving declaration and should not have been admitted. The case referred to in the Superior Court and the case on which that case relied as authority, Crossgrove v. Himmelrich, 54 Pa. 203, 208, do not sustain appellee’s contention; the letters were there admitted to show demands and nothing more. The letter in the case at bar was competent only to show a demand, and it should not have been read to the jury; the mere fact of the demand alone should have been stated. See Chapin v. Cambria Iron Co., 145 Pa. 478.

Appellee was permitted to show as against the written contract that at the time he signed the power “he believed,” “he was led to believe,” from what was stated to him “that it was distinctly understood that they would not sell any shares of his stock without giving him plenty of notice to put up collateral.” He never stated this belief to the other party. These conclusions would not only have had the effect of varying the terms of the writing, but would have entirely negatived the contract, since permission to sell without notice was the most important element in it. We have repeatedly held that in the absence of fraud, accident or mistake a contract cannot be varied by parol evidence: Crelier v. *68 Mackey, 248 Pa. 363, 366; Gianni v. Russell, 281 Pa. 320; First Nat. Bank of Hooversville v. Sagerson, 283 Pa. 406; and Int. Fuel Serv. Corp. v. Stearns, 304 Pa. 157. This evidence was inadmissible to vary or modify the terms of the writing, and, as the record stood without this evidence, the agreement was unimpaired unless a waiver of it was shown.

There is no doubt that an agreement of this kind may be waived by a broker either by express words or by conduct: Rosenthal v. Brown, 247 N. Y. 479; Meyer, Law of Stockbrokers and Stock Exchanges, 446, 448. The question before us is to determine what conduct will ordinarily give rise to a waiver.

It is admitted that when Emmons’s marginal account was low, the stockbroker would notify him, requesting him to bring it up to condition; but a notice from a stockbroker to his client to make good his marginal account in no sense constitutes a waiver of that part of the contract which reads that the securities carried in the customer’s account, pledged as collateral, may at any time be sold without notice idhenever it is deemed necessary by the brokers for their protection. The broker may well conclude, although the customer’s account is below marginal requirements, that it is not “necessary......for their protection” to sell the client’s collateral. To hold that such notice would operate as a waiver of the right to sell would upset the ordinary course of business, and furnish a legal protection or excuse that would otherwise not exist and which was not contemplated in the contract. Certainly no person dealing with a broker would normally consider the receipt of notice as to deficiency in his margin a waiver of the broker’s right to sell. Therefore, we hold that the demands of additional collateral or money to protect a marginal account are not of themselves waivers of a stockbroker’s right to sell the customer’s securities without notice if the broker’s protection demands it.

*69 Appellee does not claim his margin was sufficient to protect his account.

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Bluebook (online)
160 A. 722, 307 Pa. 62, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emmons-v-mccreery-pa-1932.