Fowler v. New York Gold Exchange Bank

13 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 186
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1875
StatusPublished

This text of 13 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 186 (Fowler v. New York Gold Exchange Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fowler v. New York Gold Exchange Bank, 13 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 186 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1875).

Opinion

Daniels, J.:

The principal controversy in this action arose ont of a contract made on the 23d of September, 1869, by which James Brown & Co., who were gold and exchange brokers in the city of New York, for and on behalf of the plaintiffs, agreed to sell and deliver $50,000, in gold coin, to Chase, McClure & Co., another firm of brokers, who acted in the transaction for Chapin, Bowen & Co., who were also engaged in the same business, for the sum of $70,625 in currency. By the terms of the agreement made, the gold was to be delivered and the currency received, on the following day, the twenty-fourth of September.

These three firms of brokers were at the time members of the Gold Exchange of the city of New York; by one of whose rules or regulations the contracts of its members for the sale of gold were to be settled, or cleared, by the defendant. And to enable it to do that, intelligently, notes were delivered by the vendors and vendees, respectively, addressed to the cashier of the defendant, by which he was informed that the vendors would settle, through the clearing department of the bank, on a specified day, the amount of gold agreed to be sold; and the vendees, in like form, informed him of the currency they were to pay or deliver, as the price of the gold. On each day in which the members had settlements or exchanges of this nature, to be made through the intervention of' the defendant, an account of all of them was also to be delivered to the defendant before half-past twelve o’clock in the day, and the amount of gold, or currency, as the case might require, necessary to balance all the transactions mentioned in the account, wras also to be paid, or delivered with it, to the officers of the defendant. That enabled the defendant to clear or settle all the sales and purchases reported to it, and for which the notices had previously been given, by the respective parties, to the cashier.

Without the account and the deposit of the balance, and the notices to the cashier, the defendant did not undertake to clear and settle the sales made; but with them they were settled and cleared by the defendant by half-past one o’clock in the afternoon, and the balances found due, paid to the person or persons entitled to receive them.

The 24th of September, 1869, the day on which the contract [188]*188between Brown & Co. and Chase, McClure & Co. was to be by its terras performed, proved to be one of uncommon excitement among gold dealers, attended with very great and rapid fluctuations in prices, so much so that it has since been known and designated in that business as Black Friday.”

The president of the defendant, apparently distrusting its ability to settle and clear all the transactions, in gold, it probably might be called upon to balance and adjust, requested its customers, as far as they could conveniently do so, to consummate and settle their sales and purchases between themselves, without the interposition of the defendant. There was some uncertainty in the evidence concerning the existence of notice of this request, but it was of too slight a nature to leave it in any serious doubt, and the referee found it, as a fact, proved in the case. Brown & Co., the vendors of the gold on behalf of the plaintiffs, were informed of this request, and for that reason, neither delivered the notice received by them from Chase, McClure & Co. to the cashier of the defendant, nor the general statement or account of their transactions in gold which were to be cleared and settled on that day. And by reason of that omission, the defendant, by its course of dealings with its customers, the members of the Gold Exchange, was relieved from all obligations to settle and clear the sales and purchases of Brown & Co.

But Chapin, Bowen & Day, for whom Chase, McClure & Go. acted in making the purchase from Brown & Go., received the notice from them to the cashier, which Brown & Co. had delivered when the agreement was made, and delivered it to the cashier of the defendant, with an account of their transactions and the balance due, which was required to clear and settle them.

The defendant, in this way, received the $70,625 in currency, from Chapin, Bowen & Day, which Brown & Co. had contracted to receive for the $50,000 of gold coin, and without any further authority from Brown & Co. than that contained in their notice, given to Chase, McClure & Co., delivered the $50,000 in gold to Chapin, Bowen & Day, as their assignees or appointees. Neither the firm of Brown & Go., nor the plaintiffs acting through them, had any right to require the defendant to advance this gold, without placing the amount in its possession for that purpose, [189]*189and had no reason to expect that it would be done by it; nor had Chapin, Bowen & Day, under the circumstances, any valid or lawful claim upon the defendant for it, but the latter voluntarily paid it from the resources placed in its hands by its customers for the clearing and settling of other contracts for the sale of gold. The aggregate of this fund was very large, and it also had a large amount of gold on hand, in what was designated as its banking, in order to distinguish it from its clearing department. Whether the amount so advanced was actually required for other clearing or settling purposes during that day, or if it were, how the clearing department was reimbursed the amount, was not clearly disclosed by the case. If it were done at all, it was probably by withdrawing that amount from the fund of the banking-department, because it was not even proposed to be shown that any loan for its reimbursement was made from any other source.

The evidence showed that Brown & Co. applied to Chase, McClure & Co. for a performance of the agreement made for the sale of the gold to them, and then ascertained that Brown & Co.’s notice to the cashier of the defendant had passed into the hands of Chapin, Bowen & Day, who had delivered it to the bank, with the currency required, and had received the gold from it. The precise time when this application was made does not clearly appear from the evidence, but it seems to have been very soon after the transaction was consummated by the defendant. Brown & Co. thereupon applied to the defendant for the currency it had received upon their contract,-as the contract-price of the gold, and offered to deliver to it the $50,000 in gold. The officer to whom the application and offer were made reserved them for a conference with the president, or a committee, and for that reason returned no definite response to Brown & Co.; and, upon returning again a few days afterward for a reply, the member of the firm acting- in its behalf was informed that nothing could be done by the committee or officers because the affairs of the bank had passed into the hands of a receiver, whose appointment appears to have been made on the twenty-ninth day of September. No want of diligence on the part of Brown & Co. appears to have attended their efforts to deliver the gold to Chase, McClure & ,Co., under the circumstances which the excitement and events of the twenty-[190]*190fourth of September brought into existence, or in their application to the defendant afterward to receive the gold and deliver them the currency.

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13 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fowler-v-new-york-gold-exchange-bank-nysupct-1875.