Hately v. Kiser

162 Ill. App. 542, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 650
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 29, 1911
DocketGen. No. 15,627
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 162 Ill. App. 542 (Hately v. Kiser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hately v. Kiser, 162 Ill. App. 542, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 650 (Ill. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

Hately, the plaintiff below, the appellee here, on March 6, 1909, recovered a judgment in the Municipal Court of Chicago against John W. Kiser, the defendant below, the appellant here, for $5,836.43 and costs. This sum was the amount of a verdict rendered by a jury less a remittitur of $254.69 for some reason entered by the plaintiff before judgment was given on it.

To reverse this judgment this appeal has been prosecuted.

The cause involves a transaction in stocks, which stated according to the contention of the plaintiff as to what was proved at the trial, was this:

The defendant Kiser was a man of large affairs and resources living in Chicago, who frequently dealt through stock brokers in accordance with the usages and customs of business so conducted in stocks commonly bought and sold on the stock market for purposes of speculation as well as of investment. He had so traded prior to the transaction involved here through the well known stock brokerage houses of Finley Barrell & Co. and Bartlett, Frazier & Carrington of Chicago. While thus trading in stocks for speculation through Finley Barrell & Co. he became well acquainted with the plaintiff Hately, a young man then about twenty-seven years old, and connected with Finley Barrell & Co. as an employee or otherwise. This was in 1903. As Mr. Kiser was known to be a man of substantial fortune, a large line of credit was extended to him by Finley Barrell & Co.

Mr. Hately in 1903 or 1904 took up the stock brokerage business for himself, forming a partnership under the name of Geddes & Hately. Mr. Geddes did not remain long in the business, which became that solely of the plaintiff Hately in August 15, 1905, and was afterward conducted under the name of Furness Hately & Co. Hately and Kiser were members of the same Club and met there and upon the street occasionally. Hately informed Kiser that he was in business for himself and solicited an order from him. In the latter part of 1904 Kiser gave Hately an order to buy 200 shares of Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul stock at a given price, and it was bought at that price and “carried” by Geddes & Hately until August 9, 1905, when apparently by the order of Kiser it was sold. Ho money was put up as margin by Kiser on this transaction nor payment made on account of the business nor for carrying the stock, nor did Hately ask for any. On the 9th of August, 1905, however, the sale of the stock produced a profit which left to the credit of Kiser with Hately after all the customary charges (as may be presumed) were deducted, $1,285.63, which at Kiser’s request was sent by check to him. In the meantime one other transaction took place within the compass of a day. On December 8, 1904, at the order of Kiser, Hately bought for him 100 shares of Union Pacific stock at 108 and sold it, likewise at Kiser’s order, at 109. Ho money was paid as margin on this transaction, but it would appear that whatever small amount may have been left to Kiser’s credit out of the profit after the ordinary commissions were charged against him so remained to his credit during the pendency of the deal in Milwaukee and St. Paul stock, and was finally included in the check of $1,285.63 which was sent to him September 28, 1905. That was then the amount of his balance, and Hately says he never had at any time any occasion to pay Kiser any other money.

Trade letters such as -stock and grain brokers’ offices are accustomed to send out were sent by Hately to Kiser after September 28th and before December 5, 1905. December 5th Mr. Kiser called Mr. Hately on the telephone, told him that he had received one of these letters containing advice on the subject of “Hickel Plate” stock (the name given the stock of the New York, Chicago & St. Louis Kailroad), and asked if he would still advise the purchase of it. Hately replied in the negative and recommended the purchase of International Mercantile Marine Preferred stock, which had been a rather inactive stock at about 36 for some timé. Whereupon Kiser told Hately to buy 200 shares for him and let him know by telephone when the order was executed. Hately bought the stock through the stock exchange or brokerage house of Bartlett, Frazier & Carrington, which had an office in Chicago and held a membership in the New York Stock Exchange, which Hately did not.

The International Mercantile Marine stock was not then listed on the New York Stock Exchange and was known, therefore, as a “curb” stock, because it could not be traded in on the Exchange, but was bought and sold on the street in New York near the Exchange with other stocks not so listed. The brokers who trade in these stocks, however, represent reputable stock exchange houses, and the transactions there which fix the market price are reported as news in the financial journals and daily newspapers. Kiser put up no margin with Hately and was asked for none by him, but Hately, as we read his testimony, says that contemporaneously with the order to Bartlett, Frazier & Carrington, or shortly subsequent thereto, he sent Bartlett, Frazier & Carrington a margin for a portion of the price, 100 shares at 35|- and 100 shares at 35$. However that may be, Bartlett, Frazier & Carrington reported to Hately within a few minutes that they had bought the stock in question at said price, and Hately reported the same by telephone to Kiser, and afterward on that date sent through the mail to Mr. Kiser a letter of advice stating the transaction as follows:

“Chicago, December 5, 1905.
J. W. Kiser,
Dear Sir: We have this day bought for your account and risk according to the rules of the New York Stock Exchange,
100 International Mercantile Marine Pfd., 35£.
100 International Mercantile Marine Pfd., 35$.
This account received by telegraph. '
* * * * ' * -x- x- x- * -x
Respectfully yours,
Furness Hately & Co.”

Shortly afterward, but later than January 12,1906, Hately and Kiser met accidentally at their club, and spoke about the transaction, in which conversation Kiser told Hately that if there was “ever a profit in it” (the stock) “over and above commissions and interest,” he was to sell it out. At various indefinite times thereafter, in incidental meetings, Kiser and Hately spoke together about the stock and the transaction. “It came up as a natural topic of conversation,” Hately says. Hately did not receive from Bartlett, Frazier & Carrington the certificates of stock, but from the fifth day of December, 1905, to the 14th day of ¡November, 1907, Bartlett, Frazier & Carrington had possession of them subject to the order of the plaintiff and for his account. Hately did not call on Kiser for “margin” or “carrying charges” or money for any other purpose until October, 1907. During the time between January 12, 1906, and ¡November 14, 1907, the stock never reached a price on the market at which it could have been sold without a loss to Kiser.

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Bluebook (online)
162 Ill. App. 542, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hately-v-kiser-illappct-1911.