Hornblower & Weeks-Hemphill, Noyes v. D & G Supply & Maintenance Co.

390 F. Supp. 715
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedMarch 5, 1975
DocketNo. CA 3-6669-C
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 390 F. Supp. 715 (Hornblower & Weeks-Hemphill, Noyes v. D & G Supply & Maintenance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hornblower & Weeks-Hemphill, Noyes v. D & G Supply & Maintenance Co., 390 F. Supp. 715 (N.D. Tex. 1975).

Opinion

OPINION

WILLIAM M. TAYLOR, Jr., Chief Judge.

This dispute between a stock brokerage house and its customer presents the Court with two issues concerning stock margin accounts. First, the Court must determine whether the defendant-customers are liable to the plaintiff-broker for a deficiency resulting from the plaintiff’s sale of securities held in a margin account for the defendants after the defendants failed to meet a margin-call. Secondly, the Court must decide whether the plaintiff failed to mitigate its damage because of an alleged negligent delay in liquidating the undermargined account. Both issues must be decided for the plaintiff.

The Court’s jurisdiction is founded upon diversity of citizenship, 28 U.S.C. § 1332. The plaintiff is a corporation incorporated under the laws of the State of Delaware and having its principal place of business in New York. Defendant D & G Supply & Maintenance Co., Inc. (hereinafter referred to ás D & G), is a corporation incorporated under the laws of the State of Texas and having its principal place of business in Texas; Defendant Richard A. Carrington (hereinafter referred to as Carrington) is an individual who is a citizen of the State of Texas; Defendant E. E. McMillian, [717]*717Jr., (hereinafter referred to as Mc-Millian) is an individual who is a citizen of the State of Texas; and Defendant Jack Silbiger (hereinafter referred to as Silbiger) is an individual who is a citizen of the State of Florida. The matter in controversy exceeds, exclusive of interest and costs, the sum of $10,000. Venue is based upon 28 U.S.C. § 1391(a).

Upon the plaintiff’s motion for severance, the plaintiff’s claims against Defendant Silbiger were severed and continued as a separate and distinct action.

At the request of Defendant Carrington, plaintiff opened a new account for Defendant D & G, and purchased 4,000 shares of Magic Marker stock. Carrington was an employee of Defendant D & G. The account number was 39-24022-005 and the account was opened August 21, 1972. The new account form bears Social Security Number 465-24-4886 and that is the number of the Defendant McMillian. The number came from the person opening the account. Pursuant to the order, plaintiff purchased 4,000 shares of Magic Marker stock for the customer on August 21, 1972, for a total of $77,190.75, the stock being purchased at a price varying between 18% to 17V2. Thereafter, no funds being received from its customer, the plaintiff, on August 28, 1972, requested and secured an extension of time for the customer which extended the due date of payment until September 5, 1972. Plaintiff then communicated with the defendants the amount of margin call which, pursuant to the Federal Reserve Board, was $42,450.91 and this information had to be communicated by the Washington office of plaintiff to the defendants in order for the defendants to know what the margin call was. On September 7, 1972, plaintiff’s Washington office was advised that D & G’s check in the amount of $42,500.00 had been received by plaintiff’s Dallas office and forwarded. The check was deposited by the Washington office on September 8 and credited to the account as payment of the margin call. The D & G check, deposited on September 8, 1972, was thereafter returned by the bank marked “insufficient funds” on September 14, 1972. Thereafter, the D & G check was again deposited on September 15, 1972, and again returned by the bank for insufficient funds on September 22,1972.

Following the final rejection by the bank of the D & G check, plaintiff sent a sell-out wire to D & G requesting payment of the margin call by September 25, 1972, or the stock being held by plaintiff for the customer would be sold. No payment was received by plaintiff on September 25, 1972, and the 4,000 shares of Magic Marker stock were sold resulting in a deficiency to plaintiff.

Plaintiff then sent a demand letter dated September 29, 1972, to D & G calling for payment. Thereafter, on October 2, 1972, a $1,000.00 cash payment was received by plaintiff’s Dallas office from “Gene McMillian (D &. G Supply)”-

No further monies have been received from defendants and there is presently due and owing to plaintiff by defendants the sum of $30,106.22 for which sum plaintiff sues herein.

It is uncontroverted in the record that the stock was purchased by the plaintiff for the customer, D & G, and that D & G has failed to make payment in restitution to plaintiff for the deficiency following the sell-out of the stock necessitated by defendants’ failure to pay the margin call.

D&Gisa Texas corporation and McMillian is the sole stockholder in D & G, as well as being its President and Director. At trial, McMillian contended that the margin account was opened on behalf of only co-defendant Carrington and that Carrington had no authority to make the purchase on behalf of either D & G or McMillian. That contention has no merit. While McMillian admitted that he signed the D & G check negotiated to the plaintiff and that the check bears the mark of D [718]*718& G’s check protector, he denied that the check was filled out in either the name of the payee or the amount at the time he signed the check. That explanation is difficult to believe considering Mc-Millian’s admission that he knew that the cheek was being issued to pay for stock and that at the time he signed the check he knew the account did not have but about $3,000.00 in it at most. This was only one facet of McMillian’s trial testimony, which was also incredible on other accounts.

These other accounts included Mc-Millian’s admissions that:

(1) he owned as much as 6,000 shares of Magic Marker stock in 1972 and was interested in Magic Marker stock and that he had failed to meet the margin call for one of his brokers, Brown-Alien, and was indebted by judgment to Brown-Allen for some $1,200.00 following a suit and a judgment entered against him.
(2) in 1971, Institutional Equity Corporation, a Dallas brokerage house, had purchased stock for D&G and that D&G had given Institutional Equity a check for $7,500.00 which bounced and, thereafter, Institutional Equity Corporation had sued D&G, McMillian and Carrington, received a judgment, which judgment was approved by their attorneys, and that McMillian had paid off the judgment, being some $1,769.55 plus $350.00 attorney’s fees; that at the time Mc-Millian signed the $7,500.00 check for Institutional Equity, there were not sufficient funds in the First National Bank in Mesquite to cover the check. Previously McMillian had denied in his deposition, and denied during the trial of this case, and continued to deny until being confronted with the file in the Institutional Equity suit, that he, McMillian, or D & G had ever had any other controversies with any stock brokerage houses other than the Brown-Allen suit.
(3) The Social Security number on Institutional Equity’s new account form is number 465-24-4886, which is the same Social Security number as appears on plaintiff’s new account form and the number is that of Mc-Millian.

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Bluebook (online)
390 F. Supp. 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hornblower-weeks-hemphill-noyes-v-d-g-supply-maintenance-co-txnd-1975.