In re of the Application of Renville

46 A.D. 37
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 46 A.D. 37 (In re of the Application of Renville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re of the Application of Renville, 46 A.D. 37 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Ingraham, J. :

In this proceeding the appellant seeks to compel the Gold and Stock Telegraph Company to connect a ticker in the petitioner’s office with its telegraph wires and to.furnish him with quotations of transactions upon the New York Stock Exchange from time to time, as they are made, in the same manner and for the same price as they are furnished to others. The petition upon which the appellant [38]*38makes this application alleges that the Gold and Stock Telegraph Company is a domestic corporation organized and existingunder the laws of the State of New York; that it was organized under chapter 265 of the Laws of 1848 and acts amendatory theretothat the said Gold and Stock Telegraph Conrpany availed itself of its franchise granted .under such statute, laid its telegraph wires through, in or under the public streets of New York from said New York Stock Exchange, in several directions, and has been for upwards of fifteen years engaged in the business of collecting reports of the purchases and sales of stocks upon the said New York Stock Exchange from time to time as they occur, and of transmitting the information so obtained through its instruments, called “ stock tickers,” to persons and corporations who are not members, of the exchange at their offices and places of business for pay, and that it is now engaged in such business; that the charge required from each subscriber for such service, or for each ticker in the district near the said- stock exchange is twenty dollars per month ; that on April 18, 1899, the petitioner applied to the said Gold and Stock Telegraph Company for such information or quotations to be furnished him; that such application was accepted ; that said ticker and wire were duly installed; that such information or quotations were furnished for about eight days in May, 1899, at-the agreed price- of twenty-dollars per month, which sum was paid in advance for the month of May ; that thereafter and during the month of May, 1899, for which said service and quotations were fully paid, the said Gold and Stock Telegraph Company discontinued said -service and cut its wire connected with said ticker, and has ever since refused and néglected further to furnish quotations; that in'June, 1899, the petitioner tendered twenty dollars to the said telegraph company, to pay in advance for such service or quotations for the month of June, 1899, and that said company refused his money and also refused to restore or continue such service and the furnishing of such quotations; that the dealings in said stocks upon the- New Yorlv Stock Exchange aggregate many thousands of shares upon each business day, and that informar tion as to the transactions -made upon such exchange is convenient and necessary for the appellant for the proper transaction of- his business; that such information and quotations are furnished-to a very large number of his fellow brokers and members upon the [39]*39Consolidated Stock and Petroleum Exchange, doing business in the city of New York, and to many other persons and corporations doing business in stocks as brokers and otherwise, and that by the refusal of the said Gold and Stock Telegraph Company to serve the appellant with such information, he has been and will be irretrievably damaged. Subsequently, by a stipulation, the Western Union Telegraph Company was joined-as a party to the proceeding, and- the petition and the proceedings were amended accordingly, and it was stipulated that the Western Union Telegraph Company was a corporation duly organized under the act for the incorporation of telegraph companies (Act of 1848, above specified).

The telegraph company served its answer to said petition, alleging that the property of the Gold and Stock Telegraph Company had been leased to the Western Union- Telegraph Company, and that the business of transmitting quotations from the New York Stock Exchange and other exchanges had been and was managed and conducted entirely by the Western Union Telegraph Company ; that prior to November 19, 1892, the respondents had been in the habit of collecting information as to the price at which stocks, bonds and other securities dealt in on such -exchange had been sold, and transmitting -such information -to its subscribers by means of these instruments, but that subsequent to November 19, 1892, the said New York Stock Exchange, availing itself of a right belonging to it, excluded the employees of the said respondent from access to the exchange,^itself collected the information and sold or transferred the same to the Western Union Telegraph Company, which thereupon and thereafter transmitted such information furnished by the New York Stock Exchange or its employees to ■ persons employing it to furnish them with quotations of stocks dealt in upon the New York Stock Exchange; that the said exchange thereafter, for its own protection and to prevent the improper and illicit use of quotations of stocks dealt-in upon the said New York Stock Exchange by bucket shops and persons disposed to use the same for the purpose of defrauding the public, insisted upon its right to dictate the persons who should be entitled to- receive the said - quotations, and -determined to give out the same only to such persons as the said stock exchange was satisfied -would use the same properly and not to the disadvantage or defrauding of the public, and it thenceforth [40]*40ref.nsed longer to sell to or give the said Western Union Telegraph Company the said quotations of stocks, bonds and ■ other securities-dealt in on the New York Stock Exchange, save and subject to the? obligation on its part only to transmit the same to such persons as were approved-by said New York Stock Exchange; that on the said 19th day of November, 1892, the New York Stock Exchange, acting through its duly appointed officers with tlie duly appointed officers of the-Western Union Telegraph Company, entered into a-contract for the purpose of carrying out the above mentioned policy ■ of the New York Stock Exchange, a copy of which contract is annexed to the answer. The said contract expired on June 30,1897,. due notice of its expiration having been given by the stock exchange; to the respondents. Subsequent to June 30, 1897, pending the making by the New York Stock Exchange of further or other-arrangements with respect to its quotations, it continued said contract in force from day to day after June 30, 1897, in consideration, of receiving from the Western .Union Telegrajih Company, for each day during which said contract shall be so continued in force, the sum of ninety dollars, payable at the close- of business on each day,, it being distinctly understood that all the provisions of said contract,, other, than those relating to its duration, are to be and remain in force during such temporary continuation of the- contract, but that the New York Stock Exchange or its committee of arrangements-could at any time, without notice, wholly discontinue and terminate said.contract, and that upon such discontinuance or termination, all rights of the Western Union Telegraph Company thereunder shall, forthwith cease and determine.

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Related

Moore v. New York Cotton Exchange
270 U.S. 593 (Supreme Court, 1926)
Moore v. New York Cotton Exchange
296 F. 61 (Second Circuit, 1923)
Tucker v. Western Union Telegraph Co.
95 Misc. 287 (New York Supreme Court, 1915)

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Bluebook (online)
46 A.D. 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-of-the-application-of-renville-nyappdiv-1899.