Jarvis v. . Manhattan Beach Co.

43 N.E. 68, 148 N.Y. 652, 2 E.H. Smith 652, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 596
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 3, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 43 N.E. 68 (Jarvis v. . Manhattan Beach Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jarvis v. . Manhattan Beach Co., 43 N.E. 68, 148 N.Y. 652, 2 E.H. Smith 652, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 596 (N.Y. 1896).

Opinion

*655 O’Brien, J.

The plaintiff in this action recovered a judgment for damages sustained by his assignors in consequence of the defendant’s refusal to transfer a certificate for one hundred shares of its capital stock upon request, whereby the holders of the certificate were compelled to purchase other shares of equal amount. The defendant had a capital stock of five million dollars divided into fifty thousand shares of one hundred dollars each. A large portion of the stock was issued and the certificates were listed upon the Yew York Stock Exchange and were the subject of purchase and sale by the public. The certificates were signed by the defendant’s president and assistant treasurer, and, in order to guard against frauds, countersigned and registered by the Central Trust Company, which acted as registrar of transfers, in order to authenticate the genuineness of the certificates. The defendant had an office in the city of Yew York, where the transfers of its stock were made, and a transfer clerk was in attendance there to make the transfers. On the 30t,h of September, 1882, this transfer clerk delivered to a firm of brokers in Yew York, in the ordinary course of business, a certificate for one hundred shares of the defendant’s capital stock to sell for ins account. The certificate bore the genuine signatures of the defendant’s president and assistant treasurer, and was countersigned by the Central Trust Company, with a certificate of its registration on the day of its date indorsed thereon. It was in all respects regular in form and carried upon its face every assurance of genuineness, and certified that one B. Bignell was the owner of one hundred shares of defendant’s capital stock. What purported to he the signature of Bignell was indorsed thereon, under the blank form of transfer, and this signature was witnessed, or purported to be witnessed, by the transfer clerk who presented it to the brokers. It appeared that this certificate was in fact spurious, fabricated by the transfer clerk over the genuine signatures of the president, assistant treasurer and registrar, upon the blanks used by the defendant in issuing genuine certificates, that Bignell was not a holder of any stock and that his name upon the *656 paper was a mere fictitious and fraudulent devicé. It was shown that, by the rules of the Stock Exchange, certificates sold there must either stand in the name of some member and be indorsed in blank by him, or, if standing in the name of some other person and indorsed in blank by him, must be guaranteed by a member of the exchange. The purpose of this role is to give to the purchaser the security of the indorsement or guaranty of some member, and hence the selling broker becomes a surety for the validity and genuineness of the certificate. The defendant had knowledge of this rule or custom, but did not follow it in practice. When making transfers of stock, in case the signature of the holder was unknown to it, then it had to be attested' by a witness whom it did know. In the present case the signature, indorsed on the certificate, was attested by its own transfer clerk, whose signature was well known, and so the certificate was apparently in a condition for transfer under the practice adopted at the defendant’s office.

The brokers, to whom the certificate was presented by the transfer clerk, sold it in the open market for his account, but were, as already staled, obliged to guarantee its genuineness. In order to ascertain whether they could safely do so they sent the certificate by a messenger, first to the office of the Central Trust Company, the registrar, and then to the defendant’s office to inquire whether it was genuine and acceptable for transfer. The Central Trust Company informed him that the certificate was properly registered and the person in charge at the defendant’s office informed him, as the plaintiff claims, that the certificate was all right for transfer. The brokers did not procure it to be transferred, but being thus assured that it was in a condition for transfer at any time, they made the guaranty upon it and sold it for the account of the transfer clerk, paying to him the proceeds, retaining only the regular commissions.

Subsequently, and about two years after, when it was ascertained that the certificate was spurious and worthless, the brokers were obliged to make their guaranty good and took *657 it back from the purchaser, procuring and delivering to him a genuine certificate which they purchased in the market. Upon the refusal of the defendant to recognize the certificate, or indemnify the brokers for their loss, they assigned the right of action to the plaintiff.

In March, 1884, the transfer clerk, who had been in the defendant’s employ for several years, absconded and then the defendant, for the first time, ascertained from an examination of the books that for years he had been engaged in fraud in lently issuing certificates of its stock, including the one in question. The evidence tended to show that prior to his departure he had sole charge of the business of transfers and of the stock ledger and transfer books; that practically no supervision was exercised over his conduct and no examination made of the books, though if made the fraud of the clerk would have appeared as it did when the examination. was made after the absconding. On these facts and circumstances the case was submitted to the jury and a verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the amount which it cost the brokers to replace the spurious certificate with a real one, with the interest, and the General Term has affirmed the judgment.

The principles upon which a corporation may be held liable, to a dona fide holder of certificates of stock, fraudulently issued or put in circulation .by the wrongful or "criminal acts of its officers or agents, are quite well settled. Numerous cases involving these questions have received the attention of this court and quite recently some new features of such transactions have appeared. (N. Y. & N. H. R. R. Co. v. Schuyler, 34 N. Y. 30; Fifth Avenue Bank v. Forty-second, Street, etc., R. R. Co., 137 N. Y. 231; Manhattan Life Ins. Co. v. Forty-second Street, etc., R. R. Co., 139 N. Y. 146; Knox v. Eden Musee, etc., Assn., 148 N. Y. 441.)

The liability in such cases is determined by an application of the general rules of law that govern the relations of principal and agent as developed and applied to corporations, acting solely through such agencies. The principal is liable to a *658 third person in a civil action for the fraud or other malfeasance of his agent, perpetrated by the latter in the course of his employment, although the principal did not authorize, justify or know of the misconduct. In this case the certificate contained the genuine signatures of three authorized officers or agents of the defendant, namely, the president, the assistant treasurer and the registrar. The paper upon its face was • an assurance to the public, through the acts of its officers, that a person named therein, whether a real or fictitious person, was the owner of one hundred shares of its capital stock.

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Bluebook (online)
43 N.E. 68, 148 N.Y. 652, 2 E.H. Smith 652, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jarvis-v-manhattan-beach-co-ny-1896.