Jeffray v. Towar

53 A. 182, 63 N.J. Eq. 530, 18 Dickinson 530, 1902 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 78
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 3, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 53 A. 182 (Jeffray v. Towar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jeffray v. Towar, 53 A. 182, 63 N.J. Eq. 530, 18 Dickinson 530, 1902 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 78 (N.J. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Emery, V. C.

The complainant, Clifford K. Jeffray, for whom Timothy T. Dwight, now deceased, held funds in trust, files this bill against Dwight’s administrator and Thomas H. Towar for an accounting and. for the-recovery from Towar of a portion of the trust .funds, or the proceeds thereof, which are alleged to be retained by him.

Towar, from the year 1884 to the year 1889, inclusive, carried on the business of a stock broker in New York City, and during those years Timothy T. Dwight was one of his customers. Towar .carried two accounts with Dwight on his books, one headed “T. T. Dwight,” the other “T. T. Dwight, Trustee.”

The main dispute in the case is whether the defendant has a right to set off the balance due to him on the individual account .against the balance due from him on the trustee account. The two accounts were opened at the same time,, and it was claimed by defendant, in his answer, that, at the time of opening the two accounts, there was an express statement by Dwight to him that any funds or securities in either account should be a margin -or security for the other account, and that both funds were Dwight’s own funds, and it was further claimed that all the .subsequent transactions with Dwight were had in reliance on this statement. Hpon the argument it has not been claimed that proof of any such statement or of any express agreement 'has been made, but it is claimed that the evidence in relation to the circumstances of opening the accounts and to the dealings between the parties, during the running of the. accounts, shows satisfactorily that there was such an agreement that the accounts -were held as margin for each other, and that this agreement was [532]*532valid, because Towar had no notice that the funds or the securities placed by Dwight to the credit of the trustee account were held by Dwight in trust for complainant, or were not Dwight’s individual property. The complainant, on the other hand, contends (1) that there was no such agreement of set-off between Dwight and' Towar, but that the trustee account was entirely separate from the individual account, and (2) that the funds in the trustee account were derived from funds held by Dwight in trust for complainant; that Towar had notice that the funds were trust funds, and that any agreement for set-off, even if made, was illegal and invalid as against complainant. The circumstances under which the accounts were opened and the status of the accounts will require statement in detail, and were as follows: Previous to April 1st, 1894, Dwight, who was the surviving executor and trustee under the will of Timothy Dwight,, and who had trust funds in his hands, had on deposit with a broker (Mr. Larned) $7,000, which belonged to the Timothy Dwight estate, the original source of the trust fund of complainant, the same being a loan to Mr. Larned, upon which interest was charged and paid. Larned says that he understood the-money on loan was held by Dwight as trustee. Larned, at the-same time, carried for Dwight a regular broker’s account, upon which he purchased and sold stocks, holding the stocks purchased as security for this account. On April 1st, 1884, the amount due Lamed on the personal account was $16)371.48, to secure which he held stocks of the value, as Larned no-w swears, of about $2,000 more. There is uncertainty about the-value of some of the stocks, and defendant claims that, at that time, there was a shortage in values of about $321.48. Mr. Larned being about to retire from business and desiring to close the accounts, Dwight applied to Towar to carry the accounts, and, as Towar says, he had one or more .conversations with Dwight about the transaction, and the substance of' the conversation was that

“Dwight said that Mr. Larned was going out of business; that he had an account there with some stocks and bonds in it; could I take the stocks over and carry them for him, to which I said E could and would be glad to do so, and did so.”

[533]*533He further says:

“I was requested to open two accounts, one for Timothy T. Dwight .and one for Timothy T„ Dwight, Trustee, which I did, charging Mr. Dwight with some $16,000, and crediting Mr. Dwight, Trustee, with $7,000, giving Larned & Company a check for the difference.”

This check, dated April 1st, 1884, was given by Towar to the -order of Larned for $9,333.98, and upon the receipt of this check the securities carried by Larned for Dwight’s account were delivered to Towar’s agent, who delivered the check. Towar .at once opened on his books two accounts, the “T. T. Dwight” .account, in which the first entry was a charge

100 Pullman,
“To Cash 100 Ont. & West.
100 Canton,
from B. P. L., Jr., $16,371.48.”

In this amount was included $37.50 as commission on the ■purchase or taking over of the stock. On the same day another account with “T. T. Dwight, Trustee” was opened on the books, with a credit of $7,000. Towar had been at one time a partner of Larned’s, and Dwight had then kept an account there, but Towar says that, prior to the time when he had the transaction with him in regard to opening an account, he had no knowledge of any account being kept with Larned. There is no evidence that Towar knew Dwight was carrying two separate accounts with Larned. So far as Towar’s books directly show, the two accounts have been kept entirely separate, and have no connection with each other. Dwight’s individual account was never .a closed account, from the time it was first opened up to the time of his death, in July, 1899, and, at that date, the amount clue to Towar on this account was over $37,000, arising on the balances due upon purchases and sales of stock by Towar for Dwight and interest. The stocks purchased were (as appears by Towar’s books and the accounts rendered to Dwight) held as security for his personal account, and at the time of Dwight’s death the value of these stocks was only $11,000, leaving a deficiency of about $26,000. Dwight died insolvent. The trustee [534]*534account was closed twice, and its course was as follows: After being opened on April 1st, 1884, with a credit of $7,000, it was increased, by subsequent deposits of cash and credits of interest, to $9,942.37 on April 1st, 1885. By a cash draft of $10,500, made on the trustee account on May 4th, 1885, not only was the entire balance drawn out, but the trustee account was overdrawn to the extent of $4,364.04. Previous to this overdraft, however, and on May 2d, as appears by a pencil memorandum on the account, fifty-eight shares of bank stock, then worth about $7,000, were held to the credit of the trustee account. Between May 13th and June 30th, 1895, twenty-six of these shares had been sold for $3,552.49, and the proceeds credited to the account, and on July 2d, 1885, Dwight, by a check for $790.64, signed by him as trustee and drawn upon a trustee account kept in bank, settled the overdraft and balanced the account. At the time of this settlement of the overdraft thirty-two shares of bank stock, delivered in May before the Overdraft, were still held by Towar, and continued to be held by him until January 20th, 1886, when they were delivered to Dwight. ■ From July 2d, 1885, up to this return of the bank stock, no deposits or drafts Avere made on the account, and the account was closed, except for this memorandum of securities held.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Kuser
26 A.2d 688 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1942)
In re the Appeal from the Order of the Orphans Court
132 N.J. Eq. 260 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1942)
In Re Mortgage Guaranty Co. of Passaic
194 A. 71 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1937)
New Amsterdam v. National Newark
175 A. 609 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1934)
Columbia Ins. Co. v. Second Bk., C., Hoboken
156 A. 327 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1931)
Rodgers v. Bankers National Bank
229 N.W. 90 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1930)
Estate of Kelley v. Kelley
255 S.W. 1064 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1923)
Sanford v. Pike
170 P. 729 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1918)
Walters Nat. Bank v. Bantock
1913 OK 737 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1913)
State Savings Bank v. Thompson
128 P. 1120 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 A. 182, 63 N.J. Eq. 530, 18 Dickinson 530, 1902 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeffray-v-towar-njch-1902.