Leuzinger v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc.

396 S.W.2d 570
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 8, 1965
Docket51034, 51168
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 396 S.W.2d 570 (Leuzinger v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leuzinger v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., 396 S.W.2d 570 (Mo. 1965).

Opinions

HOUSER, Commissioner.

Action by Leta M. Leuzinger against a brokerage firm (hereinafter “Merrill Lynch”) and a bank to recover $29,562.82 for breach of defendants’ obligations as brokers and bankers. Merrill Lynch filed a motion for summary judgment, which was sustained as to that defendant. The bank filed a motion to dismiss, which was sustained as to the bank. Separate appeals were taken to this court by plaintiff. The two appeals were consolidated for hearing, and will be decided in one opinion.

These are the conceded, undisputed facts: Plaintiff is the wife of W. C. Leuzinger. Early in July, 1959 plaintiff made a telephone call to an account executive of Merrill Lynch. After identifying herself plaintiff stated that another employee of Merrill Lynch had previously conferred with her and her husband, and that she wanted to open a securities account with the brokerage firm. Asked what type of account, plaintiff said that she wanted to open an account where securities can be purchased, paid for in cash, sold, and the proceeds credited to the account. Plaintiff instructed the account executive to put the account in the name of her and her husband as joint tenants. The executive mailed to plaintiff’s home address the firm’s regular and customary “Joint Account with Right of Sur-vivorship Cash Transactions” form, to be signed by both plaintiff and her husband, dated, and returned so that the account could be opened. Several days later the new account card, bearing the signatures of W. C. Leuzinger and Leta M. Leuzinger, dated July 9, 1959, was returned to the of[574]*574fice of Merrill Lynch. It is reproduced as follows:

“JOINT ACCOUNT WITH RIGHT OF SURVIVORSHIP
CASH TRANSACTIONS
JUL 16 1959 Stencil Here NA-4 ( — MR. WALTER C. LEUZIN-GER
MRS. LETA M. LEUZINGER BOX 403-Y, ROUTE #6 PARKVILLE MISSOURI (_653-16974 1741
“TO: MERRILL LYNCH, PIERCE, FENNER & SMITH INCORPORATED
“Dear Sirs:
“With respect to our joint account with right of survivorship we confirm that:
“1. In all matters pertaining to the account you may act upon orders and instructions from either of us.
“2. Upon the death of either of us, all securities, funds and property in the account shall he the sole property of the survivor.
“3. The foregoing shall also extend to your successors, by merger, consolidation or otherwise, and assigns.
(Signed) W. C. Leuzinger (Signed) Leta M. Leuzinger
“Date July 9, 1959”

Plaintiff instructed the executive by telephone to purchase certain securities for the joint account, which instructions were carried out. In that transaction Mr. Leuzinger gave no instructions or directions. From July 8, 1959 through December 10, 1962 Merrill Lynch handled approximately one hundred transactions for the joint account. With the exception of two transactions which took place shortly after the account was opened, in which plaintiff gave the instructions, all of these transactions were undertaken pursuant to instructions from W. C. Leuzinger. On December 10, 1962 Merrill Lynch held certain securities, the property of W. C. Leuzinger and plaintiff, in said account. On that day, without any written or unwritten request or authorization by plaintiff, but upon request of W. C. Leuzinger, Merrill Lynch sold all of the securities in the joint account, reduced the same to cash, and received and held for the account of W. C. Leuzinger and plaintiff the sum of $59,125.65. On and prior to December 10, 1962 a checking account, standing in the joint names of plaintiff and W. C. Leuzinger, was maintained at the defendant bank. On request by W. C. Leuzinger Merrill Lynch disbursed the entire proceeds of the joint brokerage account by its check for $59,125.65 made payable to “North Kansas City State Bank for account of W. C. Leuzinger and Leta M. Leuzinger” and delivered the check to W. C. Leuzinger, without the written or unwritten authority or consent of plaintiff. W. C. Leuzinger presented the check to the bank and requested that it be deposited in the joint checking account. The bank accepted the check for deposit to' the joint checking account, the bank endorsing the check as follows:

“ ‘Credited to the account of THE WITHIN NAMED PAYEE Absence of endorsement guaranteed KANSAS CITY STATE BANK North Kansas City, Missouri’ ”

Upon the crediting of the proceeds of the check to the joint checking account W. C. Leuzinger, without the written or unwritten authorization or consent of plaintiff, immediately thereafter withdrew from the account the entire proceeds of the check in the sum of $59,125.65, and appropriated the same to his own use.

Plaintiff’s petition admitted that the brokerage account was maintained in the names of W. C. Leuzinger and Leta M. Leuzinger “as joint tenants with rights of survivor-ship, and not as tenants in common.” The theory of the petition as against Merrill Lynch was that the brokerage firm breached and violated the terms of its agreement with plaintiff by disbursing funds out of the joint brokerage account by check which [575]*575was not specifically drawn so as to require the personal endorsement of plaintiff and by delivering the check to W. C. Leu-zinger without the consent or approval of plaintiff. Plaintiff pleaded that the written agreement required Merrill Lynch to draw checks so as to require her personal endorsement, and to deliver any such check jointly to plaintiff and W. C. Leuzinger, or upon the joint order of both of them, and that by delivering the check to W. C. Leuzinger as it did, with knowledge that plaintiff had a joint interest in the proceeds, Merrill Lynch made it possible for W. C. Leuzinger to divert the entire amount of the proceeds to his own use, and deprive plaintiff of her interest therein, and thus Merrill Lynch “in legal effect converted to its own use the said $59,125.65.”

Plaintiff’s petition pleaded as against the bank that the bank breached its obligations to plaintiff and acted without authority in depositing the proceeds of the check to the joint checking account without the personal endorsement of plaintiff thereon, and in thereafter paying the net proceeds of the check to W. C. Leuzinger without the written consent or authorization of plaintiff. Plaintiff charged the bank with conversion by negotiating and transferring to W. C. Leuzinger the proceeds of the check as it did, without plaintiff’s endorsement and approval, by “wrongfully” enabling W. C. Leuzinger to divert the entire amount of the proceeds of the check to his own use and deprive plaintiff of her interest therein.

Defendants’ answers admitted the facts pleaded, but denied the legal consequences plaintiff attributed to them.

On the appeal from summary judgment for Merrill Lynch:

Plaintiff’s sole point: Error in sustaining the motion for summary judgment; that the pleadings and affidavits on file did not sustain Merrill Lynch’s burden of showing that it was entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law; that on the contrary they clearly establish that Merrill Lynch was not entitled to judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
396 S.W.2d 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leuzinger-v-merrill-lynch-pierce-fenner-smith-inc-mo-1965.