Levy v. . Loeb

85 N.Y. 365, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 95
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 31, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 85 N.Y. 365 (Levy v. . Loeb) 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
Levy v. . Loeb, 85 N.Y. 365, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 95 (N.Y. 1881).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The contract between these parties was primarily one of agency. The defendants were bankers and brokers, and were employed by the plaintiffs to buy “ for their account and *368 risk,” $100,000 of United States sixes of 1881, and the same amount of bonds of 1867. The purchase-price was to be advanced by the defendants and take the form of a loan, upon which interest at four per cent was to be charged and allowed, the bonds meanwhile being held as collateral to the loan, but to be carried by the defendants for plaintiffs’ account.

The bonds of 1881 were bought in Frankfort. They were purchased by the defendants in their own name and paid for by them. As between them and the vendors abroad, there was no claim or trace of agency, but a sale to the defendants directly. The title to the bonds, their ownership and possession, passed to the bankers making the purchase, so completely and perfectly, that the latter could, as ¡they in fact afterward did, transfer to others the identical bonds thus bought, by a valid and absolute title. The purchase was made on the 16th and 17th of February, 1876, in part by Goldschmidt & Risdorff, and in part by the Deutsche Vereins banks, acting for and on account of defendants, and in obedience to a telegram requesting such purchase. On the 18th of February, and while the bonds were just started upon their transfer from Frankfort, the defendants gave the plaintiffs written notice that the former had bought for the latter and for their account and risk, $50,000 of the 1881s, at 123§, and $50,000, at 123f, to be carried at four per cent per annum. As matter of fact the statement was not true. The Special Term found that the real and actual cost of the bonds was less than the price represented and charged, by the sum of $577.82, which last sum was explained as made up of 1691.65 reich marks charged for insurance, which had not been paid or incurred; and a charge for commissions for purchasing the bonds in Frankfort, called courtage,” which amounted to 205 reich marks more. It is apparent, therefore, that the agents, instead of buying for the account and risk of their principal alone, bought these bonds on their own account at a fixed price, and held them for the principals at a larger price and for a profit which was meant to be realized; the latter supposing the defendants to be acting wholly for their benefit and in their interest as such principals. *369 The agent employed to buy undertook to transfer the bonds to the principal at a profit beyond their cost, concealing the truth of the transaction from the latter. This phase of the purchase and sale is not modified by the suggestion, very urgently pressed upon our attention, that no particular or identical bonds were intended on either side, but only so much of the ¡National debt of the government, without reference to the numbers or identity of the bonds. Whatever was bought on the one hand and transferred on the other was in that view only more clearly property bought by the defendants, and put upon the plaintiffs at a profit, without a suspicion on the part of the latter that the defendants were acting in their own interest, rather than as disinterested and faithful agents.

Something equally questionable in its nature, though more trifling in amount, took place in the purchase of the bonds of 1867. • They were bought in June, 1876, of Fisk & Hatch by the defendants, who charged their principals with a commission for buying, and received also from the seller a commission of $31.25 for selling. The agent for the buyer was also agent for the seller, and took commissions from both sides with impartial confidence in the propriety of so doing.

The purchase having been made the bonds were to be carried ” by the defendants for an interest, at first, of four per cent. It is found as a fact by the Special Term that they agreed to carry the original bonds purchased for the plaintiffs’ account.” There is evidence to sustain this finding. The written notification given by the defendants was of a purchase at a particular date for plaintiffs’ account and risk. The latter swear that they applied for the numbers of the bonds, and give the reasons why their identity was important. There is dispute on the subject, but we must be concluded by the finding, more especially since it is not excepted to by the defendants, nor is there any request to find the contrary. The original bonds, bought in Frankfort, and of Fisk & Hatch, were not carried in pursuance of the agreement. It is found that, before the maturity of the loan, and while the contract to carry was in force, the *370 defendants for their own account, without the knowledge and consent of plaintiffs, sold the whole lot of original bonds.

There is abundant evidence to justify this conclusion, and it must be taken as a fact in the case. It is entirely inconsistent with the theory and argument of the defendants, that so long as they kept on hand an amount of government bonds, of the issues in question, ready for delivery upon demand, it mattered not that the identical bonds were gone. It is, perhaps, necessary to concede that ordinarily, and in the absence of any special agreement, the identical bonds need not be retained. It has been so held as to stocks. (Taussig v. Hart, 58 N. Y. 425.) It is not easy to see why the same rule must not be applied to government bonds. But here it is found and certified to us as a fact that the parties themselves agreed that the original bonds should be carried. It was competent for them to make such an agreement, and we cannot ignore it or substitute something else in its place. If we could disregard the stipulation to carry the original bonds, and say that it was enough to have others on hand ready for delivery, a further difficulty would arise out of the refusal of the trial judge to find any such fact. The defendants, it is true, testified to it, but their cross-examination made their statement somewhat doubtful and uncertain. Their books of account were produced and, it it claimed, showed more bonds due from defendants than they had in their possession. Those books are not here. We do not know their contents. We cannot say that the Special Term erred in its refusal to find the fact requested. In any event, therefore we seem to be compelled to take it as a fact that the agreement to carry the bonds was not performed.

Of these facts the plaintiffs were kept in ignorance. Some time after the alleged purchase an account was rendered to them of the transaction, in which they were treated as the • owners of the bonds, and credited with coupons collected, and upon which they paid something more than $10,000. In this account were involved all the improper charges originally made, including six per cent of additional interest for the period between the shipment of the bonds from Trank fort and their ar *371 rival in Hew York, making for that space of time an interest of ten per cent instead of the four per cent agreed upon for carrying. At the maturity of the loan the plaintiffs were called upon to pay the alleged indebtedness, or to be sold out. The amount demanded included the excess charged- over the cost. The original bonds were long before sold, but the pretense of their being held and carried was still kept up.

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Bluebook (online)
85 N.Y. 365, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levy-v-loeb-ny-1881.