Lewis v. MacCrone

261 N.W. 546, 272 Mich. 311, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 482
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1935
DocketDocket No. 3, Calendar No. 38,129.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 261 N.W. 546 (Lewis v. MacCrone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. MacCrone, 261 N.W. 546, 272 Mich. 311, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 482 (Mich. 1935).

Opinion

Nelson Sharpe, J.

The plaintiff opened a trading account with the defendants, a firm engaged in the stock brokerage business in the city of Detroit, in November, 1929. As he might desire to trade upon margin, he was required to execute an agreement, which provided in part as follows:

• “4. That whenever it shall become necessary, in order to carry out any of my orders which may be accepted by you, to advance or expend any money, the amount of such' advance or expenditure shall constitute a loan to me and upon demand' I promise to pay to you the amount of any and all such loans, as well as broker’s commissions upon orders,.with interest thereon at such rate as may be from time to time agreed upon, and, in the absence of such agreement, at the rate of six per cent, per annum, and I authorize you to hold as collateral security for the payment thereof, or of any liability to you now existing or which may be contracted hereafter, all money, stocks or other securities deposited with you or purchased upon my account, with full power and authority to sell, assign and deliver the whole or any part thereof, upon any stock exchange, or at any public or private sale, at your option, upon the nonperformance of this promise, or the nonpayment upon demand of any of my present or future liabil *313 ities to you, or upon my failure to maintain a margin to protect my account satisfactory to yon, without advertisement or notice, such advertisement and notice being hereby expressly waived. * .* *
“7. Any demand or other notice by yon shall be a sufficient compliance with any requirement of demand or notice of this agreement, if deposited in the United States mail or delivered to a telegraph company addressed to me at the following address or such other address as I shall have designated to yon in writing as my address for receiving notices, or to my business or residence address at the time. ”

His address was stated thereon to be 5919 Wood- ’ ward, Detroit.

With each transaction plaintiff received a con-, firmation or invoice from the defendants, on the back of which was printed, in part, as follows:

“3. That all or any of the securities in your account oi” supplied us against sales in such account, may be sold or purchased on a stock exchange, or at public or private sale, without notice, if such action, is deemed necessary by us for our protection, and any deficiency arising out off such transaction is chargeable wholly to you and will be paid by you in full. You will be' considered to admit the correctness of each statement of account as rendered un-: less written notice of exception thereto has been given to us within four days after its receipt.”

From' profits made, the plaintiff, on December 13,' 1929, had a credit balance with defendants of $2,333.50, and on that day defendants purchased for him 100' shares of Fox Film “A” stock at the market price of $44 per share. His credit balance was applied thereon. The stock steadily declined in value. On December 19th it had dropped to about $25 per share, and defendants telegraphed plaintiff demanding immediate payment of $280 to meet their *314 margin requirements. On December 20th plaintiff paid defendants $280, and later on the same day, in answer to a telephone call therefor, an additional sum of $320. The stock continued to decline. On January 2d it opened at 22% and closed at 17%. At 5:44 p. m. on that day, defendants sent a telegram to plaintiff at the address above stated, reading as follows:

“Your account is short $480 or 68 per cent, of margin requirements immediate payment at our office of this amount is requested stop loss orders have been entered for execution when account becomes approximately 75 per cent, short if you have already forwarded sufficient deposit please wire or phone us immediately — ”

This telegram was similar to that sent on December 19th, except as to the amount requested and the percentage of margin requirements stated therein.

Plaintiff had left his place of business before the telegram arrived and did not receivó it until about 9:45 the next morning. He went to defendants’ office, arriving there at about 10:20, and gave his check for $480 to Frank L. Roberts, an employee of defendants, called a “customer’s man,” with whom he had had his previous dealings.

At the time of sending the telegram the evening before, defendants’ margin clerk had entered upon bis records that an order for the sale of the stock Avould be sent on the following morning, and at about the time of the opening of the New York stock exchange at 10 a. m. an order to sell the stock when it reached 16% was transmitted by wire to their New York correspondent and telephoned by it to the floor of the exchange to be there executed. The defendants, on receipt of the $480 from plaintiff, at once wired their New York correspondent to cancel the *315 order for the sale. It reached New York at 10:33, and was at once telephoned to the exchange, but it arrived too late; the stock had been sold at. 16%. At the close of the exchange on that day, the price reached 22%, and on February 6th it reached 39%-.

On January 4,1930, defendants sent plaintiff their check for $603.04 to repay the $480 paid them on the day before and a balance of $123.04 remaining in his account. A statement that it was to balance his account was later removed therefrom, and he then received payment on it.

In the following June, plaintiff brought this action to recover the loss he claimed to have sustained by the sale of the stock. It was tried before the court and a jury, and, at the conclusion of the proofs, the trial judge, on motion of defendants’ attorney, directed a verdict for them. From the judgment entered thereon the plaintiff has taken this appeal.

The defendants contend that, under the provisions in the agreement executed by plaintiff when the account was opened and in the matter printed on the confirmation or invoice he received from them, on •plaintiff’s failure to maintain a sufficient margin to protect them they were authorized to sell his stock without notice to him. In paragraph 4 of the agree-' ment, quoted above, plaintiff agreed that “upon my failure to maintain a margin to protect my account satisfactory to you” the defendants might sell his stock without notice. Under this provision, how was the plaintiff to know at any time that his margin was not satisfactory to the defendants? The defendants had construed it to require a demand for additional margin as evidenced by their telegram to the plaintiff on December 19th, their telephone call on the afternoon of December 20th, and their telegram on January 2d. "While some of the other provisions in *316 tlie agreement and on the back of the invoice tend to support the contention of the defendants, in our opinion the plaintiff had a right to rely upon the defendants’ giving him a reasonable opportunity to protect his account in a manner satisfactory to them.

In Bache v. Johnson, 255 Mich. 328 (76 A. L. R. 1514), this court quoted with approval from 9 C. J. p. 547, as follows:

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261 N.W. 546, 272 Mich. 311, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-maccrone-mich-1935.