Lowenstein v. Bache

41 Pa. Super. 552, 1910 Pa. Super. LEXIS 265
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 3, 1910
DocketAppeal, No. 126
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 41 Pa. Super. 552 (Lowenstein v. Bache) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lowenstein v. Bache, 41 Pa. Super. 552, 1910 Pa. Super. LEXIS 265 (Pa. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Opinion by

Porter, J.,

The court below entered judgment in favor of the defend-i ants upon a demurrer to the statement filed by the plaintiff in this action of assumpsit. The plaintiff’s statement averred that in the year 1902 he entered into an agreement with the defendants to act as his bankers, brokers and agents in the buying and selling of stocks on his behalf and in the advancing of sums of money on his behalf, in the making of such purchases, and to hold as collateral security for such loans and advances the stock of plaintiff so purchased; that at the time plaintiff so engaged the defendants to act as his brokers and agents it was orally agreed on behalf of the defendant firm that they would furnish said advances or loans at a fixed rate of five per cent interest, irrespective of the market rate of interest; and said agreement to exist and continue so long as the defendants should be permitted to act as the plaintiff’s bankers, brokers and agents; that defendants continued to act as plaintiff’s bankers, brokers and agents until June 21, 1907, purchasing and selling stocks and other securities from time to time and making advances upon account of such purchases, [555]*555holding the stocks and bonds as security for the advances, as set forth in detail in the exhibits attached to the statement; that at several dates specified, from December, 1905, to March, 1907, the .defendants rendered to the plaintiff statements of the purchases and sales of securities made for him and the sums advanced by the defendants on account thereof and of the interest charged him for said advances; that upon certain dates these statements charged the plaintiff with interest at a rate in excess of five per cent, the amount of such excess being in each instance specifically set forth in the plaintiff’s statement filed in this case, and aggregating $832.84; that plaintiff repeatedly protested to the defendants against these overcharges of interest and demanded that the same be stricken from the account, and that Walter C. Louchheim, one of the defendants, on behalf of the defendant firm promised and assured the plaintiff that the matter would be made right and the total amount of overcharge would be credited and allowed the plaintiff whenever he desired to withdraw his account; that on June 21,1907, the plaintiff notified the defendant firm that he desired to close his account; that the defendants then had in their possession certain stocks and securities, enumerated in the statement, belonging to the plaintiff which they held as collateral security for the sums which they had advanced, which stocks and securities were kept by the defendants in their New York office and the plaintiff did not know the certificate. numbers nor could he identify said stock; that plaintiff then demanded that the total amount of the interest overcharges be stricken from his account, in accordance with the agreement between him and the defendants, and offered to pay the defendants the balance justly due them, to wit: the amount which the defendants claimed less $832.84, the total amount of excessive charges for interest, and demanded the return of the stocks and certificates which the defendants held as collateral. The statement further averred that the defendant firm, through one of its members,'declared that they would not accept the sum which the plaintiff offered, declined to deduct any part of the excessive interest charges, demanded the full sum of $4,209.74 and refused to deliver to plaintiff the [556]*556stocks and securities held by the defendants as collateral until the said sum was paid; that plaintiff protested that the sum of $4,209.74 was not justly due, and he informed the defendants that he would pay said sum because they refused, without such payment, to surrender the stocks and securities which they held as collateral, and that he would bring suit against them to recover the amount which he was thus compelled to overpay; and that he did on June 21, 1907, because the defendants refused to surrender to him his stock without such payment, cause to be paid to the said defendants the sum of $4,209.74 and his stock was thereupon surrendered to him.

The statement sufficiently avers the date upon which the plaintiff’s cause of action rose, if upon the facts stated he is entitled to recover, and the first ground of demurrer is not well taken. The agreement as to the rate at which interest on the advances was to be charged is in the statement set forth in exact terms, the rate was to be five per centum, and the second ground of demurrer cannot be sustained. The exhibits attached to plaintiff’s statement were accounts rendered, but the averment of the statement, that the plaintiff protested to the defendants against the overcharges of interest and that the defendants agreed that they would correct the same, negatives any presumption that any one of the accounts rendered ever became an account stated between the parties; and the third ground of demurrer is without foundation. The court below, as indicated by the opinion filed, did not consider the statement defective for any of the reasons above suggested, but decided against the plaintiff’s right to recover upon the question raised by the last three grounds of demurrer, which squarely raise the question of the right of the plaintiff to recover the money which he paid to the defendants in order to obtain possession of his bonds and stocks and the certificates which were the evidence of title to the same. The court below held that under the facts averred in the statement the payment which the plaintiff made to. the defendants in order to obtain possession of his property was a voluntary payment and could not be recovered back.

The general principle that money voluntarily paid with full [557]*557knowledge of the facts, in the absence of fraud, cannot be recovered back, is well settled. Is a payment of money made under the facts and circumstances averred in this statement a voluntary payment, in contemplation of law? In one sense it may be said to be voluntary, for there is no physical compulsion upon him who pays. The person of the plaintiff was under no duress, but his property and all evidence of title thereto was in the possession of the defendants, held by them as security for a debt. The defendants had taken that property and the evidence of title thereto into their possession as security for a debt and had contracted to redeliver it to the plaintiff upon payment of the debt, with interest at the rate of five per centum. The plaintiff offered to pay the defendants the amount due and demanded his property in their possession; defendants declared that they would not accept the sum due and demanded $832,84 more than was due and refused to deliver the property of plaintiff, unless he complied with their excessive demand; and plaintiff, in order to obtain possession of his own property, paid the amount unlawfully demanded, protesting against the same and notifying them that he would bring an action to recover it.

The only effect of a protest is to show the involuntary character of. a payment procured by duress, and the intention to reclaim the money. There must be compulsion, actual, present and potential, inducing the payment by force of conditions which render the person or property subject to the control of the party demanding payment, when the party so paying may give notice of the illegality of the demand, his involuntary payment and intention to reclaim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 Pa. Super. 552, 1910 Pa. Super. LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowenstein-v-bache-pasuperct-1910.