Mandeville v. Pooler

198 A. 235, 60 R.I. 273, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 139
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 29, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 198 A. 235 (Mandeville v. Pooler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mandeville v. Pooler, 198 A. 235, 60 R.I. 273, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 139 (R.I. 1938).

Opinion

*274 Condon, J.

This is an action of assumpsit which was tried before a justice of the superior court sitting with a jury and resulted in a directed verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $99.08, plus interest. The plaintiff’s motion for a directed .verdict in the sum of $4030.58, with interest, was denied by the trial justice and to this ruling the plaintiff excepted.

The case is now before us on the plaintiff’s bill of exceptions setting out this exception and others taken during the trial. However, the plaintiff is now relying solely on its exception to the denial of its motion for a directed verdict in the sum above mentioned.

The facts are undisputed. They arise out of certain relations between the defendant and the brokerage firm of Mandeville, Brooks & Chaffee, hereinafter referred to as Mandeville, in the purchase and sale of several lots of “when *275 issued” stock in the fall of 1929. On divers days of that year, namely, August 7, October 5, 16 and 17 and November 4, the defendant ordered, through Mandeville, said lots of stock. On September 19, 1929, he sold through the same brokers one lot of one hundred shares of said stock. These stocks had been admitted to trading on the New York Curb Exchange. However, transactions in them were not cleared on the day following, as were transactions in actually issued stock, but on the day when the stock was actually issued. A purchaser of such stock coñséquently was not entitled to receive the stock purchased until it was actually issued.

The defendant’s orders for this stock were handled for him by Mandeville on their marginal account with F. B. Keech ,& Company, a New York brokerage firm, hereinafter referred to as Keech. When these orders were put through, his brokers did not receive actual stock but merely a notice that the prders had been put through and that the proper entry had been made in the account of Mandeville with Keech. In putting through these orders, Keech entered into written contracts with a firm of New York Curb brokers binding Keech to pay for said stock if, as and when issued. Keech required Mandeville to keep these orders properly margined.

Mandeville did not debit defendant on their books when purchases were made or credit him when sales were made of said “when issued” stock. One block of said stock was issued on November 22, 1929, and the remainder on April 2, 1930. The defendant, however, was neither debited, on Mandeville’s books for purchases, nor credited with sales, until after Mandeville had failed and after the date of November 22, 1929.

On November 18, 1929 Mandeville became insolvent and was suspended from the New York Stock Exchange and the New York Curb Exchange. On November 21, 1929, Keech finally closed but the Mandeville contracts for the purchase of the “when issued” stocks in question here. No tender of these stocks was ever made to the defendant" either by the *276 receiver in equity of Mandeville or by their trustee in bankruptcy.

The defendant had a margin account with Mandeville until the latter part of October, 1929. On or about October 28, 1929, he ordered this account transferred to the Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company and this was done by Mandeville. According to the defendant’s testimony, which was not contradicted, it was understood by Mandeville that the bank was to take over and pay for the “when issued” ptocks when deliverable and this is corroborated by the following letter addressed to the bank by Mandeville, Brooks & Chaffee:

“October 28, 1929.
R. I. Hospital Trust Company
Providence, R. I.
Gentlemen:
We have today received instructions from Mr. Milton W. Pooler to deliver to you as soon as payable two hundred (200) shares of Middle West Utilities Common New Stock and two hundred (200) shares of General Gas & Electric 'A’ new.
Will you kindly confirm these instructions to us.
Very truly yours,
Mandeville, Brooks & Chaffee
By: (Signed) R. Thornton.”

Defendant admits that the last purchase of two hundred shares of “when issued” Middle West Utilities New Stock .made on November 4, 1929 and incorrectly debited on November 6, 1929, was not covered by the above letter, but he testified that the same arrangements as made in that letter .were made as to this item. The state of the defendant’s account with Mandeville is shown by entries made by them up to .November 18,1929 only, as subsequent entries were made by either their receivers in equity, their trustee in bankruptcy or by the M. B. C. Company.

*277 The M. B. C. Company is a Rhode Island corporation which was organized in June 1930, in accordance with a composition plan approved by the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island, for the purpose of taking over, collecting and liquidating the remaining assets of Mandeville for the benefit of creditors. After their insolvency Mandeville first went into a state receivership in .equity in the superior court but later they were adjudicated bankrupts and their affairs were finally administered in the bankruptcy court.

Sufficient facts have been stated, we think, to make clear just what this case is about and also to understand properly the contentions of the parties. As the M. B. C. Company is the real party plaintiff in interest, it will be hereinafter referred to as the plaintiff.

The plaintiff contends that the defendant is liable for the transactions in these “when issued” stocks, because the acts of Mandeville in arranging for the purchase of said “when .issued” stocks, were the acts of the defendant, as principal, and therefore that all necessary expenditures and losses resulting to Mandeville, as agents, from the performance of the agency are legally chargeable to the defendant.

It is admitted by the defendant that in the execution of orders for the sale or purchase of securities the ordinary relationship of the customer to his broker is that of principal and agent. That is the law of this state; Leand v. Clark, Childs & Co., 53 R. I. 479, and it is also the law generally. Meyer, Law of Stockbrokers and Stock Exchanges, § 39, 1, (1931 ed.) p. 249. A broker may, however, deal in securities on his own account, in which case his relation to his customer is that of vendor and vendee. In re B. Solomon & Co., 268 Fed. 108. In the instant case the defendant expressly admits in his brief that in each of the transactions in question the relation between him and Mandeville was that of principal and agent.

*278 The general rule is well settled that a principal must indemnify his agent against the consequences of all acts legally and reasonably done by him in the execution of his agency. And it has been held that this general rule applies in the case of the employment of a broker to sell property for future delivery. Bibb

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Bluebook (online)
198 A. 235, 60 R.I. 273, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mandeville-v-pooler-ri-1938.