Miller v. Schloss

159 A.D. 704, 144 N.Y.S. 996, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8255
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 31, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 159 A.D. 704 (Miller v. Schloss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Schloss, 159 A.D. 704, 144 N.Y.S. 996, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8255 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinions

Scott, J.:

This is an action for moneys had and received.

The complaint contained three counts. The third, however, was abandoned at the trial, and plaintiffs elected to stand on the first and second. The first cause of action alleges that on April 27, 1904, plaintiffs paid to defendant the sum of $6,830 upon defendant’s promise to pay and apply the same in extinguishment of plaintiffs’ liability for the same amount to one C. P. Hunt; that defendant failed to pay the said Hunt, who thereupon sued plaintiffs for said amount and recovered judg[706]*706ment, which was paid. The second cause of action is in the usual form for moneys had and received generally for plaintiffs’ use.

The answer, besides certain formal denials, pleads a general release executed by plaintiffs on said April 27, 1904.

Although the record is a voluminous one, the essential facts • are not in dispute and are not complicated. In the years 1903 and 1904 the plaintiffs (or their predecessors in business under the same firm name) were cotton brokers in the city of New York and members of the New York Cotton Exchange. Defendant was also a member of said Cotton Exchange and resided in Memphis.

Defendant’s business, or an important part of it, was to solicit orders from customers to be executed on the New York Cotton Exchange. These he turned over to plaintiffs for execution. They carried them out, and the commissions, which were considerable, were divided between plaintiffs and defendant. The accounts on plaintiffs’ books were kept in defendant’s name, no mention being made of the customers whose orders defendant had received. In short the business was carried on, as between plaintiffs and defendant, as if plaintiffs were the brokers and defendant was the customer. No doubt plaintiffs knew perfectly well that defendant was not carrying on these large operations wholly on his own account, but they never recognized his customers as their customers, or recognized any one as their customer except only the defendant. This clearly appears to have been the understood course of business between the plaintiffs and defendant. Prior to January, 1904, defendant had three accounts with plaintiffs, a stock account, a loan account, and a cotton account No. 1, and so referred to hereinafter. In January, 1904, defendant opened a fourth account, known as cotton account No. 2. At defendant’s request these two cotton accounts were separately kept, defendant advising plaintiffs with each order as to which account it belonged. Account No. 1 represented principally or wholly the-transactions of one of defendant’s customers named Barrett. Account No. 2 represented principally or wholly transactions of one of defendant’s customers named O. P. Hunt. Although, as has been said, it is evident that plaintiffs knew that the orders given them by defendant to be executed on account of account [707]*707No. 2 represented orders given to him by some other person, there is no evidence that they knew who that person was until about March 25, 1904. When defendant was called upon to furnish margins for account No. 1, it was his custom to draw drafts upon Barrett for the amount required. As to account No. 2, when called upon for margins, defendant’s custom was to telegraph to Hunt, who deposited the required amount in a Memphis bank to the credit of plaintiffs’ New York bank.

Both of the cotton accounts were active ones and the business ran on without friction until late in March, 1904, when a large deficit developed in account No. 1, owing to the failure of Barrett to honor drafts drawn upon him by defendant in order to protect the losses incurred in said account. The other cotton account, No. 2, showed a considerable profit, and plaintiffs, insisting, as they did throughout, that the only person they knew or had dealings with was the defendant, and that both cotton accounts carried on their books were accounts with him and no one else, transferred to the credit of account No. 1, which showed a deficit, from account No. 2, which showed a profit, a considerable amount. Defendant vigorously objected to this course, insisting that as the plaintiffs, at his request, had kept the accounts separately, they should continue to be kept distinct. He was apparently not financially able to make good the deficit in account No. 1, but notwithstanding this he insisted that plaintiffs should assume and bear the loss on account No. 1, remaining liable to him, and through him to his customers.for the profit shown in account No. 2. It is true that defendant did not put his demands in this particular form, but such would have been the inevitable effect of a compliance with his demands. The plaintiffs continued to insist that they knew only defendant in the transactions; that they had no account with his customers, and that it was their right to offset his profits in one account against his losses in another. Finding it impossible to shake this determination on the part of plaintiffs, defendant arranged to transfer his business to another Cotton Exchange house and asked plaintiffs to make up his accounts with them. This was done by one of plaintiffs’ bookkeepers, defendant standing at his side and understanding precisely how the account was made up. At that time defend[708]*708ant owed plaintiffs the sum of $2,500 on his loan account, and cotton account No. 1, notwithstanding the transfers to it, showed a debit balance against defendant of $8,670. On the other hand cotton account No. 2, notwithstanding the amount transferred from it to account No. 1, showed a credit balance in plaintiffs’ favor of $4,512.03, and there was also a balance in defendant’s favor in his stock account of $404.18. The summary statement of the accounts between plaintiffs and defendant when the settlement was arrived at on April 25, 1904, was as follows:

Thereupon defendant paid plaintiffs the balance of $6,253.79 shown by the foregoing summary to be due to them, and in return they released a lien they held upon defendant’s Cotton Exchange membership, returned to him the dishonored drafts upon Barrett and gave him a general release in the usual form. The debit balance of $6,253.79 shown by the statement and which defendant paid, was arrived at, in part, by crediting to account No. 1 a portion of the profit balance standing to the credit of account No. 2, and it is abundantly clear that when defendant accepted this summary account as correctly stating the balance due from him to plaintiffs and paid the balance, he knew and understood that a part of his apparent indebtedness as shown by account No. 1 had been reduced and treated as paid by the transfer to the credit of that account of a part of the balance standing to his credit on account No. 2. In other words the losses incurred in account No. 1 were paid partly in cash and partly by the transfer of profits realized upon account No. 2. If defendant had been the only person interested in both cotton accounts, as plaintiffs persistently claimed that he was as between themselves and himself, this method of striking a balance would have been unimpeachable, for it is obvious that where a broker carries two accounts for the same customer and one account shows a loss and the other a profit, [709]*709the broker in order to ascertain the amount due from him to his customer or from his customer to -him is entitled to set off the profit in one account against the loss in the other and to pay or receive only the net difference. There remained, however, in this case the fact that the operations in account Ho. 2 or the greater part of them had been in fact carried on for O. P. Hunt, defendant’s customer.

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Bluebook (online)
159 A.D. 704, 144 N.Y.S. 996, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-schloss-nyappdiv-1913.