New England Trust Co. v. Farr

57 F.2d 103, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3931
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMarch 18, 1932
Docket2611
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 57 F.2d 103 (New England Trust Co. v. Farr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New England Trust Co. v. Farr, 57 F.2d 103, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3931 (1st Cir. 1932).

Opinion

MORRIS, District Judgo.

This is an action of contract, in which tho plaintiffs, appellees, hereinafter called the plaintiffs, seek; to recover the purchase price of certain slocks alleged to have been bought by the plaintiffs upon orders of the defendant appellant, hereinafter called the defendant.

There was a trial by jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiffs. The ease comes to this court on defendant’s appeal.

The plaintiffs are nine copartners doing business as Fare & Co., eight of whom are citizens and residents of New York, and the ninth a citizen and resident of New Jersey.

The defendant is a trust company organized under the laws of Massachusetts having a usual place of business in Boston.

Tho first five counts of the declaration allege breaches of contracts by the defendant to receive and pay for certain named securities ordered by the defendant. The sixth count covers thd same transactions set forth in tho first five counts, with an account annexed showing the amounts sought to be recovered under each of the preceding five counts.

Tho answer is a general denial and a plea of ultra vires.

The plaintiffs are a firm of stockbrokers who for many years have been doing! a, general stock brokerage business in New York. On February 1, .1929, they opened a branch office in Boston under the joint managership of Gilbert L. Stewart and Thomas P. Brooks, neither of whom was a partner in the- firm. Among the customers of this office wn,s the defendant, but up to about August 1, 1929, it had executed orders only for the trust department of the defendant. This business was handled on behalf of the defendant chiefly by Frederick 0. Morrill, who had been in its employ since 1903, first as messenger, then as assistant treasurer, and finally on June 28, 1929, ho was made an assistant vice president, with the additional duties of credit manager. In the extension of service to its customers, the defendant had been accustomed to receive orders for the purchase and sale of se-ourilies, causing tho same to bo executed through some brokerage house, charging the cusiomers’ deposit accounts with the amounts of such purchases or crediting them with the proceeds of such sales. When these orders were given, the name of the customer was not disclosed to the brokers. The transactions were carried through on the defendant’s credit. The identity of the particular customer for whom the stocks were purchased would he disclosed only upon payment of the bill rendered by the broker.

The business was handled on behalf of the defendant chiefly by Frederick 0. Morrill through Frank 8. Palfrey, who was employed by Farr & Co. in their Boston office. Palfrey was what is known as a “customers’ man,” and his duties were the taking of orders Erom persons and institutions for the purchase and sale of securities and informing customers concerning the stock market. Previous to August 1, 1929, Palfrey had been employed by Elmer H. Bright & Co., another brokerage house doing business in Boston, as a “customers’ man,” and while there did much business with the defendant, handled chiefly by Morrill, although other officers of the trust company from time to time had orders executed through Palfrey.

After Palfrey became connected with the plaintiffs’ organization, the defendant through Morrill gave tho plaintiffs, chiefly through Palfrey, many orders for the purchase and sale of securities in tho name and on tho credit of the trust company. It is alleged that these transactions, between August and October, 1929, numbered approximately three hundred. All of these orders were duly executed by the plaintiffs and payment made by them to the persons from whom they bought on the various stock exchanges. All of these purchases, with tho exception of six, were duly taken up and paid for by the defendant. Of the six orders which were not paid for, five were purchases of stock, when, as, and if such stock was issued by the corporations. It is these six purchases which aro the ones in suit, and a list of them, with the order dates and settlement dates, follows:

Date of Order Amount Name Basis Settlement Date
7/30/29 100 United Gas Improvement When issued 9/26/29
7/30/29 100 United Gas Improvement When issued 9/20/29
9/27/29 100 Commercial Solvents When issued 10/21/29
9/30/29 2000 rts. United Gas Improvement When issued 12/ 4/29
10/ 1/29 100 Stone & Webster Already issued 10/ 1/29
10/19/29 2000 rts. United Gas Improvement When issued 12/ 4/29

*106 In all of the above eases the plaintiffs, according to their custom, sent slips to the trust company on the day of receiving the orders confirming the receipt and execution of the same, and on the settlement dates, after payment by them, sent further slips showing the indebtedness of the trust company to them on account of each order.

On October 30, 1929, the plaintiffs’ Boston office received a letter from Messrs. Tyler, Eames, Wright & Hooper, .attorneys for the defendant in this matter, in which it was stated that the six purchases above listed “were •entirely unauthorized” by the defendant, and that it disavowed “all such unauthorized purchases” and disclaimed “all responsibility in connection therewith.”

Thereafter, on December 5, 1929, the plaintiffs sold the securities and brought this action to recover the difference between the amount for which they had purchased the securities and the amount received by them upon their sale.

The defendant by its answer denies that it made or authorized such purchases, and, further answering, says that the transactions in question were wholly and entirely ultra vires the said trust company, and that it is therefore in no way responsible for them.

It alleges that the purchases in issue were made by Morrill without actual authority from the defendant, and were for his own benefit; that Palfrey knew, or should have known, of Morrill’s lack of authority to make the purchases; that Palfrey’s knowledge was to be imputed to the plaintiffs; that the plaintiffs were thereupon put upon inquiry as to 'Morrill’s actual authority to make each particular purchase; and, inasmuch as all of the purchases in issue were in faet for Morrill’s own account, and not for the trust company or a customer, that the plaintiffs were barred from recovery.

The evidence establishes that Frederick O. Morrill was assistant vice president and assistant treasurer of the New England Trust Company, and vested with authority to purchase stock in the name of the trus^ compa/-ny whenever it became desirable to purchase shares for a customer; that the orders usually were placed by Morrill through Palfrey with Farr & Co.

All of the transactions in question, between Morrill and Farr & Co., were executed through Palfrey.

The defendant has assigned forty-four alleged errors. The first fifteen relate to rulings on evidence. The next twenty-two assignments are based on the refusal of the trial court to given certain rulings requested by the defendant. The last seven embody defendant’s objections and exceptions to the charge of the trial court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 F.2d 103, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3931, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-england-trust-co-v-farr-ca1-1932.