Pearlman v. Newburger

178 A. 402, 117 Pa. Super. 328, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 421
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 13, 1935
DocketAppeal 558
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 178 A. 402 (Pearlman v. Newburger) 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
Pearlman v. Newburger, 178 A. 402, 117 Pa. Super. 328, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 421 (Pa. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion by

Stadteeld, J.,

This is an action in assumpsit by Martin M. Pearl-man against Frank L. Newburger et al., trading as Newburger, Henderson and Loeb, instituted in the Court of Common Pleas No. 4 of Philadelphia County. Plaintiff, in the statement filed, claimed $33,323.61 with interest, to which defendants filed an affidavit of defense and counter-claim in the sum of $4,302.85, subsequently reduced by stipulation to $2,181.10, with interest. Plaintiff filed a reply to the counter-claim. Subsequently defendants filed two supplemental affidavits of defense.

The case was called for trial January 11, 1934, before McDevitt, J., and was proceeded with in due course as a trial before a jury. Shortly before the termination of the trial, counsel agreed to have it decided by the court without a jury, in accordance with the provisions of the Act of April 22, 1874, P. L. 109, setting forth the procedure for such trials, and subsequently a written stipulation to that effect was filed. The trial was concluded on January 12, 1934, and the stenographic notes were filed on January 29, 1934. Subsequently, on April 24,1934, the court filed its findings of fact, discussion and conclusions of law. The court’s decision was in favor of defendants, not only as to the plaintiff’s claim but also as to the defendant’s counter-claim, and the court found for the defendants in the sum of $2,217.31.

Subsequently the plaintiff appellant filed a motion and reasons to strike off the findings of fact, conclusions and discussion, on the ground that they were not filed within sixty days after the termination of the trial, and also filed exceptions to the various findings of fact, conclusions of law and the adjudication, and *331 the answers of the court to the points submitted by counsel. After argument on that motion and the exceptions before the court in banc, the court dismissed the exceptions and overruled the motion on June 16, 1934. Judgment was entered on the findings of the court in favor of defendant appellees in the amount of the counter-claim, $2,217.31. From that judgment this appeal was taken. Thereafter on October 2, 1934, the lower court filed a formal per curiam opinion approving the findings of fact and conclusions of law stated by the trial judge.

Plaintiff, Martin M. Pearlman, is a resident of the city of Philadelphia. Defendants are co-partners, trading as Newburger, Henderson and Loeb, engaged, in the same city, as stock and bond brokers. Appellant plaintiff had for several years carried a margin account with the defendants.

On June 6, 1922, an agreement had been executed by plaintiff and delivered to defendants, in the form following: “Messrs. Newburger, Henderson & Loeb, In consideration of your acting as brokers for the undersigned, it is hereby agreed that all stocks, bonds, securities or other evidences of debt carried in said account, or deposited to. secure the same, now or in the future, may be carried in your general loans, and may be pledged or loaned by you either to yourselves or to others, separately or in common with other stocks or securities, and either for .the sum due to you thereon or for a greater sum, all without notice to the undersigned, and irrespective of the kind or amount of other stocks or securities retained by you in your possession and subject to your control, and that they may also be sold or bought, at public or private sale, or at the New York or Philadelphia Stock Exchanges, without notice or demand for margins, when such sale or purchase is deemed necessary by you for your protection, and that contracts may be settled by yon in *332 accordance with the rules and customs of the New York or Philadelphia Stock Exchange.

“This agreement shall be deemed to apply to all stocks or securities heretofore or hereafter carried or deposited in said account. Dated 6-22 1922. Signature M. M. Pearlman.”

Por a long time prior to October 21,1929, appellant had a very large account with appellees. The market had been falling. By letter of October 18, 1929, the appellees demanded additional collateral or selling orders since the account required $300,000 to make up the proper margin. The plaintiff was unable to deposit additional collateral.

The trial judge, in the opinion filed, found, inter alia, that the agreement aforesaid was the basis of the dealings between the parties; that there was no contract entered into between the plaintiff and the defendants on October 21,1929, to sell the entire account of the plaintiff and that there was no consideration for such an alleged contract; that selling orders were given by the plaintiff to the defendants on October 18,19 and on October 21,1929, on the last date beginning at 9:30 A. M., down to and including 2:30 of the same day; that all of these selling orders were ratified and confirmed by the said plaintiff; that confirmation notices were sent covering these various selling orders from October 18, 1929, down to and including October 21, 1929, and received by the plaintiff; that no complaint was made by the plaintiff as to these transactions until November 8, 1929; that plaintiff by his conduct ratified and confirmed all that was done by the defendants in this case; that under all the evidence in the case the verdict is for the defendants in the amount of the counter-claim, $2,217.31.

The findings of the trial judge, when confirmed By the court in banc, have the effect of a jury’s verdict, and will not be disturbed on appeal if the record dis *333 closes sufficient evidence or reasonable inferences therefrom to sustain them: Hillegass, Trustee, v. Warren, 313 Pa. 394, 169 A. 754; Stern et al., Liquidating Trustees, v. Gorson, 315 Pa. 315, 172 A. 720. We must accordingly turn to the record to ascertain the basis of the trial judge’s findings.

The plaintiff claimed that one Lester Degenstein, an employee of the defendants, generally known as the customer’s man, and with whom plaintiff always dealt, called him on the telephone on October 21, 1929, between 10:30 and 11:00 o’clock, A. M., and told him “that Mr. Frank Newburger had told him to call me immediately and wanted me to put up $400,000—I said to Mm, ‘Lester, there is still considerable equity in the account.’ He said, ‘Well, the market is dropping and Mr. Newburger is very much disturbed because he says he has got to protect Mmself and we have got to have this money or we will have to sell the account.’ ‘But,’ he said, ‘You can talk to Mr. New-burger yourself, and maybe whatever you arrange with him it will be all right.’ I said to him, ‘Lester, I don’t want to talk to Frank Newburger. I said, you give Frank Ms message. You tell him to sell everytMng I have in my account and clean out all the accounts that I have guaranteed and that will protect him.’ That was the morning of the 21st. He (Degenstein) said ‘all right.’ ”

In support of this alleged instruction “to sell everytMng,” plaintiff offered in evidence a letter from defendants to one Irving M. Filmore, a son-in-law of plaintiff, and whose account plaintiff had guaranteed, dated January 3, 1930, in wMch defendants state “......beg to advise that your account as presented was guaranteed by Mr. M. M. Pearlman, and acting under the instructions of Mr. Pearlman, in which he stated to us to liquidate the accounts in which he had *334

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Bluebook (online)
178 A. 402, 117 Pa. Super. 328, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearlman-v-newburger-pasuperct-1935.