Porter v. . Wormser

94 N.Y. 431, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 287
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 94 N.Y. 431 (Porter v. . Wormser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Porter v. . Wormser, 94 N.Y. 431, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 287 (N.Y. 1884).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

This action is brought to open and review an account between the parties, commencing July, 1878, and ending August, 1879, of transactions in the purchase and sale of stocks and government bonds. The defendants were stockbrokers, and also dealers in government bonds on then own account. They purchased and sold upon the orders and for .the account of the plaintiff from time to time during the period mentioned, stocks to a large amount, upon which the plaintiff realized a profit of $30,000 or thereabouts, which was credited to him by the defendants in his account.

The particular transaction between the parties, which is the subject of controversy upon this appeal, originated in an ex-ecutory agreement made on or about the 22d of May, 1879, for the purchase by the plaintiff of the defendants of $1,000,000 United States four per cent bonds at the average price of about 103T9y, and the sale of bonds to that amount by the defendants on account of the plaintiff on the 13th, 14th and 15th days of August, 1879, at an aggregate sum, which, after charg *441 ing interest on the purchase-price at the rate of three per cent per annum, and commissions on the sale, and crediting the July coupons, was $24,637.55 less than the sum the plaintiff was to pay for the bonds under the agreement of Hay. previous. This sum the defendants charged to the plaintiff in their account as the loss sustained by him in the transaction, and the right to charge this loss to the plaintiff is the only point now in controversy.

The written evidence of the contract for the purchase of the bonds is contained in several sale notes delivered by the defendants to the plaintiff, dated the 22d and 23d of Hay, 1879, commencing “ Sold to D. H. Porter, Esq., by I. and S. Wormser,” and specifying the amount of the bonds sold, the, price, and stating that they were to be carried by the defendants for sixty days at three per cent interest per annum. Contemporaneously with the several transactions the cashier or bookkeeper of the defendants entered in their book of sales of bonds a statement, under appropriate headings, of the name of the plaintiff as buyer, the dates, the amount, the description and the price. These entries followed an entry of a sale to another person, in which the bonds sold to him were described as four per cent C’p. B’s,” and the bonds sold to the plaintiff were described in the entry by the abbreviation do.” written under the preceding description. On June 20, 1879, just prior to the departure of the plaintiff for Europe, the defendants gave to the plaintiff a writing, by which they agreed to carry the bonds, if not sold at the expiration of the sixty days’ arrangement, for further thirty days ” at three per cent interest per annum. The plaintiff in his complaint impeaches the item in the account of $24,637.55 first, upon the ground of fraud of the defendants, actual and constructive, in the origin of the transaction, by reason of which the plaintiff alleged, he was entitled to, and did, immediately on learning the facts, on the 6th day of September, 1879, rescind the contract of purchase; and second, that the sale of the bonds on his account on the 13th, 14th and 15th days of August, 1879, was unauthorized and constituted a breach of the defendants’ agree *442 ment to carry the bonds for ninety days, which time did not expire until August 21,1879. There is no suggestion in the complaint of any objection to the charge in question, except upon the grounds just stated.

The plaintiff failed on the trial to prove the fraud alleged in the complaint. The evidence shows that the transaction was, in its origin, an executory agreement by the defendants, as vendors, to sell to the plaintiff, as vendee, $1,000,000 of government bonds at the prices mentioned in the sale notes, and to carry them for the time and at the rate of interest specified. The allegations of fraud were not only unproved, but' were disproved, and the first ground alleged in the complaint for impeaching the account may be dismissed without further consideration.

Upon the facts hitherto stated, the sale of the bonds on the 13th, 14th and 15th days of August, 1879, was unauthorized, and furnished no foundation for charging the plaintiff with the difference between the purchase-price of the bonds and the amount for which they were sold. The plaintiff at the time of the sale was not in default. The contract to carry had not expired, and the sale cannot be regarded as the exercise by a vendor of personal property of a right to resell on account of the vendee, and to charge the latter for the loss, for the plain reason that such right in any given case does not come into existence, and can be exercised only after default by the vendee. (See Dustan v. McAndrew, 44 N. Y. 72; Mason v. Decker, 72 id. 595; 28 Am. Rep. 190.) If, therefore, there were no facts in the case except as so far stated, it would follow that the item of $24,637.55 should be expunged from the account. But the defendants rely for their authority for the sale of the bonds prior to the expiration of the time for which they were to be carried, and before the plaintiff was in default, upon a “ stop order,” so called, given, by the plaintiff on the 20th of June, 1869. This was. an order, in writing, directing the defendants to sell for account of the plaintiff and at his risk “ $500,000 United States four per cent bonds at 103, ex. July coupons and accrued interest; $500,000 do. at 103-¿- *443 do. do.; or at your (their) discretion, ‘ stop order,’ §500,000 United States four per cent bond at lOOf, ex. July coupons and accrued interest; $500,000 do. at lOOf- do. do.” The construction of this order presents one of the principal questions in the case. When this order was given, the contract made in Hay for the purchase and sale of the bonds had not matured and was still in full force. The market price of government bonds had declined, and the plaintiff was about leaving New York, where he resided, for Europe. He procured the extension of the time for which the defendants were to carry the bonds, as before stated, and concurrently therewith gave the stop order” in question. It is not controverted that the order related to the same bonds which the plaintiff had previously contracted to purchase.

The definition of a “ stop order ” was given by Nathan, one of the defendants, in his evidence on the trial and was not controverted. He said, the meaning of a ‘ stop order ’ is to await a certain figure, and whenever this figure is reached, to stop the transaction by then selling or buying, as the case may be, as well as possible,’ ’ and was explained by another witness as follows, for instance, if you give a stop order at 109 or 110, you must sell as soon as the stock or bonds have sold at that price by some one else. If you «can sell at that price you must do it, but if you cannot, you must sell at whatever the price is after they have sold at that price.” The market price of government bonds continued to decline after June 20, and on the 13th of August they sold at the Stock Exchange for 101. This was the fiat price, carrying the accrued interest from July 1, when the last due coupons were payable. The defendants thereupon on the same day, acting upon the assumption that the “ stop-order ” price for $500,000 of the bonds, viz.: lOOf ex.

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Bluebook (online)
94 N.Y. 431, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-wormser-ny-1884.