Post v. . Thomas

106 N.E. 69, 212 N.Y. 264, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 867
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 14, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 106 N.E. 69 (Post v. . Thomas) 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
Post v. . Thomas, 106 N.E. 69, 212 N.Y. 264, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 867 (N.Y. 1914).

Opinion

Chase, J.

In September, 1901, the three defendants and one other person entered into a pool to buy, sell and deal in the stock of the Keokuk and Des Moines Eailroad Company for the purpose of acquiring all or a large portion of the eleven thousand shares outstanding of the stock of said company other than that owned by the Eock Island Eailroad Company in the expectation that thereby the market price of said stock would be greatly advanced or that the Eock Island Eailroad Company, which held fourteen thousand shares of the stock of the said Keokuk and Des Moines Eailroad Company, would sell a sufficient part of its said shares to give the pool control of a majority of the stock of said company. Each of the four men contributed $5,000 to the pool. Within a few days thereafter the fourth man, with the consent of the others, withdrew from the pool, and he was repaid the $5,000 that he had contributed. Subsequently an additional payment of $5,000 was put into the pool by each of the three defendants. It was mutually agreed that the defendant Edward E. Thomas and the defendant Orlando F. Thomas or one of them would manage the pool. By mutual agreement the money of *267 the pool was first deposited with the firm of Thomas & Post, stockbrokers, in the name of the CÍK. & K. Syndicate.” The stock of the company was purchased and sold through said stockbrokers and they carried the stock purchased for the pool in the ££K. & K. Syndicate” account.

The account was subsequently transferred to Thomas & Thomas, stockbrokers, and thereafter and about April 1st, 1903, to the • plaintiffs, stockbrokers. When the account was transferred to the plaintiffs it was indebted, and the plaintiffs paid to Thomas & Thomas in taking over the account $169,994.16 and received as collateral to such balance 5,450 shares of the stock of the Keokuk and Des Moines Railroad Company which belonged to the pool. A detailed statement of the account was made and delivered each month prior to April 1st, 1903, to the defendants and each of them showing the condition of said account. On the 3d day of April, 1903, plaintiffs made a demand for the payment of $25,000 on account upon each of the members of the pool. Soon thereafter $50,000 was paid to the plaintiffs on account of Edward R. Thomas and Orlando F. Thomas to be applied to the pool account. Hamilton never replied to the demand upon him for the payment of $25,000 to the credit of such account.

On the 13th day of April, 1903, Orlando F. Thomas sold and transferred his interest in the pool to Edward R. Thomas. On that day Edward R. Thomas wrote to the plaintiff a letter in which among other things he said: ££ I also wish to inform you that I have purchased from Mr. O. F. Thomas his one-third interest in the account on your books known as the £ Keokuk and Des Moines pool,’ and that I hereby assume all his liability and credit in the same. I wish it clearly understood that my present interest in this pool is a two thirds interest and that I am responsible for two thirds of its losses and am entitled to two thirds of its profits after I am credited with the *268 $50,000 margin which I now have on my two thirds share in excess of Hr. Hamilton’s proportionate margin; the other one third being owned by Mr. 0. A. Hamilton and that this account is in no sense a joint account. In other words myself and Mr. Hamilton are each liable for our share and not for the share of the other.”

At that time it seems to he conceded that the stock held as collateral to the account was worth more than the indebtedness of the pool to the plaintiffs. On April 14, the day following the letter from which we have quoted, plaintiffs wrote Edward E. Thomas and said: We beg to acknowledge the receipt of your esteemed favor of the 13th inst. and have noted the sales charges and credits as noted therein * * * Concerning the Keokuk & Des Moines syndicate we now understand that you are sole owner and liable for two thirds of the same and that Mr. O. F. Thomas has no further interest in said syndicate, the remaining one third being the property of O. A. Hamilton.”

Orlando F. Thomas on April 13 wrote the plaintiffs saying: I have sold to Mr. E. E. Thomas my one third interest in the Keokuk & Des Moines syndicate including whatever margin I may have against it and no further liability attaches to me.”

The collateral being then sufficient to pay the pool indebtedness there is some basis for the claim, at least as between the plaintiffs and the defendant Edward E. Thomas, that the plaintiffs assented to carrying the “K. & K. Syndicate” account with the personal liability of Edward E. Thomas therefor, limited to two-thirds of the amount thereof subject to a division as between him and Hamilton, taking into account the payments that had theretofore been made by each on account of the pool. The account was continued, and the plaintiffs in June thereafter told Mr. Edward E. Thomas that it was impossible for them to use the Keokuk and Des Moines stock in their loans, and for that reason it was impossible *269 for them to carry the account. One of the plaintiffs testified that on the 15th day of June he made such representations to Mr. Edward R. Thomas as caused him to take over the account in its entirety, which he did "by having the debit balance in the account and the stock transferred to an account which he, Thomas, owned on the books of the plaintiffs entitled the “International Silver Syndicate Account.” This statement to Edward R. Thomas was apparently made by telephone, and on the same day, June 15, the plaintiffs wrote Edward R. Thomas a letter in which they say: “In accordance with your telephone conversation * * * we have charged the International Silver Syndicate account with the entire K. E. Syndicate account as per statement herewith. ”

Some days after the transfer of this account Edward R. Thomas asked to have it transferred to its own name. Plaintiffs wrote him a letter in which they say: “In regard to transferring the E. E. Syndicate account from the International Silver account back to its own name we find that while it is true the E. E. Syndicate has been benefited by the transfer to the International Silver Syndicate at the same time at the present moment while it stands in the latter account it is receiving the benefit of the value of approximately $12,000 worth of silver certificates which are in the Silver Syndicate account. The entire debit balance of the International Silver account is approximately $102,000 and if theK. E. Syndicate stock is removed from that account with the debit balance it will suffer somewhat by the removal. It would place it in a stronger position if you would strengthen the K. E. account to about the extent mentioned above which is now represented by silver securities.”

It will he seen by this letter that the plaintiffs were reluctant about retransferring the E. E. account for the reason stated that they wanted the benefit of about $12,000 worth of silver securities which seemed to have *270 been held to the credit of the account. It does not appear just what was done in settling this controversy, but the balance of the K. K. account after deducting therefrom the amount that was to the credit of the International Silver Syndicate account, being $36,123.30, was transferred to its own name.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 N.E. 69, 212 N.Y. 264, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/post-v-thomas-ny-1914.