Saul v. Barse

158 A.D. 560, 143 N.Y.S. 830, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7403
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 31, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 158 A.D. 560 (Saul v. Barse) 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
Saul v. Barse, 158 A.D. 560, 143 N.Y.S. 830, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7403 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Thomas, J.:

Plaintiff was entitled to $400,000 (sixteen per cent) of the undivided $2,500,000 of the stock of the Michigan Peninsular Car Company and authorized the defendant and his partner Ives, now deceased, who owned the balance of it and had custody of all of it, to convert it into the stock of railway companies, among others the Ohio Southern and Cleveland, Akron and Columbus, which they did, save to the extent of 1,000 shares preferred and 880 shares common, which were delivered to him. In this action the plaintiff asks the defendant to account. This the defendant has been unable to do beyond showing that, as the Peninsular stock was held in custody as an indistinguishable part of the whole stock, a syndicate composed of himself, Ives and one Morehead used it as a common, fund for obtaining a controlling interest in the companies [562]*562named; that by the voting power of such stock they made the plaintiff president thereof, used the-stock for the benefit of the undertaking and on occasions for the personal benefit of the plaintiff, and finally at his instance sold the shares of Cleveland, Akron and Columbus stock for a sum whereof he received one-half the net proceeds, or $138,750. And the defendant urges that he cannot give the definite information because the purchase of the stock in the two companies was a joint adventure by plaintiff and the syndicate, but that upon winding it up the plaintiff would be entitled to his proper proportion, which by reason of the decline of the stocks and the payment of the $138,750 was largely overpaid. If there was a joint venture the defendant is quite logical in his position, and in any case his misfortune is that he and his partner have so treated the matter. But the court has found that it was not that, and the finding is not disturbed, notwithstanding the intimacy of the parties in regard to the pooling and sale of the Peninsular stock, the acquisition of the controlling interest in the railroads and the control of the same and the use of the substitute stock for a variety of purposes to which the plaintiff was in instances privy. Under the date of December 16, 1892, Barse and Ives, in reply to a letter from plaintiff, stated that they held plaintiff’s Peninsular stock and that they were converting it into the stocks of several companies named, that the dividends would be credited to the plaintiff as declared, and that “the holdings of the above stocks are to be transferred to you or put in such name as you may designate, when you may deem necessary.” But now the plaintiff would have fulfillment of this declaration, and the defendant cannot do more than answer that the Peninsular stock went directly or indirectly into the stock of the two companies purchased at varying prices and that plaintiff’s interest either as to price or quantity or company is indistinguishable from that of the syndicate. And so as to dividends. In this predicament the referee, who was appointed to state the account,, charged defendant with the highest average prices at which Peninsular shares aggregating the amounts that plaintiff was entitled to sold. Such manner of ascertaining value in some instances would be just, and whether it is in the present case will be [563]*563later considered. But however it should be computed, the value of the Peninsular stock should be the basis of ascertaining the value of the substitute stocks. The argument leads to that. How much Ohio Southern and how much Cleveland, Akron and Columbus did that value procure for plaintiff ? The defendant never bought any specifically for plaintiff; no investment was made for him. No price can be mentioned that is applicable to any stock bought for him. Plaintiff was cast into the adventure and treated as a member of the purchasing syndicate. Barse shows what the syndicate bought and the prices paid by them. Is the stock most cheaply bought the plaintiff’s stock ? The defendant cannot tell. Was plaintiff’s stock purchased at highest prices ? That defendant does not know. Was the purchase in the Ohio Southern or in. the Cleveland, Akron and Columbus ? The defendant does not know that. The defendant is one of the syndicate enlarged from Barse and Ives who undertook to act for plaintiff to Barse, Ives, Horehead and, perchance, others. What then is fairer than that the defendant should be charged with the value of what he took to convert into other stocks and to hold for plaintiff, but which he duly converted and used for a syndicate whereof he regarded plaintiff a member ? This was a misadventure for plaintiff’s property caused by defendant’s breach of duty whereby plaintiff’s interest cannot be discriminated, so the value of the thing committed to him becomes for the purposes of measurement the value of the thing into which it should have been converted. The substitute stocks have declined. Theoretically the plaintiff should bear the loss. This would be so if it could be shown when the conversion of one to the other was made for the plaintiff and into what it' was made. But there is no such knowledge. From the sums charged to the defendant the referee has deducted the sum of $138,150, the amount paid the plaintiff, leaving a balance of $91,609.65, to which $16,188.68 interest has been added. The defendant urges that the payment credited on account was in full settlement of the plaintiff’s claims. It could have been indifferently found that it was or was not. The referee found that it was not, and there seems to be no reason for distinguishing the defendant’s version of the event as the [564]*564more probable. The plaintiff arranged with the purchaser of the stock from the parties hereto to let him share the purchase, and .later sold his interest so obtained, for $300,000. The defendant would share the profit of it. The plaintiff stood in no confidential relation to the defendant. He bought into the purchase, which he and defendant made, and later sold again, at a profit. The defendant was paying him a half of the purchase money on his debt and, to free the stock from technical title to some of it in Saul, he joined in the sale. It does, indeed, seem strange that the plaintiff was related so intimately to the members of the syndicate and their transactions, and yet was unconscious that his Peninsular stock was a part of the general holdings. Such complacency under the circumstances is incredible. Nor can I believe that it was -so. But the question is, whether he knew that Barse and Ives had so confused his holdings with the general fund that they could not be extricated and given identity, and whether he ratified such condition. There the defendant and Ives failed in their duty to him and in such respect Saul may complain, for when he asks to know what he had and when and at what cost it was obtained, he received only the reply that he was made a party to a joint adventure and that his interest never has been and cannot be particularized. There is no suggestion that Saul was a member of the syndicate, but rather that he and the syndicate were in a joint venture, and that plaintiff must abide by the disposition of the property by the Federal court in Morehead v. Striker, a suit to liquidate the affairs of the syndicate. So it is urged that the firm in which Morehead was a partner did whatever was done and that Morehead should be a ' party to this action and that in any case this court has no jurisdiction as the partnership and its assets were involved in the other action. But the Federal court properly refused to stay this action on such grounds. Barse and Ives owed plaintiff a duty; they took his Peninsular stock. The plaintiff is asking what they did in furtherance of their undertaking to him.

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Related

Saul v. Barse
144 N.Y.S. 1143 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 A.D. 560, 143 N.Y.S. 830, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saul-v-barse-nyappdiv-1913.