Schmid v. DuVal

200 A.D. 514, 193 N.Y.S. 278, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8215
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 24, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 200 A.D. 514 (Schmid v. DuVal) 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
Schmid v. DuVal, 200 A.D. 514, 193 N.Y.S. 278, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8215 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

This action was brought against the members of the stock brokerage firm of H. C. DuVal & Co. for the conversion of 100 shares of the preferred stock of the South Porto Rico Sugar Company, which they held as margin for a speculative account which they were carrying for the plaintiff. Pending the appeal, Horace [515]*515C. DuVal, one of the defendants, died and his executrix was duly-substituted in his place.

Plaintiff alleged that on the 24th day of December, 1917, defendants were carrying for his account 100 shares of said preferred stock; that there was then due and owing from him to them, in accordance with the terms of the agreement between them $130.11, and he duly tendered that amount in cash and demanded the delivery of the stock; but that the defendants refused the tender and demand, and converted the stock to their own use, to his damage in the sum of $10,000, for which amount, with interest and costs, he demanded judgment. Defendants admitted the tender, but denied that it represented the amount then due and owing to them, and alleged that the amount so owing exceeded $9,000. They further allege that in the month of November, 1916, the Chalmers Motor Corporation was incorporated under the laws of New York, and certain bankers agreed to purchase 264,000 of its 600,000 shares of capital stock; and that a syndicate was organized to acquire the stock from the bankers at $31 per share, and each subscriber thereto agreed to take the number of shares set opposite bis signature and to pay to the bankers therefor in cash $31 per share when and as called for by them; and that it was agreed that the subscribers should share in the profits of the syndicate in the proportion of their respective subscriptions, and should be obligated in like proportions for losses, but no subscriber was to be liable beyond the full payment of his subscription; and that the bankers should be the sole managers of the syndicate with authority to sell the stock and to charge the syndicate fifty cents per share for all stock so sold; and that the syndicate agreement, unless sooner terminated, should remain in force until the 1st of March, 1917, with the privilege to the bankers to extend it sixty days, which they exercised; that one of the subscribers to the syndicate offered to allow the customers of the defendants to participate through him and his subscription, and to subscribe for stock, and that this was made known to the plaintiff, who authorized the defendants to subscribe for 300 shares, which they did for his account and risk; and that thereafter and during the same month there was allotted to the various subscribers to the syndicate agreement the full number of shares subscribed by them, and full payment therefor was required; and thereupon the defendants, for the account and risk of the plaintiff through said .original subscriber to the syndicate agreement, paid the full subscription price of $9,300 for the 300 shares subscribed for by the plaintiff, and the plaintiff became the owner thereof, subject to the terms and conditions of the syndicate agreement; and that defendants charged [516]*516the plaintiff’s account with the purchase price thereof and a commission of $37.50, which was a reasonable charge, and so thereafter carried the transaction; and that consequently, when the plaintiff made the tender and demand as alleged in .the complaint, there was due and owing from him to the defendants the sum of $9,632.52 with certain interest, which amount and interest remains wholly unpaid. Defendants also pleaded as a separate defense that on or about the 1st of December, 1916, after they had so charged the plaintiff’s account with the purchase price of the Chalmers Motor Corporation stock and commissions, they duly rendered to the plaintiff a statement of the account, showing that he was charged with the transaction concerning the Chalmers Motor Corporation stock; and that he duly accepted and approved the account, which thereupon became an account stated between them; and that thereafter on or about the first day of each succeeding month until the 2d of October, 1917, they rendered a like statement to the plaintiff, showing the balance owing to them; and on or about the 14th of January, 1917, they received a dividend of $225 on the stock for the account of the plaintiff and duly credited the same on his account; and that the statements of the account thereafter rendered by them to him showed such credit; and that he received and approved all of said accounts, and each of them constituted an account stated; and that the plaintiff did not attempt to disclaim or repudiate the Chalmers Motor stock transaction until on or about the 2d of October, 1917.

The sole controversy between the parties concerning the state of the plaintiff’s account with the brokers is with respect to whether his account was properly charged with the purchase price of the Chalmers Motor Corporation stock and the commissions, and, if not so properly charged originally, whether he ratified it, for it is conceded that, if the defendants improperly charged his account with the purchase price of the Chalmers Motor Corporation stock and the commission and he did not subsequently ratify such charges, he tendered the balance owing to the brokers, and was entitled to recover the value, which was stipulated, of the 100 shares of the South Porto Rico Sugar Company stock.

On a former trial the complaint was dismissed at the close of the evidence, but the judgment was reversed by this court without opinion on the ground that the case should have been submitted to the jury (195 App. Div. 937). On the trial now under review questions of fact arose on conflicting evidence and were submitted to the jury with respect to whether the plaintiff authorized or ratified the acts of the brokers in acquiring the Chalmers Motor Corporation stock for him and charging it and the commission [517]*517thereon to his account. The verdict of the jury could be sustained were it not for an error by the court with respect to instructing the jury concerning ratification.

Plaintiff testified, in effect, that Mr. Steiner, the office manager of the brokers, early in October, 1916, informed him that the brokers were to participate in an underwriting syndicate for the purchase of Chalmers Motor Corporation stock, and that, if he so desired, they would, as a matter of courtesy and favor, give him a participation or sell him 500 shares of the stock “ out of the participation,” and that they were to receive it at $31 a share, and that it was to be offered to the public at $35 per share, and that he took the matter under consideration, and on or about the thirty-first of October Steiner asked him to decide whether he wanted to buy seme of the stock which the brokers were to receive from the syndicate, and explained to him what a syndicate was, and he asked Steiner whether the stock would be delivered to him and was informed that, when the syndicate delivered it to them, they would send him a slip stating that they had received the stock, and that he was at liberty to sell it; that a few days thereafter he authorized Steiner to buy 300 shares for him at $31 per share, and Steiner said that they would only charge him a regular broker’s commission; that on the twenty-second of November he received a notice from the brokers, on the customary brokers’ form of notice, to the effect that they had “ received ” for his account and risk

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Bluebook (online)
200 A.D. 514, 193 N.Y.S. 278, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmid-v-duval-nyappdiv-1922.