Small v. . Housman

101 N.E. 700, 208 N.Y. 115, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 1029
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 4, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 101 N.E. 700 (Small v. . Housman) 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
Small v. . Housman, 101 N.E. 700, 208 N.Y. 115, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 1029 (N.Y. 1913).

Opinion

Werner, J.

The plaintiff sues to recover damages for the conversion of certain of her stocks and bonds by the defendants. At Trial Term the court directed a verdict in favor of the defendants. The judgment entered upon this direction was affirmed at the Appellate Division. The question is whether the evidence for the plaintiff, supplemented by such favorable inferences as may properly be drawn therefrom, is of sufficient probative force and cogency to create an issue of fact; and the determination of that question naturally depends upon the view to be taken of the transactions out of which the controversy arises.

The defendants are stockbrokers in the city of 27ew York, and members of the 27ew York Stock Exchange. *118 In January, 1905, they employed Eugene W. Small, the son of the plaintiff, to work for • them, and this relation continued until the end of October, 1907. Immediately after this employment of her son, and through him, the plaintiff opened an account with the defendants for the buying and selling of stocks and bonds. At that time the plaintiff had' no personal communication with either of the defendants or with any one on their behalf except her son. Without dwelling upon unnecessary details it is sufficient to say that the account was a fairly active one, embracing a large number of purchases and sales all of which were consummated through the agency of the son acting for his mother, and the only communications which passed directly between the defendants and plaintiff were the periodical reports of transactions mailed by the former to the latter. This course of dealing continued without incident until July 19th, 1907, when the plaintiff went abroad. She was to he absent for several months, hut she gave to the defendants no notice of her intentions and left with them no foreign address and no directions concerning her account. Meanwhile the son continued as before to buy and sell through the defendants for his mother’s account, as appears from the itemized statements in the record, and when margins were needed or demanded he delivered to the defendants various securities which he obtained from Mr. Heinsheimer, a friend of the plaintiff, who had a key to her box in the Mercantile Safe Deposit vault. This continued until the latter part of August, when Mr. Heinsheimer also went to Europe, and before leaving he delivered to the plaintiff’s son certain securities, most of which the latter delivered to the defendants on the 14th, 16th, 18th and 22nd of October, as margins on plaintiff’s account. During the interval between August 14th and October 22nd the condition of the market had been steadily growing worse until the crisis was reached in the failure of the Knickerbocker Trust Company, which was followed *119 by the events that are a familiar part of recent financial history. On the latter date, in response to importunities from both of the defendants, the plaintiff’s son brought to them as margin 100 shares of Southern Pacific preferred, which he stated was the last he had of his mother’s securities. The defendant Housman, still unsatisfied, retorted “margin is needed on this account. What are you going to do about it ? ” and the plaintiff’s son replied that he didn’t know. To Housman’s inquiry whether the son could communicate with his mother, the son replied that he would try; that he would cable her. He did send a cable on that day addressed to her at the Credit Lyonnaise, Paris, to which he received a reply from the bank indicating that the plaintiff’s last address was not known. On the morning of the 22nd of October the defendant Baruch had requested the plaintiff’s son to give orders for the sale of stocks, but the latter had objected on the ground that he did not feel justified in selling them as his mother was not in the habit of selling stocks in a declining market, unless she felt that the intrinsic value of the stocks required it; and during the afternoon of the same day the defendant Housman reported to the plaintiff’s son that he was going to sell $30,000 of Interborough Metropolitan 4%’s which were very weak. The son remonstrated, but without avail, and on the 25th $25,000 of these bonds were sold. The son having reported to the defendants on the 23rd the answer which he had received from the Credit Lyonnaise in response to his first cable, sent another at the request of the defendants. On the 24th the defendants sold for account of the plaintiff 1,800 shares Union Pacific, and on the 25th other stocks to the extent of 1,000 shares. The market was then in a critical condition, notwithstanding Mr. J. P. Morgan’s loan of $25,000,000 on the afternoon of the 24th. When the plaintiff’s son was notified of the sale of some Union Pacific preferred for his mother’s account, he went to the defendant Housman and asked him to quit, at the *120 same time suggesting that 'he had an idea which might be of use in helping out the account. Without going through the details of that conversation it is enough to say that it resulted in the transfer toWerner & Brown, another firm of brokers, of certain specified securities “at present market prices buyer 30; ” the term “ buyer 30,” being a trade abbreviation indicating that the purchaser is given 30 days within which to pay. The plaintiff’s son testified that on October 25th after the “ buyer 30” transaction had been concluded with Werner & Brown, he had a conversation with the defendant Baruch concerning the plaintiff’s account; that Baruch indicated his willingness to carry what remained of the account until the plaintiff’s return, if it were not for the high priced securities in the account, “meaning some St. Paul certificates which were at $115;” that the plaintiff’s son thereupon drew the attention of Baruch to the fact that these certificates did not represent $115 a share, but only $10 a share; that there was paid on the certificates only 25 per cent, and that $75 was deducted from the price; that Baruch thereupon stated he didn’t know that, but if it were so it would be all right.; that Baruch and plaintiff’s son then went to Lewinson, one of the defendant’s employees, who verified what plaintiff’s son had represented, and that Baruch concluded the conversation by stating “it would be all right.” In the second cable sent to the plaintiff by her son on October 23rd, the latter had stated that the defendants were making active demands for funds, and on October 29th the son received a reply from the mother, dated at Gibraltar, stating in substance that the son’s cable had just been received; that it could not be translated; and that arrangements would have to await plaintiff’s return. Defendants did not wait, however, but notified plaintiff’s son on the afternoon of October 29th that they were going to sell some more Interborough Metropolitan bonds; and they did sell $30,000 of them.

*121 To those who are familiar with the record, it will be evident that the foregoing references to the evidence and the brief excerpts therefrom are intended to be nothing more than an outline of so much of the testimony as is relied upon by the plaintiff to support the contention that there were issues of fact which should have been submitted to the jury. We are not now concerned with the testimony for the defendants, or its probable weight, as compared with the testimony for the plaintiff.

The reciprocal rights and duties of the parties depend, of course, upon their relation to each other.

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Bluebook (online)
101 N.E. 700, 208 N.Y. 115, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 1029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/small-v-housman-ny-1913.