Stewart v. . Drake

46 N.Y. 449, 1871 N.Y. LEXIS 277
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 21, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 46 N.Y. 449 (Stewart v. . Drake) 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
Stewart v. . Drake, 46 N.Y. 449, 1871 N.Y. LEXIS 277 (N.Y. 1871).

Opinion

Allen, J.

Ho question is made upon this appeal, as to the regularity of the sale by the defendants on the 19th of April, 1864, of the 200 shares of stock, or the effect of such sale as a foreclosure of the plaintiff and a bar to his legal rights. The principal question considered in Markham v. Jaudon (41 N. Y., 235) is not, therefore, involved in this action. Both parties assented to regard that sale as a nullity, and neither claimed to have acquired any rights under the same. If the decision in Markham v. Jaudon (41 N. Y., 235) is sound, the plaintiff might have treated the sale as a conversion of so much of his stock, and brought an action therefor, and recovered the value of the stock sold. But he did not elect so to *453 do. On the contrary, in his letter to the defendants of 27th of April, the da/ after his return home, and purporting to have been written immediately on learning of the sale, he disavows and repudiates the alleged sale, and notifies the defendants, that he shall require them to account for all the stocks belonging to him, and left with them, particularly specifying the stocks he claimed still to own, and the same held by the defendants for him, on the morning of and before the sale of the 19th of April. He did not claim as for a conversion of any part of the stocks, but did insist that the defendants should account for all, as if no sale had been made of any part, and as still held by them for Mm. The defendants at once acquiesced in and assented to the claim of the plaintiff, and agreed to regard the sale as made on their own account, and not as a sale of the plaintiff’s stock. Yielding to the claim of the plaintiff, they admitted that they still held his stock, and every part of it, subject to the agreement under which it was bought.

Under this arrangement the duty of defendants was folly performed, if they had at all times stock on hand, to meet the demand of the plaintiff when called upon, or when required by the exigencies of the dealings between the parties. The stock purchased for the plaintiff had no ear mark, and one share being of equal value with every other share of the same stock, the defendants were not bound to deliver, or to have on hand for delivery, any particular shares, or the identical shares purchased for the plaintiff. (Nourse v. Prime, 4 J. C. R., 490, aff’d 7 id., 69; Horton v. Morgan., 19 N. Y., 170.)

The plaintiff, on the 27th of April, claimed and insisted that the defendants still held and must account for his stock, and the defendants assented to occupy that position.

The plaintiff, when called upon after that time, to make further advances and furnish a margin, in pursuance of the agreement under which the stock was bought, made no suggestion that any part of the stock had been sold, or any claim to be relieved from making further payments by reason of *454 such sale. He assumed that the rights of the parties in the situation of his stock, and his liabilities in respect thereto, remained unchanged and unaffected by the sale of the 19th of April. It follows that on the 28th April, the plaintiff was possessed of all his stocks and rights in the stocks purchased by the defendants for him, as if no sale had been attempted, and could have demanded and received them upon payment of the amount due the defendants. As late as the 2d of May, the plaintiff, in a communication addressed to the defendants, claimed that they had still on hand the stocks which had been bought for him before the 19th of April, and had not been sold before that day, again enumerating the stocks he claimed to own. It is quite too late, therefore, for the plaintiff now to fall back upon that sale, and claim to recover as for a conversion of the stock then sold, as the sale was repudiated by him, waived by the defendants, and by both treated as a nullity, so far as the plaintiff and his stocks were concerned.

The.question as to the effect upon the right of action, of a restoration of the property to the owner, after a conversion of the same, is not involved. Both parties have agreed, and acted upon the assumption that there was no sale, and consequently no conversion of the plaintiff’s stocks, on the 19th of April.

There is no pretence upon the evidence that the defendants, at any time after the sale of the 19th of April, purchased stocks to supply the place of those sold on that day. They simply treated that sale as of their own stock, made on their own account, and continued to hold the plaintiff’s stocks until the sale of the 30th of April; and during all that time the rights of the parties, by mutual consent, were the same as if no stocks had been sold on the 19th, and had the plaintiff complied with the calls repeatedly made upon him, to increase his margin by making a deposit, made necessary by the decline of the shares in the market, the defendants could not have sold the same as they did; or, had the plaintiff elected to pay for the stocks at the prices for which they had been purchased, he could have demanded, and would have been *455 entitled to receive, the same from the defendants. The corresponding right was with the defendants, to enforce their lien by a sale of the stock, upon the failure of the plaintiff to comply with the agreement on his part, and his default in making a proper deposit or furnishing satisfactory security.

The referee has found, upon evidence warranting his conclusions, that after notifying the plaintiff several times between the nineteenth and thirtieth of April, that unless he furnished more margin they would sell his stocks, the defendants did, on the twenty-eighth of April, notify the plaintiff personally, and in writing, that unless a satisfactory margin was placed in their hands, or the balance of the account paid, they should sell the stocks held on his account, designating and describing them, at public auction, on Saturday, the thirtieth of April, at an hour and place named in the notice. The plaintiff failed to make the payments or improve his margin, and certain of the stocks were sold pursuant to the notice, and the proceeds credited to the plaintiff. At the time of the sale the value of the stocks, together with the margin or deposit of the plaintiff with the defendants, was considerably less than the cost price of the stocks on hand, and the advances made by the defendants in the purchase; and this, under the agreement as found by the referee, that the plaintiff was at all times to keep with the defendants a margin, or security, entirely satisfactory, authorized the sale of the stock by the defendants, and such sale was clearly regular and legal. A notice given on the afternoon of Thursday, of a sale to be made at half-past twelve o’clock on Saturday, was a timely and reasonable notice, the parties living and being in the city of Hew York where the sale was made, and all the transactions had.

The giving of any notice of that sale was denied by the plaintiff; and the evidence in relation to it was conflicting. JBut there was evidence, which, if believed, proved the fact as alleged by the defendants; and the finding of the referee in accordance with that evidence, is conclusive in this court. The-referee, upon a statement of the accounts between the *456

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.Y. 449, 1871 N.Y. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-drake-ny-1871.