Thompson v. Williamson

58 A. 602, 67 N.J. Eq. 212, 1 Robb. 212, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 82
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJuly 21, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 58 A. 602 (Thompson v. Williamson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Williamson, 58 A. 602, 67 N.J. Eq. 212, 1 Robb. 212, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 82 (N.J. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Emery, V. C.

Complainants are stockholders doing business in the New York Stock Exchange, and on May 2d, 1902, recovered a judgment in the supreme court of the State of New York against the defendant Frederick. B. Williamson for the sum of $10,-oSI'.OS, the balance due complainants on their account as brokers for the purchase and sale of stocks between March 8th, 1898, and May 31st,- 1899, with interest and costs. Suit in. the New [214]*214Jersey supreme court was subsequently brought against this defendant, who resides in New Jersey,' upon the New York judgment, and a judgment obtained in this state, upon which execution was issued and returned unsatisfied. The suit in New York was commenced in July, 1899, and in October, 1899, the defendant, through a third person, conveyed to his wife, Mary I. Williamson, his real estate, consisting of three parcels of land in Elizabeth. These conveyances were voluntary, and it was so conceded at the hearing. Mrs. Williamson1 and her husband subsequently, in March, 1903, conveyed a small portion of the lands to the defendant, Mrs. Emily B. Williamson, a sister-in-law, and this defendant claims to be a bona jide purchaser of the lot conveyed to her. Complainants’ bill seeks to set aside both conveyances as fraudulent against them, and the defence set' up by the judgment debtor himself, as well as by his wife as his grantee, and also- by -her grantee, is that the judgment in New York was founded on transactions which are in New Jersey held to be gaming transactions, and the judgment is therefore not enforceable in the courts of equity of this state against the judgment debtor or his grantee, whether voluntary or otherwise. So far as the judgment debtor himself is concerned, the defence is not available.

The judgment in New York was obtained in a suit in which the defendant appeared, and by an answer contested the complainants’ claim, not especially setting up, however, the defence of a gaming transaction, but the answer did set up that by the agreement between the parties the complainants, for all advances to him over $3,000, were to be repaid only out of the sale of the securities. Under the federal constitution full faith and credit must be given in the courts of this state to the judgment obtained in New York, and the same effect as to finality must here be given as would be given in the State of New York. There is no proof in this- case that in the State of New York a judgment so obtained is not final between the parties as to all defences which were or could have been set up in the suit, or that a judgment can there be avoided if founded on gaming transactions. In the absence of such proof, it must be presumed. [215]*215that the rule of the common law as to the effect of such judgment prevails, and that the judgment is final and conclusive, and that the Yew Jersey judgment is also conclusive as being based' thereon. As to the defendants who are grantees of the judgment debtor, and who were not parties to the suit in which the judgment for the debt was recovered, the rule is settled in this state that they are not concluded by the judgment from setting up that the recovery was upon gambling transactions, and therefore should not be enforced against them. In Minzesheimer v. Doolittle, 60 N. J. Eq. (15 Dick.) 394 (Court of Errors and Appeals, 1899), this defence was sustained in behalf of the wife of the debtor, and the bill seeking to set aside a conveyance of the debtor’s property to her as voluntary and fraudulent, ivas dismissed without inquiring into the consideration. It is true that in this case the conveyance was made not only before the institution of the suit and recovery of the judgment, but before the incurring of the debt upon -which the judgment was obtained, and in that respect differs from the case in hand, where the debt existed and the suit was instituted before the' conveyance. But this circumstance bears only upon the character of the proof of fraud required, and in view of the ground upon which the decision is based, viz., the right of the grantee to a day in court to defend the title against all acts or admissions of the grantor, after the date of the deed, I consider the decision as controlling this case and as overruling ou this point Mc-Canless v. Smith, 51 N. J. Eq. (6 Dick.) 505 (1893), in which Vice-Chancellor Pitney held that the wife of a judgment debtor, claiming under a voluntary settlement of her husband’s lands, could not question the validity of the judgment as based on an illegal gambling transaction. The questions, therefore, as to both of the grantees are — first, whether the defence that the transactions were gambling transactions is made out on the proofs; and secondly, whether, if made out, protection against the enforcement of the judgment should be afforded so far as the judgment may be equitably based on money paid to the defendant. The proofs in the case show that the transactions, between the complainants, as brokers, and Williamson, as their [216]*216customer, consisted in the execution by them of orders-given by the customer, for the purchase or sale of stocks in the-New York Stock Exchange, and that so far as the brokers were concerned there was .in the execution of every order an actual purchase or sale of the stock by them for. cash paid or received, and perfected by delivery to or from other brokers of the exchange, and that such actual purchase or sale of the broker was contemplated by the customer and required by the rules of the stock exchange.

In each case the transaction was reported to the customer as a purchase or sale on his account, and the names of the brokers from whom the stock was purchased, or to whom it was delivered, were given in the report. On such purchase or sale the brokers charged a fixed commission — one-eighth of one per cent. The stocks .purchased were not, during the running of this account, in any instance, actually delivered by the brokers to the customer, but were, until directed to be sold, retained by them as collateral for the sums advanced for their purchase, and for the balance due on the account. Eor the purpose of raising money, the stocks themselves were sometimes pledged by the brokers with banks as collateral for their own loans, and on the sale for the customer were taken up for delivery. The customer was charged monthly with interest on the balances, the brokers crediting him with dividends on the stock received by them, and the commission, with these charges for interest balances, represents the entire profit or advantage to the brokers in the whole transaction. These amounts of commissions are fixed sums, and the rate charged for interest depended on the market rate for money, and was usually one per cent, more than the brokers themselves paid on procuring from their banks loans for executing these purchases and sales. On opening the account, in March, 1898, Williamson deposited $1,000 as a margin or security on ordering a purchase of one hundred shares of stock, which cost the brokers $9,250, but made no further deposits for this or any other purpose. During the running of the account he received, however, as stated above, from the brokers about $9,000 in cash, which was charged to his account, [217]*217this amount about equaling the charges for interest ($2,842.23) and for commissions, about $6,000. The account covered the purchase and sale of about twenty-five thousand shares of stock in all, and the balance due from the customer on the entire account, on June loth, 1899, when it was closed, was $9,053.39.

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Bluebook (online)
58 A. 602, 67 N.J. Eq. 212, 1 Robb. 212, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-williamson-njch-1904.