Veazey v. Allen

61 A.D. 119, 70 N.Y.S. 457
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 61 A.D. 119 (Veazey v. Allen) 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
Veazey v. Allen, 61 A.D. 119, 70 N.Y.S. 457 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

IlTGBAHAM, J.;

Four causes of action are alleged in the complaint. Three of them relate to speculations in stock of a corporation known as the Distilling and Cattle Feeding Company, and the fourth relates to a. speculation in stock of the American Sugar Refining Company, two-corporations whose securities were dealt in on. the New York Stock. Exchange. The question presented on each of these four causes- of action is the same, and it will only he necessary to call specific attention to the first cause of action. The plaintiff therein alleges that: on or about January 5, 1893, the defendant Henry Allen, acting on behalf of the firm of Henry Allen & Co., at the- city of New York,, entered into a contract or agreement with the plaintiff whereby he- “ contracted and agreed that if this plaintiff would report and communicate to the said firm of Henry Allen & Company such facts- and circumstances as might come to the knowledge of the plaintiff by virtue of his engagement in an undertaking upon which he was about to enter, which would or might in any way tend to affect the-market value of the stock of the Distilling & Cattle Feeding Com-: pony, that they, the said Henry Allen and Edward L. Horton, composing the firm of Henry Allen & Company, the defendants herein; would sell for the. account of this plaintiff, and in consideration of" such services aforesaid, and advance all margins necessary thereto,, three thousand (3,000) shares of Distilling & Cattle Feeding, Company stock, .and, whenever the said stock should decline to such a. point as. in their judgment might render it advisable, would buy and thereby cover said sales at a profit, and-that they would account-to this plaintiff and pay to him all such profits as might be made in the fall and decline of said stock,” and the complaint alleges the-performance of this contract by the plaintiff; that the market price of the said stock, heavily declined; that the said defendants, sold for. and on -account of the plaintiff, in accordance with the agreement aforesaid, 3,000 shares of the stock of - the corporation,, and, upon such decline, paid to this plaintiff the -sum of $6,237.81,. which the defendants represented to be the true net profits realized on account of said sale or sales; that the said sum, however,. [121]*121was not the true net result of the operations of the' defendants for and on account of the plaintiff under the said contract, but that the net profits thereon realized were largely in excess of the said amount; that the plaintiff has repeatedly demanded of the defendants an accounting of their operations, but that the defendants have persistently refused and still refuse to render to the plaintiff an accounting thereof; and that the defendants are indebted to the plaintiff in a large sum of money as a balance due upon their transactions under the said contract, the exact amount of which balance now due this plaintiff is unable to ascertain without a true and complete accounting from the said defendants. The other causes of action allege similar contracts made at subsequent periods; and the relief demanded is that the defendants be compelled to account for all the sales made by them in their dealings and transactions of the stock of the Distilling and Cattle Feeding Company, and in the stock of the American Sugar Refining Company, under the contract set forth in the said four separate and distinct causes of action.

We have here alleged a copartnership or joint adventure for speculating in stocks. There is not an allegation in this complaint that it was understood that the defendants were to deal in these stocks in any other way than as gambling transactions. They were to sell stock which they did not have, with the expectation of buying them back at a cheaper price, and the profits in which plaintiff was interested were to be obtained by a purchase of the stocks at a less price than that at which they had been sold. The defendants were to sell the stock, assume all the responsibility of the transactions, and account to the plaintiff for the profits. The plaintiff was to report and communicate to the defendants such facts and circumstances as might come to his knowledge by virtue of his engagement in an undertaking upon which he was about to enter. Thus, according to the complaint, it was the communication of information by the plaintiff to the defendants which was the sole service that he was to render to them and for which the defendants were to sell this stock, assume the large responsibilities that had to be assumed to supply the margins to carry out the transactions, and the profits arising from such speculation were to be paid to the plaintiff.

The contract as thus alleged is so unusual and the consideration to [122]*122be furnished by the plaintiff so slight and unsubstantial that it is at once suggestéd that it was intended to cover up some transaction that the pleader felt was dangerous to openly avow. That , a person who had been a traveling salesman for a firm of whisky dealers,. ■ which position he had left, should be in a position, to furnish such information about facts and circumstances that might come to his knowledge, by virtue of his engagement in an undertaking -upon which he was about to enter, as to induce a firm of stockbrokers to agree to- enter into such a speculation as is here alleged, is certainly-most surprising and at once suggests that back of this allegation ■ there were other and different services' to be performed by the : plaintiff. The testimony of the plaintiff discloses what ..the. real agreement between "these parties was, and what it was that • the 'plaintiff - was', to do to entitle him to the benefit, of such a contract. -: These contracts upon which the various causes of action are based are alleged in the complaint to have been made upon the -5th and 17th óf January and the 1st of February, 1893. The plaintiff testified that prior to that time he had been a -traveling "salesman for a firm of whisky dealers in Cincinnati, O., and that : upon the 1st of January,-1893, he had severed bis - relations with -that firm; that prior to that time hé had known of the organization of -the corporation called the Distilling and Cattle Feeding Corn- • pony, which had largely' absorbed the distillers.-of whisky and ■ monopolized the manufacture and sale of that article. The plaintiff ' had considered that the method of doing the- business adopted by • this corporation tended to make his employment difficult, and- he had consulted with various people relative to the advisability of taking some proceedings to expose such methods of doing business. He seems to have met with but little success prior, to the 1st of January, 1893. Among others with whom he had discussed this proposition was a Mr. Walton and the.latter’s father-in-law, a Judge Veazey. In the autumn of 1892 Mr. Walton suggested--that an investigation of this corporation- would have an effect upon the price of its securities upon the ■ stock market, and subsequently proposed to plaintiff that he should come to New-York to meet a ■ Mr. Flagg before engaging in the enterprise; “that he might - have something to suggest which would be beneficial to me.” Plaintiff came to New York, was introduced to Flagg, and “ Mr. [123]*123Flagg told me that there probably would be an opportunity to make considerable money out of the decline of the Distilling and Cattle ' Feeding Company’s stock, providing the representations that I made in regard to the conditions of that company were true, and that they should be exposed, and he thought it would be well for me to see and consult with some broker here in New York.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 A.D. 119, 70 N.Y.S. 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/veazey-v-allen-nyappdiv-1901.