Weisberg v. Hunt

131 N.E. 471, 239 Mass. 190, 1921 Mass. LEXIS 1075
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 3, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 131 N.E. 471 (Weisberg v. Hunt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weisberg v. Hunt, 131 N.E. 471, 239 Mass. 190, 1921 Mass. LEXIS 1075 (Mass. 1921).

Opinion

Jenney, J.

This is an action of contract in which the plaintiff seeks to recover money paid by him to the defendants as margins for the purchase and sale of stocks. The declaration is in two counts, one under R. L. c. 99, §§ 4-7 (now G. L. c. 137, §§ 4-7); and the other on an account annexed for the amounts so paid. The case was tried in the Superior Court without a jury. The plaintiff put in evidence the report of an auditor before whom the case had been heard, then rested, and elected to stand upon the second count. He does not claim that he is entitled to recover under the cited statutes, but relies wholly on alleged failures of [194]*194the defendants to perform their contracts with him. In his brief it is stated that “. . . the plaintiff does not claim any illegality in any contract in this case.”

The defendants reside in Massachusetts and are and have been partners carrying on business as brokers and having an office in Boston. They are members of the Consolidated Stock Exchange of New York. On October 16,1918, the plaintiff began operations in the stock market through them, and on that day signed and delivered to them at their request a printed document entitled “ Customer’s Registration Card.” This directed that all orders for the purchase or sale of securities given by the plaintiff should be executed by the defendants at their discretion on or through any stock exchange or curb exchange in Boston or New York. It also provided: All orders executed in New York or any New York Stock Exchange or Curb Exchange, shall be executed in accordance with the Laws of New York and the Rules and Regulations of the said Exchanges prohibiting fictitious and illegal transactions, contracts and agreements; and [further that]] it is understood and agreed that the validity of all transactions . . . executed on any New York Stock Exchange or New York Curb Exchange shall be controlled and determined solely by the Laws of New York.” Furthermore, said card authorized the defendants to “ loan, hypothecate or otherwise use ” all securities held or carried by them on account of the plaintiff and empowered them without demand or notice to “ close out at public or private sale ” any securities held or carried for the plaintiff whenever they deemed it necessary for their protection.

At the time he signed the card, the plaintiff gave, the defendants $400 as a margin for which amount a receipt was given by them, which recited that it was agreed that “ all orders given . . . are to be executed according to the rules of the Consolidated or New York Stock Exchange, and all stocks bought or sold may be received or delivered through the Clearing House, according to the rules of the Exchange, and such a delivery shall be a good delivery.” Thereafter the plaintiff ordered the defendants to buy and sell stock certificates for him at various times. These orders were in writing and all authorized their fulfilment in accordance with and subject to the laws of the State where they were executed and the rules and regulations of the stock exchanges where the [195]*195purchases were made, prohibiting all fictitious and illegal transactions and agreements, and further empowered the defendants without demand or notice to close out any of the securities carried by them in the manner stated in the registration card and herein-before recited.

On February 11, 1919, the plaintiff received a balance then standing to his credit on the books of the defendants and delivered to them a release of all claims and demands which he then had against them. Neither party now claims that the financial transactions entered into prior to that date are still open.

On April 10, 1919, the plaintiff “ again began operations in the stock market,” making a new deposit and receiving a receipt like those previously given him. He was not asked to sign a new registration card. Thereafter followed transactions relating to the purchase and sale of stock certificates upon the plaintiff’s account and order, the last of which was on November 13, 1919. For the payments made by the plaintiff from time to time he received receipts in form like those hereinbefore referred to. His orders were in writing and were in form like those previously considered. During this time the plaintiff paid to the defendants in all $4,400 and received from them $1,752.01.

As the findings of the auditor as to what took place upon the plaintiff’s orders cannot be substantially abridged, reference must be made thereto. The result of the transactions, however, was this: The defendants, at the opening of the next business day for each transaction in behalf of the plaintiff, sent to the clearing house of the New York Consolidated Stock Exchange, where many of the transactions took place, a full record of all their transactions for the previous day, which record is known as the clearing house sheet, and which is required by the rules of said exchange. Under and in accordance with said rules, transactions are cleared in the following manner: All clearing house sheets each day submitted are checked up; a record is then made by the clearing house showing the excess of purchases over sales, or sales over purchases, of a given security, as made by each member of the exchange for the previous day; on a given hour of that day the clearing house .sends to each member whose sales exceed his purchases of a given security an order to deliver the balance of said securities to some other member of the exchange, and gives to each member whose [196]*196purchases of a given security exceed his sales the name of a member of the exchange from whom he is to receive the shares to which he-is entitled. The rules of the exchange require that all securities, shall be delivered in accordance with such order on or before a. given hour on the same day and provide for the prices at which deliveries shall be made. An adjustment of the difference between the actual price at which a security was bought or sold and the settling price is thereafter made through the clearing house, thus-making the transactions, so far as prices are concerned, in accord with the actual amount bid at the time when the purchase or sale was made. “All orders given by the plaintiff to the defendants-were executed and completed by the defendants’ receipt or delivery of securities in the manner above described, in accordance with the rules of the exchange. Orders for the purchase and sale of stocks listed on the New York Stock Exchange were executed by the defendants through members of . . . [that]] Exchange in substantially the same manner as described above.” The record does not show what stocks were bought or sold in this manner on each exchange.

No evidence was introduced before the auditor or before the court as to the law of New York with reference to transactions-concerning the purchase and sale of stock, and it must be assumed to be the same as the common law of Massachusetts. Bearse v. McLean, 199 Mass. 242.

On November 13, 1919, before the opening of the stock market on that day, the defendants called the plaintiff’s attention to the condition of his account and to the “dangerous state” of the stock market and asked for a further margin. The plaintiff did not furnish this, but gave the defendants a “ stop loss ” order as to some stock which the defendants claim was then being carried on his account. The auditor finds that such order authorized the sale of the stock on the market when the price fixed was reached in the exchange; and trading at said point having been reached, the stock was sold in accordance therewith.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 N.E. 471, 239 Mass. 190, 1921 Mass. LEXIS 1075, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weisberg-v-hunt-mass-1921.