Weisbrod v. Lowitz

282 Ill. App. 252, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 643
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 12, 1935
DocketGen. No. 38,264
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 282 Ill. App. 252 (Weisbrod v. Lowitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weisbrod v. Lowitz, 282 Ill. App. 252, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 643 (Ill. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice McSurely

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff brought suit to recover the purchase price of 1,000 shares of Electric Bond and Share Company stock alleged to have been sold by defendants to plaintiff, in violation of the Illinois Securities Law, claiming damages of $35,000; upon trial by the court the judgment was against him, and from this he appeals. It is conceded that the stock in question was not registered or qualified under the provisions of the Illinois Securities Law and not exempt under any of its provisions.

Defendants first say, in defense, that they acted solely as the agents of plaintiff in purchasing the stock and hence are not answerable under the securities law. Defendants are stock brokers, having no stock for sale; they act only as brokers for customers, buying and selling as customers order; they charge a commission on such transactions. Plaintiff had been a customer of defendants for several years, commencing in 1923; plaintiff would at intervals give orders to defendants by telephone with reference to transactions- in stocks; defendants would execute these orders and on the same day would confirm by mail what had been done. Plaintiff, before the particular transaction in question, had bought shares of the Electric Bond and Share Company through defendants and apparently was more or less familiar with the stock.

September 12, 1931, he called Mr. Woolf, one of the defendants, by telephone and inquired as to quotations in the market. Plaintiff says that Woolf mentioned the Electric Bond and Share Company and gave some information about it and said that if it could be bought for $30 a share it was a good buy; plaintiff then said that if it reached this • figure to buy 1,000. shares for him. Mr. Woolf testified that he answered plaintiff’s inquiries as to quotations on different stocks; that he did not volunteer any information and did not solicit him to zbuy any shares of stock of the Electric Bond and Share Company.

Woolf made a written memorandum of the order and forwarded it to defendants’ New York office by private wire; the New York office transmitted the order to brokers doing business on the floor of the New York Curb Exchange where the purchase of 1,000 shares was made at $30 a share; a report of this purchase was then sent to the defendants at their Chicago office and Woolf sent plaintiff a confirmation of the order showing the purchase price of $30,000 and a charge by defendants of a brokerage commission of $150; no other commission or profit was charged or received. A few days later the defendants received the certificates of stock and they were delivered, pursuant to plaintiff’s orders, to certain banks which lent plaintiff money with which to pay for the stock,

We are of the opinion the trial court correctly found that defendants acted solely as the agents of the plaintiff in the transaction and purchased the stock as ordered by him. The sellers of the stock were the undisclosed principals of the New York brokers who made the sale to defendants’ brokers on the floor of the New York Curb Exchange. The distinction between a stock dealer who deals in stocks on his own account and a stock broker who acts as his customer’s agent has been clearly expressed by Meyer in The Law of Stock Brokers and Stock Exchanges, pages 249 and 250 of the edition of 1931 and page 32 of the supplement of 1933. The author notes that stock dealers usually confirm the transactions to customers by using words like “confirming sale to you,” or “confirming purchase from you, ’ ’ whereas stock brokers usually couch their confirmations in language as follows: “We have this day bought (or sold) for your account and risk.” The confirmation in the instant case read, “We have this day bought for your account and risk. ’ ’

Cases cited by plaintiff do not negative this position. In Link, Petter & Co. v. Pollie, 241 Mich. 356, it was held that the brokers solicited the purchaser to buy. In Taft v. Otte & Co., 274 Ill. App. 280, the opinion merely states the conclusion that the defendants there had acted as sellers. The briefs in that case show that the defendant did not charge the customer a brokerage fee and in its confirmation referred to the transactions as a sale, and also purchased the stock at one price and resold it to the plaintiff at a profit. The facts there are quite different from those in the instant case.

Considering the evidence as having established that defendants were brokers acting for plaintiff in this transaction, are they amenable to the Illinois Securities Law? Plaintiff argues that they are and that they became liable to return the full purchase price of the stock because they knowingly furthered, aided and assisted in the transaction. Section 37 (1) (Cahill’s Ill. Rev. St. ch. 32, ¶ 290) provides as follows:

“ (1) Every sale and contract of sale made in violation of any of the provisions of this Act shall be void at the election of the purchaser, and the seller of the securities so sold, the officers and directors of the seller, and each and every solicitor, agent or broker of or for such seller, who shall have knowingly performed any act or in any way furthered such sale, shall be jointly and severally liable, in an action at law or in equity, upon tender to the seller or in court of the securities sold, to the purchaser for the amount paid, the consideration given or the value thereof, together with his reasonable attorney’s fees in any action brought for such recovery. ’ ’

Subsec.4, sec. 2, defines the term “sale” and subsec. 5 defines “dealer and broker.” These definitions are quite lengthy and include every transaction constituting or leading up to a transfer of ownership of securities. But section 37, above quoted, creates rights and imposes liabilities. It clearly is aimed at those, who sell stock not qualified.

In every transaction of this nature there are' two parties — a buyer and a seller. Plaintiff’s argument that the act applies to anyone participating’ in the transaction, even as the agent for the buyer, ignores any distinction or difference between a buyer and a seller. Clearly the legislature did not intend to penalize the buyer in such a transaction, and it would be illogical and abnormal to penalize the buyer’s agent who was acting for his principal.

It should be remembered that in a transaction of this sort there is only one change of ownership, namely, from the seller to the buyer. The New York owners of the stock under consideration did not sell to their brokers but their brokers represented the owners in making the sale. And so plaintiff was not purchasing from Ms brokers, who were acting as his agents in the matter. The sale was from the New York owners to the plaintiff through the medium of their respective brokers.

It is not of controlling importance that the defendant Woolf gave as his opimon to plaintiff that the stock was a “good buy” at $30 a share. Plaintiff was seeking information and the broker was giving it as best he could. There was no evidence that plaintiff was asked or solicited to buy.

Subsec. 4, sec. 2, of the Illinois Securities Law was amended in 1933 by adding these words:

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282 Ill. App. 252, 1935 Ill. App. LEXIS 643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weisbrod-v-lowitz-illappct-1935.