Wicks v. Hatch

6 Jones & S. 95
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedOctober 31, 1874
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Jones & S. 95 (Wicks v. Hatch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wicks v. Hatch, 6 Jones & S. 95 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1874).

Opinion

By the Court.—Freedman, J.

The most important question which presents itself at the very threshold of this case, relates to the extent of the power possessed by George A. Wicks, as the agent of the plaintiff. The fact that he was, and is, the husband of the plaintiff, is immaterial. A married woman who carries on a business for profit, and employs her husband as her agent, to manage it, is legally liable for the acts of such agent, the same as though the marital relation did not exist (Warner v. Warren, 46 N. Y., 228).

The power was conferred by a written instrument, appointing him as her attorney “to buy, sell, assign and transfer in his discretion, gold, stocks and bonds, and to draw, execute, sign and deliver for me and in my name, all orders, checks, or other instruments in writing whatsoever, which shall or may in his discretion be necessary in the conducting, carrying on and transacting the business of buying and selling gold, stocks and bonds, on speculation or otherwise, giving and granting unto my said attorney full power and authority to do and perform all and every act and thing whatsoever requisite and necessary to be done in and about the premises, as fully to all intents and purposes as I might or could do if personally present, with full power of substitution and revocation, hereby ratifying,” &c.

It bears date July 31, 1869, and consequently was executed by the plaintiff after an experience of nearly three months in the hazardous business in which she had embarked. For the evidence shows that the first [111]*111account of the plaintiff with the defendants was opened on April 2, 1869, and closed on May 26 following, by defendants’ giving to Mr. Wicks a check to the order of the plaintiff for about forty-five thousand dollars, and that a second account was opened by her on June 12, 1869, by a deposit of sixty thousand dollars, as security for such orders as she might thereafter give.

The defendants may well insist, therefore, that the power thus given should be construed, as against them, with reference to the nature and usages of the business to which it related. These usually involved the employment of brokers. The defendants were employed as such, and the power of attorney executed by the plaintiff was placed into their hands. As such brokers the defendants, pursuant to directions from plaintiffs’ agent, made according to the custom of brokers, purchases and sales for account of the plaintiff, which involved millions. In the case of the purchases they advanced the entire cost beyond the sixty thousand dollars on deposit with them, and retained the securities as margin. This a broker, who is employed as such to purchase and carry stock or other securities, has a right to do (Horton v. Morgan, 19 N. Y. 170). The stocks and bonds for the conversion of which this action is brought, were purchased in precisely the same way, namely in defendant’s own name, and on their own-credit, and at the time of their alleged conversion the plaintiff was indebted to the defendants thereon in a sum exceeding two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, over and above the sum of sixty thousand dollars deposited. And as the plaintiff never had any personal dealings with the defendants before the alleged conversion, she can make title only through the acts of her husband, and to that end she must adopt all the instrumentalities by which the stocks and bonds were purchased, that is to say, the entire series [112]*112of speculative transactions of which they were a part. Accounts had been rendered covering the transactions during the months of June, July and August, and moneys had occasionally been paid to the plaintiff, by checks to her order, on account of profits made ; when the change in the market occurred. In September, the stock-market became excited, and the defendants being apprehensive of it.s course, and fearful of heavy and. sudden depreciations in the market value of stocks and bonds, and of the embarrassment which might ensue therefrom to themselves and their customers, and considering in reference to the plaintiff and her agent the said George A. Wicks, that they resided at Fort Washington, and had no place of business near that of defendants, and could not be easily communicated with, required of the said George A. Wicks, and, on September, 18, received from him as the agent of the plaintiff, authority in writing to sell in their discretion, at public or private sale, and without notice to the plaintiff or any notice whatever, the stocks, bonds, or gold, which they were or might be carrying for the plaintiff, whenever her margin shall fall below five per cent.

By this instrument George A. Wicks did not confer on the defendants all the powers possessed by him as the agent of the plaintiff,—the power to bay and sell generally at discretion,—but merely the power to sell such securities as by the exercise of his own discretion had come to their hands. And even this power was not conferred upon the defendants absolutely, but their right to exercise it was made to depend on a proper exercise of discretion and upon a fall of the margin below five per cent. As thus interpreted the delegation of authority that was made to the defendants, was, under the circumstances, clearly within the scope of the general powers of George A. Wicks, and the plaintiff is bound by it, for, as already stated, the powers con[113]*113ferrecL by her upon her husband must be construed with reference to the usages of the speculative business to which they related. When they are thus construed it is, in view of all the circumstances, and especially in view of the magnitude of the risks involved and the amount of watching required in consequence thereof, not at all astonishing that the defendants were intrusted with a limited discretion to sell. The instrument was, therefore, not objectionable on this ground. Mor could it be rejected on the ground that thereby George A. Wicks waived plaintiff’s right to a demand, and to notice of the time and place of sale. As it would have been entirely sufficient to have made such demand of George A. Wicks, and to have given the notice to him, as the agent charged with the management of the entire transaction (Millikin v. Dehon, 27 N. Y. 364), he had a right to waive them. The paper of September 18 was therefore properly received in evidence, and none of the exceptions based upon the effect given to it are well taken.

The question therefore remains: Did the defendants make a proper exercise of the authority delegated ? There is no dispute in regard to the statement of the accounts between the parties. The action is not predicated upon any balance claimed to be due from the defendants to the plaintiff, but it is for the conversion of a specific lot of stocks and bonds which had been carried for the plaintiff on the faith of the authority to sell delegated by the paper of September 18, on which the plaintiff was indebted to the defendants in a sura exceeding two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, over and above the amount of her deposit, and which, with the exception of three hundred shares of Wabash, for which no bids could be obtained and which were subsequently sold, but as to which sale no question arises, in consequence of the entire exhausion of the margin by a panic, the defendants on [114]*114September 28, 1869, sold for account of the plaintiff. They possessed no arbitrary discretion to sell, but a discretion to be exercised upon sufficient cause.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Milliken v. . Dehon
27 N.Y. 364 (New York Court of Appeals, 1863)
Horton v. . Morgan
19 N.Y. 170 (New York Court of Appeals, 1859)
Warner v. . Warren
46 N.Y. 228 (New York Court of Appeals, 1871)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Jones & S. 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wicks-v-hatch-nysuperctnyc-1874.