Wolff v. Lockwood

70 A.D. 569, 75 N.Y.S. 605
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 70 A.D. 569 (Wolff v. Lockwood) 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
Wolff v. Lockwood, 70 A.D. 569, 75 N.Y.S. 605 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Patterson, J.:

The judgment from which this appeal is taken was entered upon the report of a referee in favor of the. defendant dismissing the complaint and allowing a recovery upon a counterclaim. The transactions between the plaintiff and the defendants out of which their respective demands arose consisted of dealings in stocks. The plaintiff’s claim is based upon allegations that the defendants, as brokers, were employed by him to buy and sell shares on his account; that there were two accounts with the defendants standing in his name, known, respectively, as accounts Ho. 1 and Ho. 2; that on account Ho. 1 no transactions were had after February 7, 1898, and he claims further that on account Ho. 2 a balance apparently due from him to the defendants was paid by the check of a third party. The claim of the defendants is, in substance, that the transactions of the plaintiff with them extended beyond February 7,1898, and included items of stock, the purchase of which on the plaintiff’s account is now repudiated by him. The determination of the issues arising upon the transactions contained in account Ho. 1 depends upon the authority of the defendants to charge the plaintiff with certain [570]*570alleged purchase's made by them on his behalf. All the stocks bough t or held by the defendants for the plaintiff were carried on margins. The referee found that, on the 14th day of February, 1898, the defendants were carrying on the plaintiff’s account 1,600 shares of stock on which the margins had become exhausted; that the defendants made due and reasonable efforts to advise the plaintiff of the condition of his account and to secure further margin from him; that they failed to ■ receive further margin and sold out the account on the fifteenth day of February, at a loss. The plaintiff’s contention is that on the 7th of February, 1898, the defendants were carrying for him only 1,000 shares of stock; that he ceased dealing with them on his account TSTo. 1 at that time, and that he never gave any orders to buy stock on his account after that date, and that the sale of his stocks on the fifteenth of February was unauthorized. If the defendants, by authority of the plaintiff, bought shares on margin for him after the seventh of February, and in excess of the 1,000 shares carried for him on that date; or if the plaintiff ratified purchases of shares made by the defendants on his account after the seventh of February, and without excuse failed to respond to calls for margin after being duly advised, then the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.

All the transactions had by the plaintiff with the defendants were "by orders given through one Ranger. The referee has found that Ranger was an employee of the defendants whose business it was to solicit accounts for the firm and that he received a salary for so doing; that while in such employment Ranger secured the account of the plaintiff for the defendants, and plaintiff authorized a number of transactions on said account, giving his orders through Ranger, who, in addition to those authorized, sent other orders to buy and sell stocks on account of the plaintiff of which the plaintiff was ignorant; but the referee also found that those transactions were executed in good faith by the defendants, who did not know, and had no reason to know, that they were unauthorized.

The evidence fully sustains the contention that through all those transactions Ranger was the agent of the defendants and not of the plaintiff. The dealings of the plaintiff with Ranger as the representative of the defendants must stand respecting account Ro. 1 upon the same footing as to their liability as if the plaintiff had [571]*571dealt directly with the defendants. The shares with which he is sought to be charged by the defendants over and above the 1,000 which they were carrying can be no other than the 600, the purchase of which on his account the plaintiff disclaims. The referee has found that the plaintiff must bear the loss arising from the purchase and sale of these 600 shares, because of his neglect in the transactions and because the defendants themselves were free from negligence, and this conclusion requires an examination of the evidence to ascertain what was the situation and what were the acts of the parties concerning the account Eo. 1.

Eliminating from that account those 600 shares, we find that on the 15th of February, 1898, the day upon which the stock was sold, there was a margin upon 1,000 shares of $1,770 and the referee very properly states in his opinion that if the plaintiff’s contention is correct, his account was sufficiently margined to protect it from an arbitrary sale, while if the defendants’ contention is correct, they were unquestionably justified in selling out the account, provided they had performed their obligation in giving notice. We are unable to gather from all the evidence a satisfactory reason why, as an original proposition, the plaintiff should be charged with the fraud of Ranger upon his principals, or with the consequences of the impositition he practiced upon them. It is conceded that he had no direct transactions with the defendants. Ranger was employed by them to solicit and take orders from customers. The defendants put Ranger in the position which enabled him to deceive them, and as his agency was solely for them it is apparent that if no other element is introduced in the case those who were invited by the defendants to deal with him on their account should not be made to suffer for his transgressions. G-ood faith or honesty of purpose on the part of the defendants in buying these stocks and charging them to the .plaintiff does not affect the question. The defendants may have believed that the plaintiff had ordered the purchase of the additional shares, but that would give them no right, unless the plaintiff did something to confirm that belief or acted in such a way as to justify it and to subject them to some loss in consequence of such acts of confirmation. The defendants contend that such was the case. They claim that accounts were furnished from day to day to the plaintiff of the transactions he [572]*572now repudiates; that the ordinary notifications were sent to him at the address given by him; that he paid no. attention to those notices, arid that, therefore, they were justified in believing that the orders for the purchase emanated from him, and that they were thus prevented from taking such steps as would have been appropriate to save themselves from loss had they been notified that Banger had no authority to give the orders for these repudiated purchases. The course of dealings established between the parties was the following: The account, referring now to account Ho. 1, was originally opened at the solicitation of Banger and by a transfer to the defendants of' an account which the plaintiff had had with another firm of brokers. The defendants conducted their business at their office at 44 and 46 Broadr way in the city of Hew York. Banger, their agent, transacted his business at the Waldorf-Astoria. Hotel in the city of Hew York; orders were given to him by the plaintiff and were then transmitted by telephone to the defendants’ principal office on Broadway, and the orders were then executed in the customary way.. On the day on which each order was executed, a memorandum showing the transaction was sent in the usual way to the customer. The plaintiff had stated that his address was the Beform Club in the city of Hew York. There is no reason to doubt that on each occasion on which an order was given by Banger for the account of the plaintiff, whether such order were genuine or spurious, the usual notification was sent to the Beform Club. The plaintiff swears that he.

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Bluebook (online)
70 A.D. 569, 75 N.Y.S. 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolff-v-lockwood-nyappdiv-1902.