Wood v. Aronberg

110 S.E. 351, 132 Va. 126, 1922 Va. LEXIS 11
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 19, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 110 S.E. 351 (Wood v. Aronberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Aronberg, 110 S.E. 351, 132 Va. 126, 1922 Va. LEXIS 11 (Va. 1922).

Opinion

Prentis, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

[1] D. G. Aronberg instituted his motion for judgment against J. Leon Wood and J. W. Cole, partners doing business as J. Leon Wood & Co. There was a trial by jury and a verdict for the defendants; whereupon the plaintiff made [128]*128a motion to set aside the verdict upon the. ground that it was contrary to the law and the evidence, which motion was sustained; thereupon the trial judge entered judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the defendants for the full amount claimed, $5,439.18, and they are here assigning error.

The pertinent facts out of which this controversy arises may be thus stated: One R. Palmer Ingram had been buying stocks upon margins through the defendants, who were stock brokers, for several months. On the 24th day of June, 1919, he bought through them 200 shares of stock of the American Sugar Refining Co. at 134 1-2. The margin required on this transaction was $2,000. Ingram gave' the brokers his check for $1,500 instead of for the amount demanded, because, as he roughly figured up his account, he found that he had $500 or $600 to his credit over and above the sum necessary to margin various other stocks which he was then carrying with the defendants. The 200 shares of stock were purchased in his own name, and according to the testimony of the defendants nothing was said then, nor until a long time thereafter, about the plaintiff, Aron-berg, and no intimation was then given that he had any interest in the transaction. Ingram’s cancelled check for $1,500 now has on it a notation “for D. G. Aronberg,” but the brokers testify that they believe that this w,as not put on the check until after it had been paid. Confirmation of the purchase was duly made to Ingram, showing that the stock had been bought for him. There was a subsequent check for $500 containing the same notation paid by Ingram to the brokers for additional margin on his account. Before this particular transaction, Ingram had bought fifty shares of this stock, and after it he also bought 100 shares of it in the same way on margin in his own name. On the 7th day of August, 1919, Ingram owed the brokers, Wood & Co., over $3,000 on account of margins due on purchases [129]*129of these and various other stocks. It appears from the plaintiff’s testimony, though the defendants deny that they had any notice of this, that Aronberg, the plaintiff, who was absent from the city a great deal, had directed Ingram to buy 200 shares of this particular stock for him, and at the same time authorized Ingram to get the $2,000 which was necessary to pay the margin from his (Aronberg’s) office. Aronberg, however, paid no attention to the fact that he had no confirmation of the sale from the brokers, or that the stock was being carried in Ingram’s name as purchaser and owner. Between July 17 and August 7, 1919, the-brokers were pressing Ingram for additional margins, and threatening to close out his account unless the additional funds were supplied. Ingram then owed the brokers more than $3,000 for margins then due on this and other stocks being carried for him, ;and on August 7, 1919, this letter was sent to the brokers by special messenger:

“Norfolk, Virginia, August 7, 1919.
“Messrs. J. Leon Wood & Co.,
“City.
“Gentlemen:
“Enclosed please find my check for $2,000 as additional margin to cover 200 shares of American Sugar, now held in the name of Robert P. Ingram, also kindly transfer same to my account.
Yours very truly,
“D. G. Aronberg.”

Upon receipt of this check the brokers immediately had it certified and placed to the credit of Ingram’s account. This letter was dictated by Ingram but signed by Aronberg. The brokers promptly and positively refused to transfer the 200 shares of stock because the amount was insufficient to margin the stocks then being carried for Ingram by them and replied to this letter on August 8th in this language:

[130]*130“We have your favor of the 7th, enclosing check for $2,000 and have placed the same to the credit of the account of Mr. R. Palmer Ingram.”

When the plaintiff and Ingram learned that the brokers declined to transfer the stock to Aronberg, Ingram wrote a letter, signing Aronberg’s name to it, to the effect that in as much as they had not carried out the instructions, he had stopped payment of the check, but as the check had already been certified, this effort to stop its payment was unavailing. From that time to the close of the transactions there appears to have been no change in the relation of the parties. Both plaintiff and Ingram then knew that the $2,000 had been placed to the credit of Ingram’s account, and that the defendants refused to transfer the 200 shares of sugar to Aronberg because of Ingram’s failure to pay the additional margins required. The brokers continued their demand on Ingram for additional margins, and on September 23, 1919, notified him by letter that unless he deposited at least $3,000 by Thursday, September 25, they would close out his account at the prevailing prices, and also advised him that he was then carrying with them fifty shares of Pierce Oil, 200 shares of American Sugar Refining Co., and 100 shares of Silver King of Arizona. The letter further states that “Unless this matter is attended to by eleven o’clock on the morning of Thursday, September 25th, wc will sell these securities at the market the best we can get at that time.” On September 25, according to the testimony of the brokers, Ingram told them to close out all of these stocks, and thereupon, on that date, they were sold, and after crediting the proceeds of sale the account showed a balance of $478.50 due to the brokers.

Thereafter, on the 30th day of September, Aronberg and Ingram went to the office of the defendants, after they both knew that the stock had been sold, and Aronberg de[131]*131manded his money, asking for $4,000, or as he expressed it, “very particularly, where is the $2,000 check I sent you. I have an account or I didn’t have an account. If I did have an account and you accepted my check my account is still in force and I will tell you when to sell the sugar.” But the brokers declined to respond to his demand. Then on October 2, 1919, Aronberg wrote the brokers this letter:

“Referring to my letter of August 7, 1919, in which I enclosed my check for $2,000, as additional margin to cover 200 shares of American sugar stock, then held in the name of Robert P. Ingram, with instructions for the transfer of this stock to my name, I now instruct you to sell the same at the market price and ask that you kindly let me have remittance to cover this transaction.”

To this letter no reply was made, and this litigation ensued. The judgment of the trial court is based upon the view that the plaintiff was entitled to recover as the original purchaser of the 200 shares of stock at 134 1-2 and to receive the profit which would have been his if the whole transaction had been in his name as purchaser from the beginning, and terminated by a sale of the stock as his property by his direction at the prevailing price on October 2, 1919, the date of this letter—that is, at 142. Thus calculated, his profits would correspond with the judgment of the court.

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Bluebook (online)
110 S.E. 351, 132 Va. 126, 1922 Va. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-aronberg-va-1922.