Yohey v. Burton

11 A.2d 794, 139 Pa. Super. 393, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 57
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 13, 1939
DocketAppeal, 312
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 11 A.2d 794 (Yohey v. Burton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yohey v. Burton, 11 A.2d 794, 139 Pa. Super. 393, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 57 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by Cunningham, J.,

Defendants, partners in a stock brokerage business, have appealed ,from the action of the trial court in directing a verdict for plaintiff, a customer, in the amount of $1,894.72, at the conclusion of her action to recover damages for the alleged unlawful conversion of certain stocks held by defendants as collateral security in plaintiff’s margin account.

If plaintiff is entitled to recover, the amount of the judgment entered on the verdict is not in controversy. Concededly, the trial judge properly ruled, as a matter of law, that the measure of damages is the difference between the amount for which the stocks were sold and their highest price within a reasonable time after their sale, fixing three days as that reasonable time. See Act of April 10, 1929, P. L. 476, Section 1, 68 PS §481.

The essential facts, with minor exceptions, are not in dispute. On March 24, 1937, plaintiff opened a trading account jointly in the name of herself and a sister, Violet Yohey. Subsequently she opened two additional accounts, one in her own name on May 19, 1937, and the other in the name of another sister, Florence Van Horn, on September 14, 1937. Plaintiff had general powers of attorney conferring upon her full authority to deal with the joint account and the Van Horn account as if they were in her own name.

*395 The status of these three accounts on October 18, 1937, was as follows: In the joint account there were securities valued at $5,800, with a debit balance of $4,474.47, leaving an equity in favor of plaintiff of $1,325.53; in the Blanche Yohey account there were securities worth $4,200, with a debit balance of $4,037, leaving an equity in favor of plaintiff of $163; and in the Yan Horn account plaintiff was short 100 shares of United States Steel Common, but had a cash credit balance of $4,090.87. Concededly, if the Yan Horn account had been closed out on that date, there would have been a credit balance in the neighborhood of $4,575, which plaintiff had the right to use under the powers of attorney held by her to bolster the margin in either of the other accounts, if she so desired.

The worst break in the history of the market occurred in the month of October, 1937. During the week preceding October 18, 1937, defendants sent plaintiff a series of telegrams demanding additional collateral. Such a telegram had been dispatched to her on October 17, 1937. As plaintiff testified, on October 3.8, 3.937, at about 2:45 P. M., she talked 'with defendants’ manager, William F. Henshaw, Jr., with respect to putting up additional margin. She said that she discussed with him the advisability of covering her short position in steel. She further stated: “I went to Mr. Henshaw. I asked what 1 should do about it. He said, ‘Oh, go home; sleep it over and cover it in the morning,’ because I might get a better price for it.” That is, cover at a lower price.

Her testimony in this respect was corroborated by the manager, who was no longer in the employ of defendants at the time of the trial and was called on behalf of plaintiff. His version was as follows: “Miss Yohey came to me near the close of that day, and more or less asked counsel. I said my advice was to wait until the following day. I advised it ought to be held over until the following day.”

*396 The evening of October 18, 1937, plaintiff was again notified by telegram to produce $1,100 by 10 A. M. the next morning or else the stocks protecting the joint account would be sold. The telegram read: “Your account needs $1100. Unless this amount is received before market opening Tuesday October Nineteenth we will be forced to liquidate sufficient collateral to protect your account.”

Plaintiff testified that on the morning of October 19, 1937, she arrived at defendants’ office at 9:45 A. M., and from the corridor saw that Henshaw, with whom she had transacted her business exclusively for a month prior to that date, was busy talking on the telephone. She waited for him to finish talking, and when he finally emerged and spoke to her, it was a few minutes after the market had opened, the opening having taken place at 10 A. M. She related in substance that she had come there to cover her short position in steel as a method of supplying the additional collateral demanded by the telegram of the previous evening. She testified: “Q. Tell us what happened on the morning of the 19th. A. I went to the door to see Mr. Henshaw, to tell him I was covering the steel this morning. He was busy on the phone. I stood there and waited for him. He motioned to me he would be with me in a few minutes. Well, it is like a little hall. You can see the board room, translux and the board. I was watching the market as it opened. I kept motioning to him to come on out. When Mr. Henshaw finally was through, he opened the door and came out. Q. What time was that? A. Ten or fifteen minutes after the market had opened. I said, ‘Mr. Henshaw, I will take care of the steel; I will cover it—cover the steel, please’—By the Court: Q. Finally he came out and told you what? A. I was ready to cover the steel. When the market opened and steel was lower, I would buy it and take care of my margin call. Mr. Henshaw said to me ‘Mr. Burton (one of the defendants) took that account out of my hands *397 this morning, and I have nothing more to do with it. He put your stocks up, sold them this morning—put them up for sale this morning.’ By Mr. Kellam (counsel for plaintiff): Q. What did you say to that? A. I said, ‘He can’t do that; I am here to take care of my margin call.’ ” This testimony also was substantially corroborated by the manager.

Burton admitted he gave the order to sell the collateral at 9:58 A. M. or two minutes before the opening of the market. These orders were executed sometime during the morning, and the total receipts from the stocks sold were $2,624.23. At about 10:30 A. M. the same morning, plaintiff covered the steel, which gave her a cash credit balance of approximately $4,500 in the Yan Horn account, an amount sufficient to supply the additional margin demanded by defendants. When plaintiff learned of the sale of the collateral in the joint account, she inquired as to which stocks had been sold, but the manager was unable to furnish this information at once.

Plaintiff made no demand upon defendants to repurchase the stocks which were sold, but according to her own testimony, said to the manager: “Find out what he sold, and we will buy those securities back. I didn’t want to part with those securities.”

Plaintiff continued to trade at the defendants’ brokerage office daily for almost six months thereafter, taking away her accounts in March, 1938. She was not in any sense a novice at playing the market, and the record reveals that she understood marginal dealings fully. She had been buying and selling stocks for a period of ten years before the transaction here involved, and her practice was to be in defendants’ office daily from the opening of the market to its close.

When the joint account was opened, plaintiff and her sister signed a “Customer’s Agreement” addressed to defendants, which provided, inter alia: “Gentlemen: In consideration of your accepting one or more accounts of *398

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Bluebook (online)
11 A.2d 794, 139 Pa. Super. 393, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yohey-v-burton-pasuperct-1939.