Zulick v. Markham

6 Daly 129
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJune 28, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 Daly 129 (Zulick v. Markham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zulick v. Markham, 6 Daly 129 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1875).

Opinion

Charles P. Daly, Chief Justice.

The plaintiff delivered a certificate of eighty shares of stock, with a power of attorney in which the name of the transferee was left blank, together with the plaintiff’s promissory note for $4,800, to a broker named Cook to borrow money for the plaintiff’s use, the certificate of stock to be pledged as security for the payment of the note. Cook went to a broker named Christie to procure a loan upon the stock, who went to another broker named Markham, and Markham applied to another broker named Townsend, but neither Markham nor Townsend were willing to loan any money upon the stock. Cook then authorized Christie to sell it at 58£ per cent., and Christie offered it to Mark[130]*130ham, who agreed to take it at' that price. Markham without paying anything for it, and the certificate still remaining in the hands of Cook, was engaged for nearly two months in trying to find a purchaser for the stock, during which he offered it to the broker Townsend for 62J per cent., and Townsend having on his part found a purchaser for it in a person named Burdell, agreed to take it from Markham at 62J per cent., and sold it to Burdell at 70 per cent., who paid the amount for it. Townsend then deducted from the amount received the difference between 62-^ and 70 per cent, as his profit in the transaction, and Markham the difference between 58£ and 62? per cent, for his profit, out of which it wordd seem he paid Christie $100 for his profit, and Cook upon receiving the residue, paid $70 50 to Christie, and after deducting his own commission as a broker, he paid what was left, $4,539, to a person by the plaintiff’s direction, the plaintiff supposing that was the amount which Cook bad obtained upon the note. Neither Christie, Markham. Townsend or Burdell knew that the plaintiff was the owner of the stock, nor did either of them see or know anything of the note which the plaintiff had given to Cook, nor did either of them know the fact that the stock had been placed in the hands of Cook solely for the purpose of borrowing money upon it. Cook told Christie that somebody wanted a loan upon the stock, and that there would have to be a note, and after the sale of the stock he heard that the plaintiff was the owner of it.

The plaintiff, whose note was outstanding, and who had received, as he supposed, the $4,539 as a loan upon the note and the certificate of stock pledged for the payment of the note, having afterwards learned that the stock instead of being pledged as security for the payment of the note, had been sold to Burdell, an innocent purchaser for value, through the joint instrumentality of Cook, Christie, Markham and Townsend, brought the present action against these four brokers, for a conversion of the stock. The" complaint was dismissed for a defect in the pleadings as to Cook the fraudulent broker, through whose instrumentality the stock was diverted from the use for which it was delivered to him ; but judgment for the [131]*131full value of the stock, was recovered against ■ Christie, Markham and Townsend, as parties assisting and co-operating with 'Cook in the conversion of the stock. The appeal is brought only by Markham and Townsend, and the question is whether they are liable with Cook for a conversion of the stock. In my opinion they are not.

It is not disputed that no action could be maintained against Burdell, he being an innocent purchaser for value; nor does the fact appear to be disputed that Christie, Markham and Townsend were innocent parties, who did what they did in the transfer and sale of the stock, without any knowledge of the circumstances under which it was placed in the hands of Cook, and in the belief, accompanied as it was by a power of attorney in blank, that he, Cook, had full power and authority to dispose of if; but their liability to an action for the conversion is predicated upon the fact that neither of them were purchasers for value, having paid nothing for the stock, and that having exercised a control or dominion over it in the successive transfers of it from one to the other, until the final purchase of it by Burdell for value, that they are answerable as wrongdoers, through whose joint and successive instrumentality the stock passed into the hands of an innocent purchaser for value, and was thus lost to the plaintiff.

It was said by Lord Holt, in Baldwin v. Cole (6 Mod. 212), that conversion was an assuming upon one’s self the property and right of disposing of the goods of another,” and by Lord Ellenborough, in McCombie v. Davies (6 East, 538), that “a man is guilty of a conversion, who takes any property by assignment from another who has no authority to dispose of it; for what is that but assisting that other in carrying his wrongful act into effect.” This is undoubtedly the law, although somewhat broadly stated, but it is to be understood with a qualification, since extensively acted upon, which is comprehensively and succinctly stated by Judge Rapallo, in McNeil v. The Tenth National Bank (46 N. Y. 329), as follows: “ Where the true owner holds out another, or allows him to appea/r as the owner of, or as having full power of disposition over the property, and innocent third parties are thus led into dealing [132]*132with such apparent owner, they will be protected. Their rights, in such cases, do not depend upon the actual title or authority of the party with whom they deal directly, but are derived from the act of the real owner, which precludes him from disputing, as against them, the existence of the title or power, which through negligence or mistaken confidence he caused or allowed to appear to be vested in the party making the conveyance and that, in my judgment, as respects these brokers-Christie, Markham and Townsend, is the present case.

The plaintiff, through mistaken confidence in the fraudulent broker Cook, placed in his hands the certificate of stock, with a power of attorney in blank indorsed upon the certificate, thereby enabling him to appear as if he had the right to assign and dispose of the stock by simply filling in the blank in the? power with the assignee’s or vendee’s name; in other words,, giving him the indicia of title, or the usual means by which transfers of stock are made in such cases; and by so doing, putting it in his power to deal with innocent parties who-treated with him in the ordinary course of business, upon the-assumption that he was the person who had the right to dispose of it.

It was held by the Court of Appeals in McNeil v. The Tenth National Bank (supra), after a very elaborate review of the authorities by Judge Rapallo, that the owner, by a delivery to the broker of a certificate of shares of stock, with an assignment perfect in. all respects except that the date and the name of the transferee is left blank, confers upon the broker such an apparent title to, or power of disposition over the shares in question, as will estop him from asserting his own title, as against parties who took bona, fide though the broker, and that the delivery of the certificate with such an assignment: or power passes the entire legal title to the stock. “ The holder of such a certificate and power,” says Judge Rapallo,, possesses all the external indicia of title and an apparently unlimited power of disposition over it.” It is urged, however, that this protection extends only to an innocent purchaser, who has paid value for the stock, and cannot be invoked by intermediate innocent parties through whose instrumentality or [133]

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Bluebook (online)
6 Daly 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zulick-v-markham-nyctcompl-1875.