Opinion
Argued April 23, 1962
Decided July 6, 1962
Appeal from the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in the First Judicial Department, ARTHUR MARKEWICH, J.
Emanuel Becker and Jacob Gruber for appellants.
Ulysses S. Grant and Lawrence R. Condon for respondent.
The record unequivocally establishes the absence of any possible defense to the action brought by the plaintiff and, accordingly, the courts below had no alternative but to grant her motion for summary judgment.
The action is for conversion of securities and cash in a stock brokerage account, carried by the defendants, entitled "Mendoza y de la Torre Spl A/c #35 R C", and the "issues" advanced by the defendants concern the ownership of that account and their status as pledgees. In our view, the record establishes beyond question that the plaintiff was the sole owner of that account and that the defendants, having asserted no personal adverse claims of their own against it, were not pledgees or innocent purchasers for value with respect to it.
We start with the undisputed and indisputable fact that Mendoza, the Cuban broker with whom the plaintiff dealt in Cuba, acknowledged in his letter of June 6, 1958, to the plaintiff that Special Account #35 R C was owned by the plaintiff alone; in so many words, he "certified" that "the account that appears on the books of Messrs. Jacques Coe Co. * * * as Mendoza y de la Torre, `Special Account Number 35 RC' * * * is the exclusive property of [the plaintiff], who can give orders to us or to [Coe]." Whether that letter was delivered to the defendants in June, 1958, simultaneously with the opening of the account, as the plaintiff asserts, or was not brought to their attention until September 8, 1960, when the plaintiff demanded the securities and funds in that account, as the defendants concede, is irrelevant. Nothing occurred during that period which in any way altered or affected the plaintiff's title to the securities and funds in this account and, obviously, the unilateral act of Mendoza in writing the defendants, under date of February 29, 1960, that Special Account #35 R C, a free cash account, and his margined special omnibus account were to be treated as one, was ineffectual to alter the plaintiff's rights. (See Le Marchant v. Moore, 150 N.Y. 209, 216.)
The Federal Reserve Board rules and the rules of the New York Stock Exchange authorize a broker, who carries margin accounts for his own customers on the prescribed minimum margin of 70%, to maintain with a member firm of the Stock Exchange an omnibus account on only 25% margin. Acting pursuant to those rules, Mendoza did open such an omnibus account with the defendants in 1950. Eight years later, on June 3, 1958, the plaintiff, a native of Cuba, instructed Mendoza to open an American account for her with the defendants. She delivered her personal check for $11,000, drawn on the Chase Manhattan Bank to his order, which he indorsed over to the defendants with written instructions, contained in a letter, also dated June 6, 1958, to open a new account with the defendants which, as indicated, they designated on their books as "Mendoza y de la Torre Spl A/c #35 R C"; "R.C." are the initials of the plaintiff's name. The $11,000 was credited to that account and purchases of securities for the plaintiff's account for cash were placed in this new account. From its inception and throughout its existence it was strictly a cash account, never a margin account. It necessarily follows, therefore, that Mendoza's omnibus account could not possibly have been regarded as including or applying to this fully paid-up account.
We go further and note that the defendants' handling of Special Account #35 R C leaves no doubt that the defendants knew that it belonged to the plaintiff. Securities were purchased and sold by the defendants upon instructions of Mendoza, the transactions were recorded on the defendants' books in that account, dividends upon stocks listed in that account, as well as interest upon credit balances, were credited to that account, and these transactions were reflected in the defendants' statements. Indeed, some of these statements were delivered to the plaintiff by the defendants in August of 1960. In addition, funds were transferred by the defendants from that account and deposited in the plaintiff's own bank accounts, and on one occasion the defendants actually delivered their check to the plaintiff personally for the cash balance then in the special account. Moreover, in February of 1959, the defendants transferred to Mendoza's omnibus account $6,501.34 as an adjustment of advances made by Mendoza for the plaintiff's account and that sum was charged to Special Account #35 R C. Here is another indication, an unequivocal one, that this account was no part of Mendoza's omnibus account. If it had been, there would have been no reason or occasion to effect this transfer. These acts, and there were others, evidence full recognition that Special Account #35 R C was separate and apart from the omnibus account and that it belonged exclusively to the plaintiff.
It is of considerable consequence that the title of the account on the defendants' books, and on 16 of the 19 statements of account rendered by the defendants, consistently appeared as "Special A/c #35 R C", without any reference being made to "omnibus" — except on three occasions when the insertion was obviously made for self-serving purposes. It is entirely immaterial that the statements were rendered to Mendoza who transmitted them to the plaintiff.
The course of conduct between the defendants and the plaintiff — who had a long personal acquaintanceship with Jacques Coe — the purchases of the securities for cash, the deliveries and remittances of funds by the defendants to the plaintiff, which were charged to Special Account #35 R C, constitute a definite appropriation and segregation of the plaintiff's securities in that account, free of any margin or indebtedness due to the defendants from the plaintiff.
As noted above, the defendants do not deny that the plaintiff is the exclusive owner of the securities and funds in this account. However, in an attempt to avoid the consequences necessarily flowing from these facts, the defendants seek to create a triable issue by asserting that they had not established any broker-customer relationship with the plaintiff. But, as we held in the Le Marchant case ( 150 N.Y. 209, supra), the existence of such a relationship is immaterial; quoting with approval from Roca v. Byrne ( 145 N.Y. 182), the court wrote (p. 218):
"`The general and well-recognized rule is, and has been, that a principal is entitled, in all cases, when he can trace his property, whether it be in the hands of the agent, or of his representatives, or of third persons, to reclaim it and it is immaterial that it may have been converted into money; so only that it is in condition to be distinguished from the other property or assets of the agent.'"
Thus, if the defendants were ever entitled to regard Mendoza as the owner, they certainly were not privileged to do so once they were notified in September of 1960 of the plaintiff's "exclusive" ownership of the account. From that time on they were bound to recognize the plaintiff's claim.
Although the defendants concede that the plaintiff is not indebted to them in any amount, they claim that she may, perhaps, be indebted to Mendoza. Manifestly, the assertion of imagined or illusory rights of a third person (Mendoza), despite the latter's own declaration that the account is the plaintiff's "exclusive property", should not be permitted to defeat the grant of summary judgment.
Nor, as we have already intimated, are any rights of an innocent purchaser or pledgee for value involved. The defendants did not make any loan or extend any credit to the plaintiff in connection with this account, nor did they resort to the plaintiff's securities or the cash credit balances prior to September 8, 1960 — the day on which the defendants admitted that they saw Mendoza's June 6, 1958 letter certifying to the plaintiff's exclusive ownership of the account. Except for the transfer of the $6,501.34 to the omnibus account, to which we referred above, Special Account #35 R C remained intact throughout. Mendoza's instructions to the defendants on February 29, 1960 to regard the omnibus account and Special Account #35 R C as being one account constituted an attempted conversion by him of the plaintiff's securities and funds, and the defendants' refusal to turn them over to the plaintiff after September 8, 1960 was unauthorized and improper. (See Hall v. Bache, 235 App. Div. 256.)
Parenthetically, we would but add that there is nothing to indicate that the debit balance, in Mendoza's omnibus account, of $74,283.97 as of December 1, 1960 was not sufficiently secured by the collateral in that account and the other sub-omnibus numbered accounts, other than Special Account #35 R C.
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
We have repeatedly held that the granting of a motion for summary judgment where there was at least "doubt as to the existence of a triable issue" was clearly unwarranted ( Falk v. Goodman, 7 N.Y.2d 87, 91; Sillman v. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., 3 N.Y.2d 395, 404; Di Menna Sons v. City of New York, 301 N.Y. 118, 121); that since the granting of such a motion is the "precedural equivalent of a trial" ( Falk v. Goodman, supra), it should be denied whenever the issue "is fairly debatable" ( Stone v. Goodson, 8 N.Y.2d 8, 12) or is "`arguable' ( Barrett v. Jacobs, 255 N.Y. 520, 522); `issue-finding, rather than issue-determination, is the key to the procedure'" ( Sillman v. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., supra). If these rules mean anything, the granting of plaintiff's motion for summary judgment herein was patently erroneous.
This is a tort case — for conversion — in which defendants are subject to arrest and imprisonment (Civ. Prac. Act, § 826, subd. 3) and they have been adjudged liable on clearly conflicting affidavits.
Plaintiff instituted this action on September 30, 1960, following refusal by defendants, a New York stock brokerage firm, to release to her the credit balance and securities in a stock brokerage account maintained by them under the name "Mendoza y de la Torre Spl A/c #35 R C" and opened a few months before Castro came into power in Cuba. The complaint alleged that plaintiff was the owner of the credit balance and securities in the aforesaid account; that she, through her agent Mendoza, a Cuban broker, had delivered the property to defendants to be held for her account upon the agreement of defendants that the property would be returned to plaintiff upon demand; that such demand was made but defendants wrongfully refused to return the property and converted it to their own use.
Defendants' answer denied the material allegations of the complaint, with the exception of the demand and refusal. It set forth by way of defense that the property in question was part of an omnibus account maintained by them for Mendoza pursuant to an agreement made in 1950 in compliance with the provisions of section 4 (subd. [b]) of Regulation T issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Code of Fed. Reg., tit. 12, § 220.4, subd. [b]), which expressly recognizes "Special omnibus account[s]"; and that said property was duly credited against the debt balance existing in said account from Mendoza to defendants.
After executing plaintiff's orders through his omnibus account with defendants, Mendoza delivered to plaintiff a letter dated June 6, 1958, expressly reciting that
"the account that appears on the books of Messrs. Jacques Coe Co., 39 Broadway, New York 6, N.Y. as Mendoza y de la Torre, `Special Account Number 35 R.C.', with its balances in securities and funds in favor or against, is the exclusive property of Mrs. Reina Canto de Gomez Mena, who can give orders to us or to Messrs. Jacques Coe Co."
Plaintiff alleged that Mendoza informed her that "he had notified defendants that said special account is my exclusive property and that he had sent them a copy of said letter".
Defendants emphatically maintain that they "at no time received a copy of such letter from Mendoza"; indeed they alleged they first saw this letter in September, 1960 when plaintiff produced it in connection with her demand. Thus the unilateral act of Mendoza in so informing plaintiff can in nowise affect defendants' rights; on this motion, therefore, in view of this conflict we may attach no significance to this letter. Defendants further assert they "had no agreement or understanding with Mendoza to carry any account for plaintiff nor to receive or carry any moneys or securities for her". They allege that their sole agreement was with Mendoza, and that he alone was their customer pursuant to their 1950 omnibus account agreement. Of course they knew that the securities in the omnibus account belonged to customers of Mendoza, for such is the nature of an omnibus account; moreover, even if they knew the names of Mendoza's customers, unless some restriction were imposed upon them they would be justified in treating Mendoza only as their customer.
That agreement provided that defendants "are acting as broker for" Mendoza "and not for any other person, and that" Mendoza "is liable to you for all commitments incurred and amounts due on transactions in said account".
On September 8, 1960 plaintiff made demand on defendants for the property in question. Defendants refused to comply with this demand, contending that Special Account #35 R C was but a sub-omnibus account included in the omnibus account maintained for Mendoza, and that the latter account had a debit balance of approximately $74,283.97; the cash and securities in the sub-omnibus account had allegedly been pledged by Mendoza as security for the entire omnibus account. In support of this contention, defendants also rely upon a letter from Mendoza, dated February 29, 1960, wherein it is stated:
"all of the accounts which you [defendants] are carrying on your books for our Omnibus Account, including not only the Omnibus Account itself, but all of the other Sub-Omnibus Numbered Accounts, except if specifically advised otherwise, are to be regarded and treated by you as being one account. At present these other accounts are: * * * [setting forth 14 accounts, 12 of which were `Special', including] Mendoza y de la Torre Omnibus Special 35 R.C.
* * *
"Furthermore, you have at all times the unrestricted power to sell any of the securities carried in any of these accounts in order to keep the entire Omnibus Account on a proper marginal basis."
Plaintiff maintained, however, that defendants had no right to rely upon the above-quoted letter in the absence of her consent, since they allegedly knew the account was her property. As indicative of defendants' knowledge, plaintiff points to the fact that she received statements with respect to the account from defendants, and that defendants paid to her the dividends and interest received on the securities in her account. Defendants denied these allegations, stating that their statements were all directed to Mendoza, and never to plaintiff, except on one occasion when Mendoza directed them to send a copy to plaintiff. Defendants further alleged that remittances to plaintiff were made only pursuant to the instructions of Mendoza. Thus the affidavits are conflicting throughout.
Mendoza's notification to plaintiff that her orders had been executed and the stocks purchased on her behalf undoubtedly transferred title to the securities in question to plaintiff, no matter what the nature of Special Account #35 R C in which they were held ( Le Marchant v. Moore, 150 N.Y. 209, 216; People v. Atwater, 229 N.Y. 303, 312). If, therefore, the securities were wrongfully pledged with defendants as security for another account, Mendoza's action was a criminal offense (Penal Law, § 956) as well as a civil conversion. Nevertheless, this does not establish, as a matter of law, that plaintiff is entitled, as against defendants, to the property contained in the pledged account. A broker who, as a pledgee for value and without knowledge of a third person's interest, receives securities as collateral for the indebtedness of the person in whose name the account stands may apply such collateral against the debt balance of that account ( Willard v. White, 56 Hun 581 [1st Dept.]; Le Marchant v. Moore, supra; Kittredge v. Grannis, 244 N.Y. 168, 177).
In the absence of knowledge to the contrary, defendants are "entitled to the protection of the ordinary presumption that the person in whose name an account stands is the party in interest from whom instructions are to be taken" ( Timpson v. Allen, 149 N.Y. 513, 519-520). Or, phrased somewhat differently, Judge ANDREWS restated the presumption thus ( Kittredge v. Grannis, 244 N.Y. 168, 177, supra):
"Assuming, therefore, that there was a conversion of these bonds by [plaintiff's broker], or that in the sale there was a breach of faith amounting to fraud, the next question to be considered is exceptions touching the question as to whether [the defendant brokerage firm] became holders in good faith. As to them we start out with the presumption that the brokers having possession of these negotiable instruments had the right to sell them. They had presumably also the right to pledge them for the amount due from the customer, and the pledgee taking them in due course might assume that the pledge was of right. In the absence of knowledge to the contrary or of facts which required inquiry [defendants] might rely upon these presumptions."
That the pledge was unauthorized and constituted a conversion, or that the stock pledged was wholly paid for by the wrongdoer's customer, does not alter the fact that title thereto was subject to the lien of the innocent pledgee for value ( Le Marchant v. Moore, supra; Willard v. White, supra). Indeed, in Turnbull v. Longacre Bank ( 249 N.Y. 159, 164-165), we recognized the negotiable character of stock certificates, and held that an innocent pledgee for value from a thief was entitled to retain the stolen securities subject to the true owner's right to redeem the pledge by paying the debt for which the certificates were collateral security.
Applying these principles to the instant case, it is manifest that the crucial issue is whether defendants had knowledge that Mendoza was not privileged to pledge the securities in question. This question is not one that may be answered on the basis of the present record, since the parties' affidavits are in direct conflict on each point which might tend to resolve the issue one way or the other. Credibility of affiants is for the trier of facts, and may not be determined by the court on a motion for summary judgment ( Di Donna v. Sachs, 9 A.D.2d 576; Bernstein v. Kritzer, 224 App. Div. 387, 389).
We have in this case no evidence of custom or usage, nor do we have the testimony of Mendoza, the Cuban broker, with whom plaintiff had other accounts. It should be noted that defendants' answer was served on November 7, 1960. They promptly served a demand for a bill of particulars which was furnished on November 17, 1960. Just eight days later plaintiff moved for summary judgment. In the meantime, defendants were trying to contact Mendoza, but efforts to communicate with him in Cuba failed in the short interval between service of the bill and the motion for summary judgment. We are told he is now in this country, and that "his testimony could clarify the issues presently obscure".
For all of the foregoing reasons, the judgment appealed from should be reversed and the motion for summary judgment denied, with costs.
Judges DYE, BURKE and FOSTER concur with Judge FULD; Judge FROESSEL dissents in an opinion in which Chief Judge DESMOND and Judge VAN VOORHIS concur.
Judgment affirmed.