Where the trustee of a bankrupt broker finds in the estate
certificates for shares of a particular stock legally subject to
the demand of the customer for whom shares of that stock were
bought by the bankrupt, the customer is entitled to the same
although the certificates may not be the identical ones purchased
for him.
Richardson v. Shaw, 209 U.
S. 365.
Where there are in the bankrupt's possession certificates for
enough shares of a particular stock to satisfy the legal demand of
a customer for whom shares of that stock were purchased, and no
other customer can legally demand any shares of that stock, those
certificates will be presumed to be the certificates kept by the
bankrupt in accordance with his duty so to do to satisfy the demand
of such customer.
It is the right and duty of the bankrupt, if he uses securities
belonging to a customer, to use his own funds to replace such
securities with others of the same kind, and in so doing he does
not deplete the estate against his other creditors.
No creditor of the bankrupt can demand that the estate of the
bankrupt be augmented by the wrongful conversion of property of
another, or the application to the general estate of property which
never rightfully belonged to the bankrupt.
There is no presumption that certificates of stock in the
possession of the bankrupt were embezzled or stolen, but there is a
presumption that such certificates were bought and paid for out of
his own funds to replace those which he had used belonging to a
customer.
175 F. 769 reversed.
The facts, which involve the right of a customer of a bankrupt
brokerage firm to shares of stock purchased for him by the bankrupt
and fully paid for by the claimant prior to the petition,
notwithstanding the certificates in
Page 229 U. S. 20
possession of the bankrupt are not the identical ones purchased,
are stated in the opinion.
Page 229 U. S. 21
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents a controversy over 250 shares of Green
Cananea Copper Company stock, which came into the possession of the
trustee in bankruptcy of Albert O. Brown and others, copartners,
trading under the name of A. O. Brown & Company. Appellant,
James E. Gorman, claimed to be the owner of the shares of stock,
and instituted proceedings in the district court to recover them.
The matter was referred to a special master, who found the facts
and recommended the transfer of the stock to the claimant. The
district court, upon hearing, ruled otherwise, and, upon appeal to
the circuit court of appeals, the ruling of the district court was
sustained.
The claimant for a year or more before the failure of A. O.
Brown & Company was a customer dealing with one of the Chicago
offices of that firm, buying stocks on margin and also paying for
them in full. On or about April 14,
Page 229 U. S. 22
1908, Gorman directed the Chicago office to buy 250 shares of
Green Cananea Copper stock for him. The stock was brought on the
understanding that it was to be paid for in full, and at the time
that the order was executed the claimant had an ample credit
balance with the firm, applicable on its books to the payment in
full of the shares purchased. The certificates of stock were left
by the claimant in the possession of the broker, subject to the
claimant's future order. The books of the bankrupt firm show that,
on April 14, 1908, they bought for the account of Gorman, 100
shares of Green Cananea Copper stock, and received certificate
A-335. This certificate was delivered to J. T. ________ on May 6,
1908, on account of a sale from H. Wright & Company, of
Cleveland, Ohio. On April 14, 1908, the bankrupt firm bought for
the claimant 50 shares of Green Cananea Copper stock, and received
certificate Y-11083. This certificate was, on May 14, 1908,
delivered to DeCoppet & Doremus, on account of balance of trade
on that date. On April 14, 1908, the bankrupt firm bought for the
claimant 50 shares of the same stock, and received certificate
B-6589. This certificate was delivered to DeCoppet & Doremus on
April 16, 1908, on account of the sale of L. E. Gorton, of Detroit,
Michigan. On April 14, 1908, the bankrupt firm bought for the
claimant 50 shares of the same stock, and received certificate
B-6537. This certificate was delivered to Carpenter & Baggott
on May 14, 1908, on account of a sale to Parson, Snyder &
Company, of Cleveland, Ohio. The receiver in bankruptcy, now the
trustee, came into the possession of, and still has in his
possession, certificates indorsed in blank for an aggregate of 350
shares of Green Cananea Copper stock. As to this stock, no claim
has been filed with the receiver or trustee, although the master
says the time for filing claims has expired. The certificates of
stock in question, with those purchased for other clients, which
were paid for in full or were purchased on margin, were
Page 229 U. S. 23
placed without discrimination in the same tin box. It was
customary to take certificates to make delivery from that box,
indiscriminately, unless the certificate had been transferred to
the name of the customer. At no time before the failure did the
claimant receive his shares of the Green Cananea Copper stock, nor
did he order its sale.
Upon these facts the question is, are these shares of stock part
of the general estate for the benefit of creditors, or should they
be turned over to the claimants?
In
Richardson v. Shaw, 209 U.
S. 365, the nature of this property was the subject of
discussion and decision in this Court. In that case, a broker, who
had been adjudicated a bankrupt, shortly before the bankruptcy, and
after his insolvency, turned over upon demand to a customer shares
of stock similar to those which had been held for the customer, and
for an equal number of shares. It was contended that, under the
circumstances, this delivery of certificates amounted to a
preference under the Bankruptcy Act. This Court therefore had to
consider the legal relation of customer and broker in buying and
holding shares of stock, and it was held that the certificates of
stock were not the property itself, but merely the evidence of it,
and that a certificate for the same number of shares represented
precisely the same kind and value of property as another
certificate for a like number of shares in the same corporation;
that the return of a different certificate or the substitution of
one certificate for another made no material change in the property
right of the customer; that such shares were unlike distinct
articles of personal property, differing in kind or value, as a
horse, wagon, or harness, and that stock has no earmark which
distinguishes one share from another, but is like grain of a
uniform quality in an elevator, one bushel being of the same kind
and value as another. It was therefore concluded that the turning
over of the certificates for the shares of stock belonging to the
customer, and
Page 229 U. S. 24
held by the broker for him, did not amount to a preferential
transfer of the bankrupt's property.
In the subsequent case of
Sexton v. Kessler & Co.,
225 U. S. 90, this
Court, speaking of the relation of customer and broker, said (p.
225 U. S.
97):
"When a broker agrees to carry stock for a customer, he may buy
stock to fill several orders in a lump; he may increase his single
purchase by stock of the same kind that he wants for himself; he
may pledge the whole block thus purchased for what sum he likes, or
deliver it all in satisfaction of later orders, and he may satisfy
the earlier customer with any stock that he has on hand or that he
buys when the time for delivery comes. Yet, as he is bound to keep
stock enough to satisfy his contracts, as the New York firm in this
case was bound to substitute other security if it withdrew any, the
customer is held to have such an interest that a delivery to him by
an insolvent broker is not a preference.
Richardson v. Shaw,
supra; Markham v. Jaudon, 41 N.Y. 235. So, a depositor in a
grain elevator may have a property in grain in a certain elevator,
although the keeper is at liberty to mix his own or other grain
with the deposit, and empty and refill the receptacle twenty times
before making good his receipt to the depositor concerned."
It is therefore unnecessary for a customer, where shares of
stock of the same kind are in the hands of a broker, being held to
satisfy his claims, to be able to put his finger upon the identical
certificates of stock purchased for him. It is enough that the
broker has shares of the same kind which are legally subject to the
demand of the customer. And in this respect, the trustee in
bankruptcy is in the same position as the broker.
Richardson v.
Shaw, supra.
It is said, however, that the shares in this particular case are
not so identified as to come within the rule. But it does appear
that, at the time of bankruptcy, certificates
Page 229 U. S. 25
were found in the bankrupt's possession in an amount greater
than those which should have been on hand for this customer, and
the significant fact is shown that no other customer claimed any
right in those shares of stock. It was, as we have seen, the duty
of the broker, if he sold the shares specifically purchased for the
appellant, to buy others of like kind, and to keep on hand subject
to the order of the customer certificates sufficient for the
legitimate demands upon him. If he did this, the identification of
particular certificates is unimportant. Furthermore, it was the
right and duty of the broker, if he sold the certificates, to use
his own funds to keep the amount good, and this he could do without
depleting his estate to the detriment of other creditors who had no
property rights in the certificates held for particular customers.
No creditor could justly demand that the estate be augmented by a
wrongful conversion of the property of another in this manner, or
the application to the general estate of property which never
rightfully belonged to the bankrupt.
The ground upon which the circuit court of appeals decided the
case seems to have been that the certificates were not sufficiently
identified; but, as we have said, they were on hand to an amount
claimed by the appellant, and more, and were not claimed by any
other customer. We think there should be no presumption that the
stock was stolen or embezzled with intent to deprive the rightful
owner of it, and when the unclaimed shares are found in the
possession of the bankrupt, it is only fair to accept the general
presumption in favor of fair dealing, and to decide, in the absence
of countervailing proof, that the broker, out of his funds, has
supplied the deficiency for the benefit of his customer, which he
had a perfect right to do.
Judgment reversed.