A bank's trusted agent, in gross breach of his duty, took
certain stock certificates belonging to the bank, endorsed and
authenticated with evidence of title, to a broker who, in ordinary
course of business and in good faith, sold them to third parties
for full value and paid over the proceeds to such agent.
Held, in a suit by the bank against the broker that:
Where one of two innocent persons must suffer by the acts of a
third, he who has enabled such third person to occasion the loss
must sustain it.
Stock certificates are a peculiar kind of property; although,
strictly speaking, not negotiable paper, they are frequently the
basis of commercial transaction and bought and sold in open market
as negotiable securities are.
Bank v.
Lanier, 11 Wall. 369.
The fact that principles affecting the matters involved are well
known to businessmen and are constantly acted upon by them should
be given due weight in determining the rights of parties in a
transaction relating to the sale of stock certificates.
Russell
v. Am. Bell Telephone Co., 180 Mass. 467, approved.
Under the principles of equitable estoppel, the bank is estopped
to make any claim against the broker.
32 App.D.C. 459 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the question of liability of a broker
for sale of stolen stock certificates, are stated in the
opinion.
Page 229 U. S. 392
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case is in this Court upon writ of error to the judgment of
the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia, 32 App.D.C. 459,
affirming the judgment of the Supreme Court of the District of
Columbia in an action brought by the plaintiff in error,
hereinafter called the bank, against the defendant in error, for
the alleged conversion of certain shares of stock. The case was
tried upon an agreed statement of facts, from which it appears:
The plaintiff in error has been doing a general banking business
in the City of Washington, including the making of loans to its
customers on promissory notes secured by stock collateral, and, to
a limited extent, the buying and selling of stock for its customers
and occasionally for itself.
On March 12, 1903, the bank made a loan to one T. M. Kelley of
$12,500, for which he gave his promissory note, payable on demand,
and deposited with the bank certain stock certificates of the
Mergenthaler Linotype Company as collateral security. Each of the
certificates stood in the name of T. M. Kelley, and on its face
recited that it was transferable by him, in person or by proxy,
only upon the books of the company upon surrender of the
certificate, and each upon its back contained an assignment with
power of attorney to transfer the stock upon the books of the
company, signed in blank by Kelley, whose signature was duly
attested.
One Willard H. Myers had been in the continuous employ of the
bank for over twenty years, and had committed no acts inconsistent
with his duty to the bank, and was trusted as a faithful employee.
During the last ten years of his employment, he had been general
bookkeeper and assistant note teller, a part of his duties being to
receive and enter upon the cash book of the bank the payment of
loans by customers, and to procure from one of the officers of the
bank and deliver to such customers
Page 229 U. S. 393
the collateral security pledged for the loans, it being usual,
in the ordinary course of business, for the bank to thus deliver
certificates to him upon his request. He had no authority, and it
was not a part of his employment, to dispose of, by sale, pledge,
or otherwise, any stock held as collateral by the bank, or owned by
it or any of its customers.
On May 26, 1904, Myers requested the secretary of the bank to
procure from the vault where such securities were kept the
certificates deposited by Kelley, whereupon the secretary delivered
the certificates to Myers in the usual course of business for the
purpose of having them returned to Kelley, similar requests having
been made by Myers prior thereto. Kelley had not paid the loan or
asked for the delivery of the stock, and Myers made no entry in the
cash book.
The day following, May 27th, Myers delivered two of such
certificates to the cashier of the defendant in error, a
stockbroker, for sale on his account, and at the request of the
cashier, as was the usual custom where the signatures of the
assignor and attesting witness are unknown, Myers, as a further
identification of such signatures, signed his name to the
attestation clause of the assignment. The defendant in error being
out of the city, the certificates were turned over to another
broker, by whom they were on that day sold on the Washington stock
exchange, and on the same day Myers received the check of the
defendant in error for the proceeds of the sale, which he
subsequently cashed.
Myers did not represent to the cashier of the defendant in error
that he was selling the stock for the bank, or that he was acting
for it in any way, or indicate that he did not own the stock, nor
did the defendant in error or his cashier know or have cause to
suspect that the stock did not belong to Myers. The stock was sold,
however, without the knowledge or consent of the bank or Kelley.
By
Page 229 U. S. 394
the custom of banks, brokers, and others dealing in stock, which
custom was known to the bank, the possession of stock certificates
assigned in blank and attested, as were the certificates here in
controversy, has been recognized, in the absence of knowledge or
cause of suspicion to the contrary, as evidence of ownership or of
authority to sell, pledge, or otherwise deal with such certificates
as the owner might do.
Certain of the other certificates deposited by Kelley were
disposed of by Myers, some in like manner, through the defendant in
error, for which Myers received the proceeds, others being
hypothecated with the American Security & Trust Company, while
the rest were surrendered by Myers to the authorities.
In this case, conflicting legal principles are invoked and
relied upon. For the defendant in error the familiar principle
"that, where one of two innocent persons must suffer by the Acts of
a third, he who has enabled such third person to occasion the loss
must sustain it" is advanced. The plaintiff in error invokes the
principle that, where the owner of property, such as stock
certificates, has lost it by the criminal or fraudulent act of
another, the owner, not voluntarily or negligently conferring upon
such another the indicia of ownership or apparent title, cannot be
deprived of his property by the attempted transfer of title to a
third person for value, no matter how innocent the purchaser may be
of knowledge of the crime or fraud by which the property was
acquired.
In this case, the diligence of counsel has called to the
attention of the court many cases more or less applicable to the
facts herein involved. We will not stop to pass them in review. It
is enough to say that they have been attentively considered.
Stock certificates are a peculiar kind of property. Although not
negotiable paper, strictly speaking, they are the basis of
commercial transactions large and small, and
Page 229 U. S. 395
are frequently sold in open market as negotiable securities are.
In
Bank v.
Lanier, 11 Wall. 369,
78 U. S. 377,
this Court said:
"Stock certificates of all kinds have been constructed in a way
to invite the confidence of businessmen, so that they have become
the basis of commercial transactions in all the large cities of the
country, and are sold in open market the same as other securities.
Although neither in form or character negotiable paper, they
approximate to it as nearly as practicable. . . . Whoever in good
faith buys the stock and produces to the corporation the
certificates, regularly assigned, with power to transfer, is
entitled to have the stock transferred to him."
These principles are well known to businessmen, and are
constantly acted upon by them. This circumstance should be given
due weight in determining the rights of the parties in this
case.
In
Russell v. American Bell Telephone Co., 180 Mass.
467, a certificate of stock signed in blank was delivered to an
agent for the purpose of surrendering it to the company in order to
obtain a new certificate. He wrongfully obtained an advance on the
strength of the certificate by putting it in pledge. Dealing with
the contention that the case was like one where the certificate had
been stolen, and therefore no title could be transferred, Mr.
Justice Holmes, delivering the opinion of the Court, said:
"In
Scollans v. Rollins, 179 Mass. 346, it is admitted
that the general principle there laid down would not apply to an
instrument indorsed in blank and stolen before it had been
transferred. We shall not examine the premises of this defense,
because we cannot accept the conclusion. The qualification of the
rule as not applying when the instrument is stolen is not based
upon the name of the agent's crime, but upon the fact that, in the
ordinary and typical case of theft, the owner has not entrusted the
agent with the document, and therefore is not considered to
have
Page 229 U. S. 396
done enough to be estopped as against a purchaser in good faith.
He certainly has not done enough if the estoppel is based upon the
principle that, when one of two innocent persons is to suffer, the
sufferer should be the one whose confidence put into the hands of
the wrongdoer the means of doing the wrong. But, in a case like the
present, the agent has been entrusted with the converted property,
and it is totally immaterial whether, by a stretch which extends
larceny beyond the true field of trespass, his wrong has been
brought within the criminal law or not. The ground of the estoppel
is present and the estoppel arises. The distinction is not new. On
the one side are cases like
Knox v. Eden Musee American
Co., 148 N.Y. 441, where an agent or servant simply had access
to a document remaining in the possession of the owner; on the
other, cases like
Pennsylvania Railroad's Appeal, 86 Pa.
80, where possession is entrusted to the agent for one purpose and
he uses it for another. It cannot matter in the latter class that
the agent intended the fraud from the outset."
We think this case correctly states the principle, and, applied
to the case in hand, is decisive of it. Here, one of two innocent
persons must suffer and the question at last is where shall the
loss fall? It is undeniable that the broker obtained the stock
certificates, containing all the indicia of ownership and possible
of ready transfer, from one who had possession with the bank's
consent, and who brought the certificates to him, apparently
clothed with the full ownership thereof by all the tests usually
applied by businessmen to gain knowledge upon the subject before
making a purchase of such property. On the other hand, the bank,
for a legitimate purpose, with confidence in one of its own
employees, entrusted the certificates to him, with every evidence
of title and transferability upon them. The bank's trusted agent,
in gross breach of his duty, whether with technical criminality
Page 229 U. S. 397
or not is unimportant, took such certificates, thus
authenticated with evidence of title, to one who, in the ordinary
course of business, sold them to parties who paid full value for
them. In such case, we think the principles which underlie
equitable estoppel place the loss upon him whose misplaced
confidence has made the wrong possible. Applying this principle, we
think the Court of Appeals was right in affirming the judgment of
the Supreme Court, and its judgment is
Affirmed.