Judges: Patterson
Filed Date: 12/21/1900
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The plaintiff, a member Of the New York Stock Exchange, was expelled from that body, his membership was forfeited, his right of membership sold, and the proceeds of the sale were paid over to him. Upon the receipt of such proceeds, he executed, under seal, an instrument in which, after an acknowledgment of the receipt of the money, he transferred his membership to another person, and relinquished “all his right, title, and interest as a member of the said New York Stock Exchange.”
The expulsion of the plaintiff was the result of an investigation by the governing committee of the stock exchange, that being the appropriate tribunal, of certain transactions of the plaintiff for the firm of which he was a member, had upon the floor of the stock exchange, which transactions, it was claimed, were fraudulent. A written charge was preferred against the plaintiff, namely, that he was guilty of fraud,—the specifications of the charge being, in substance, that on the 30th of March, 1897, he procured, prepared, and furnished, or caused to be furnished, to certain other parties, facilities, means, or instrumentalities for the perpetration or concealment of frauds, or of fraudulent, dishonest, or criminal practices; that on or about March 30, 1897, he, on the request, or by the procurement, or for the account, of the E. 6. Dean 'Company, or one Samuel Kellar, its agent, instructed and requested Herzoz & Sichel, a firm represented on the New York Stock Exchange, to make and deliver to the plaintiff or his firm a false, fraudulent, and fictitious report of the sale by Herzoz & Sichel, for account of the plaintiff’s firm, certain stocks, naming them, at a certain fixed price, and that thereupon Herzoz & Sichel,
To this charge and its specifications the plaintiff interposed a written answer, in which he denied that he had been guilty of fraud, and he proceeded to give what he claimed to be an explanation of the transactions referred to in the specification. That explanation was, in substance, that the firm of which he was a member had for a customer a concern known as the E. S. Dean Company; that prior to March 30, 1897, the plaintiff’s firm had bought for that customer various stocks, and that on the afternoon of March 29, 1897, the margin being low, and the market having declined, the plaintiff’s firm received instructions to make sale of all the stocks held for the E. 8. Dean Company at the market price, and to repurchase the same line of stocks at the market price for another account which that same customer had with the plaintiff’s firm; that on morning of the
A hearing was had before the governing committee of the stock exchange upon the charge and answer, and, after an investigation, the plaintiff was found guilty and expelled, as above stated. Some time after his relations with the stock exchange were thus terminated, the plaintiff brought this action to be reinstated as a member, and for damages for his expulsion, he claiming that he did not have a fair trial by the committee; that there was not sufficient evidence to support the determination of the committee, that gross abuses of authority were committed on the investigation; and that he was in ignorance of the facts which invalidated the action of the committee in expelling him until long after the determination was made,' and the paper in which he relinquished his right of membership was executed.
There are seven specific grounds upon which the plaintiff attacks, in this action, the proceedings had before, and the judgment of, the governing committee upon the charge and specification upon which he was tried. They are as follows: First, that on the trial evidence of acts and transactions wholly disconnected from those mentioned in the written charges, and of which plaintiff had no notice, was received against him; second, that upon the hearing, while plaintiff was present, no evidence whatever to sustain the charge that the plaintiff was guilty of the fraud charged, or of any fraud, was produced, nor were any facts proven from which such a conclusion could be deduced by fair or reasonable men; third, that the trial, and the evidence given thereat, wholly failed to show that the plaintiff was guilty, in any way of the charges made against him, or of any fraud, or showed any facts from which such an inference could reasonably be drawn; fourth, that the persons who actually made the charges against the plaintiff did not sign them, and that upon the trial the person or persons who actually made the charges, and who instituted and made the investigations resulting in the charges, and who appeared with the governing committee as a member or members thereof, and pressed the charges, and asked the governing committee to bring the plaintiff to trial, and who subsequently took an active part in procuring and preparing the evidence to be brought against the plaintiff, and who at the trial took an active part in examining the witnesses, and became witnesses and made arguments against
The court at special term directed judgment in favor of the defendant on the merits. A careful examination of the whole record satisfies us that the cause was properly decided. The plaintiff was brought to trial upon a written charge directed to his transactions upon the stock exchange of one specific day. He presented an answer to that charge which contains an admission that the transactions took place. He only denied that they were fraudulent, and that they were intended to aid in a dishonest practice. It appears that there was a full investigation made of the circumstances surrounding the transaction; or, in .other words, the merits were fully inquired into, and, if the investigation was a fair one, the judgment of the stock exchange, to which the plaintiff as a member of that body was subject, cannot be reviewed on the merits by the courts. As was remarked in Lewis v. Wilson, 121 N. Y. 288, 24 N. E. 475, whether the committee decided rightly or wrongly upon the merits does not change the “attitude of a plaintiff as a member,, of the association. All that he could require was that the investigation should be conducted bona fide, upon a notice to him, and an opportunity to be heard, and that the decision made should be within the scope of the jurisdiction conferred upon the committee. Bigelow v. Benedict, 70 N. Y. 204; White v. Brownell, 2 Daly, 329; Lambert v. Addison, 46 Law T. (N. S.) 20; Dawkins v. Antrobus, 17 Ch. Div. 615.” There can be no question here of the jurisdiction nor of the legality of the steps taken by the stock exchange to procure an investigation of the charge made against the plaintiff. When- we come to examine the evidence in the record of the trial of this action, we are struck by the absence of proof to sustain any one of the
There is one subject brought to our attention which requires notice, in view of the claim of the appellant that he was deprived by a ruling of the court of documentary evidence material to his case. He had caused to be served upon an officer of the defendant a subpoena duces tecum to produce a number of papers which it was as» serted were used upon the investigation before the committee of the stock exchange. There was also served upon the attorneys for the defendant a notice to produce the papers. The secretary of the stock exchange was called as a witness. He had no knowledge of such papers, and could not, therefore, comply with the subpoena. The plaintiff’s counsel then called upon the defendant’s attorney to produce those papers. Some of them were in court in the possession of the defendant’s attorney. The court declined to require their production, saying that he knew of no authority for an order of that kind. The court held that the plaintiff was entitled to make secondary proof of the papers called for, although there was no proof to show how they were material or necessary to the plaintiff’s case.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.