Bowen v. Bull

Van Brunt, P. J.

This action was brought against the Hew York Stock Exchange to recover damages for its refusal to recognize claimed rights of the plaintiff in a seat or membership in the exchange. The questions involved are whether a membership in a stock exchange is property capable of being attached and sold and applied to the payment of debts by creditors, and, secondly, if it is such property, whether there was any valid levy and sale of the seat in the open board of brokers which formed the foundation of the plaintiff’s claim. It appeared that, in 1868, an action was commenced by Henry Fitch and Edward E. Bowen against John Perry, Jr., then a member of the open board of brokers. This board was an unincorporated association doing business similar to that of the Hew York Stock Exchange, and was, after the commencement of said action, consolidated with it. An attachment was issued against the property of Perry in the action above mentioned, and it is claimed that a levy was made upon the seat of the then defendant in the open board of brokers under the attachment. Judgment was entered by default, and execution issued, and thereupon the sheriff executed and delivered to the plain*326tiff in the present action a bill of sale of Perry’s interest in such membership. The only evidence of the attempted sale of this seat is contained in the recitals of the bill of sale by the sheriff, no proof whatever upon the subject having been offered. And the only evidence of the levy of the attachment offered was that of the attorney for the plaintiff in the action in which, the attachment was issued. His testimony utterly fails to establish any such levy. All that he could swear to was the conclusion that the attachment had been regularly levied. In one place he states the levy to have been made at the office of the president of the open board of brokers, locating the office at a place which was not the place of business of the board. He then defines-his idea of a regular levying of the attachment upon a share or seat of the board in such a way that it makes it necessary that the levy should be made in the board room of the board of open brokers. And the witness seems to-be equal to the occasion, and shifts his evidence to meet his definition. This evidence was utterly unreliable. It was evident that the witness was swearing to a conclusion, and had no recollection of the method of levying the attachment, and did not know whether it was to be levied upon this property as. though it was a chattel capable of being touched, and taken possession of, or whether it was to be levied upon as though it was a share of stock in an association. His testimony evidently was intended to meet either horn of the dilemma. We think the referee would not have been justified bysuchevidence in finding that there had been any levy of this attachment. This is the foundation of the plaintiff’s claim, and without considering other questions which may be presented by the record, we think for this reason alone if for no other the report of the referee should be confirmed. Judgment affirmed with costs. All concur.