This suit was begun by appellant, who sued for himself and his infant son, to recover the par value of eleven shares of the capital stock of the Little Giant Oil & Gas Company, it being alleged that appellee, the defendant below, had wrongfully converted and disposed of the stock. Appellee is a stockbroker engaged in buying and selling stock.
There was a controversy as to whether the letter of transmission contained the direction to sell the stock at par, and a special interrogatory was submitted to the jury on that question, and the jury answered in the negative.
The testimony was to the effect that appellant owned ten shares of the stock, which was covered by one certificate, and that his infant son owned one share, which was. covered by a separate certificate, and that the par value of the stock was ten dollars per share.
Appellee sold the one share, and sent appellant a check for six dollars as the net proceeds, less commissions; but, when the point was made that the instruction was to sell at par, appellee tendered ten dollars, the face value of the stock.
The ten shares were not sold, and it developed that appellee had let another broker have this certificate, with the understanding that it should be replaced when appellee found a purchaser. This was done because the *30other broker had for sale a certificate for a large number of shares which he desired to have “broken up” into certificates for smaller number of shares to meet the demands of prospective purchasers. There was some delay in having this done, on account of the absence of the secretary of the corporation. Later, the large certificate which the other broker had was broken up, and a certificate for ten shares of this. Little Giant Oil &■ Gas Company stock was delivered to appellee for the one which appellee had loaned to the other broker, and this certificate was tendered to . appellant by appellee. It was shown that this transaction accorded with the custom of the local brokers.
It was the opinion of the trial court that the only question in the case was whether the direction to appellee was to sell at par, and the jury was told to find for appellant for the face of the stock, if they found that such was the direction to appellee. It was evidently the opinion of the trial court that, in the absence of specific direction, appellee had the right to handle and dispose of' the stock in accordance with the local custom. Appellant insists, however, that the court should have submitted the question of the conversion of the stock to the jury, and insists that it was a conversion of the stock for appellee to deliver the certificate, to the other broker.
We think it unnecessary to pass upon this question, for the reason that appellee returned ten shares of the Little Giant Oil & Gas Company stock, and tendered the sum claimed for the other share. There is no contention that one share of this stock was worth any more than any other share. Appellant sent ten shares to be sold, and ten shares were returned to him.
Of course, the question of depreciation in value of the stock might have been raised if any loss had been sustained on account of appellee not having the stock to return on demand; but no such issue was submitted to the jury, nor was the court asked to submit that question. Recovery was sought upon the sole ground of a conversion; and we think the failure to return the identical *31certificate was not a conversion, where another certificate for the same number of shares in the same corporation was returned.
At section 21 of the chapter on Brokers, in 4 B. C. L., page 271, it is said: ‘ ‘As in the case of any other bailee, a broker is usually bound to keep and return the identical property that has come into his hands, but with respect to stocks a different rule obtains. Courts have -said that no good reason exists for requiring stockbrokers to whom clients have pledged or intrusted their shares of stock to preserve at all times a careful separation of distinguished certificates connected with each transaction or pledge, and maintain the identity of each certificate distinct and unbroken. Consequently it is held to be unnecessary for a broker to retain in his possession the identical stock purchased by him on his customer’s order, or received as collateral security, so long as he has in his possession at all times a sufficient quantity of like stock to respond to the call of his customer.”
No error appearing, the judgment is affirmed.