Banta v. City of Chicago

40 L.R.A. 611, 172 Ill. 204
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 40 L.R.A. 611 (Banta v. City of Chicago) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Banta v. City of Chicago, 40 L.R.A. 611, 172 Ill. 204 (Ill. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

The city of Chicago adopted an ordinance declaring it unlawful for any person, association or corporation to engage in business in the capacity of a “broker” within said city without having paid a license fee and obtained a license authorizing such person, association or corporation to transact business in that capacity. The appellant was tried upon a stipulated state of facts, by the court without a jury, and was convicted of violating said ordinance and a fine of $25 was assessed against him. This is an appeal from such judgment of conviction.

Counsel for appellant urge the court erred in its rulings upon propositions submitted to be held as the law of the case, and in their brief, with reference to such alleged erroneous rulings, say: “It wdll be perceived that the propositions given and refused present squarely these questions: First, was not the business carried on by Banta that of a factor, and not a broker? Second, if Banta is a broker, is he not such a broker as' is not covered by the ordinance in question? Third, does not the constitution forbid the legislature empowering the city of Chicago to require one engaged in the avocation of a broker to take out a license as a condition precedent to the right to carry on his business? Fourth, if the ordinance levies a tax, is it not in violation of the constitutional requirement that taxes on brokers should be uniform, and the constitutional requirement that taxes for corporate purposes should be uniform in respect to persons and property?” We will consider and dispose of these questions in the order as stated by counsel.

The stipulation as to the facts and the ordinance are as follows:

“It is hereby stipulated by the parties hereto that the defendant, Banta, is a citizen of Chicago and a member of the Chicago Stock Exchange, a voluntary association composed of 445 members, which members become members thereof upon election thereto by the governing committee of said board, payment of an initiation fee and signing the constitution and by-laws thereof; that said stock exchange has a board room in the c.ity of Chicago, to which none but members are admitted, and at which room stocks, bonds and other securities are bought and sold by the members thereof as agents for others, on a call made daily, excepting Saturdays, from 10 A. M. until 2 P. M. Under the rules of said exchange no member thereof can buy or sell stocks or bonds or other securities save in the room of said exchange and between the hours aforesaid, and no member can belong to any similar association within the State of Illinois. By the constitution of said exchange no fictitious sales can be made and no fictitious or trifling bids or offers can be made, and all bonds, securities and all certificates of stock dealt in are obliged to be delivered on the floor of said exchange or at the place of business of the member who is the purchaser, and under said constitution every member must have in the vicinity of the exchange a place of business other than the exchange, where comparisons may be made at any time during the day and where notices may be served. The constitution and by-laws are signed by every member on joining said exchange, and any violation of such constitution or by-laws subjects the offender to fine, suspension or expulsion, at the instance of the governing committee of said exchange. The defendant’s sole business consists in buying and selling stocks, bonds and other securities on the floor of said exchange for customers from whom he receives orders at his office to buy or sell said stocks, bonds or other securities on said exchange, and the manner of his doing said business is invariably as follows, to-wit: A customer gives him an order to buy stocks. Defendant goes onto the stock exchange, makes a contract with a member of the exchange for the purchase of stock, and in all cases receives from such member on the floor of the exchange or at his office the certificates of stock so bought, endorsed with blank assignment of shares of stock and blank power of attorney to make necessary transfer on books of the corporation issuing such stock, and in payment therefor the defendant gives to such member his own check. Defendant then delivers to his customer said certificates of stock so bought upon receiving from said customer a check for the purchase price thus paid, plus the defendant’s commission for making such purchase. In case of a sale it is defendant’s invariable custom to receive the certificates of stock from the customer, endorsed with blank assignment of shares of stock and blank power of attorney to make necessary transfer on books of the corporation issuing such stock, sell the stock aud deliver the certificates thereof to the member of the exchange buying, receive from him his check for the purchase price, and give to his customer defendant’s check for the stock sold, less his commissions. In every case of purchase or sale the certificates of stock are actually delivered. In the case of a purchase they are delivered to defendant by the member selling and then by defendant to his customer. In case of sale they are received by defendant from his customer and delivered to the member of the exchange buying the same. Such delivery to the purchasing member of such stock so sold by defendant is invariably made within a short time after the sale,—at the latest by 10:30 o’clock of the morning after the sale. In some cases, when the parties so require, said delivery takes place at the instant of the sale. It is also agreed that this defendant always buys or sells on the stock exchange in his own name, but he acts exclusively for others, and does not buy or sell on his own account, and that' this is true, generally, of the transactions of members of the exchange. The person for whom the member of the exchange buys stock from this defendant is not usually known to this defendant. The commissions in the case of purchase or sale are those specified in article 19 of the constitution of the Chicago Stock Exchange, section 1 of which is as follows, to-wit:

“ ‘Sec. 1. Commissions shall be charged, and paid under all circumstances, and upon all transactions, both purchases and sales, or upon contracts for the receipt or delivery of securities. Such commissions shall be calculated, in all cases, upon the par value of securities, and shall be at the rates hereinafter named; and such rates shall be, in each case, the lowest commission that maybe charged by any member of the exchange, and shall be absolutely net, and free from all or any rebatement, return, discount or allowance, in any shape or manner whatsoever, or by any method or arrangement, direct or indirect. And no bonus, percentage or portions of the commissions so established shall be given, paid or allowed, directly or indirectly, to any clerk or person, for business sought or procured for any member of the exchange.’

“The commissions vary with the price for quantity of stock, bond or other securities sold or bought. In some cases it happens that defendant receives orders from customers to buy or sell shares of stock which are in conflict with the orders received from other customers. In such event defendant procures another member of the board to act as his agent in making purchase or sale, and pays him one-half of the commissions for his services, unless at the end of the day, by agreement between defendant and such other member of the board, the trade is re-transferred back to the defendant, in which case defendant pays the other member of the board at the rate of two dollars per hundred shares for his services.

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Bluebook (online)
40 L.R.A. 611, 172 Ill. 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/banta-v-city-of-chicago-ill-1898.