Blunt, Ellis & Loewi, Inc. v. Igram

319 N.W.2d 189, 1982 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1373
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 19, 1982
Docket65899
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 319 N.W.2d 189 (Blunt, Ellis & Loewi, Inc. v. Igram) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blunt, Ellis & Loewi, Inc. v. Igram, 319 N.W.2d 189, 1982 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1373 (iowa 1982).

Opinion

ALLBEE, Justice.

This litigation arises, from a dispute growing out of substantial losses sustained by defendant Charles Igram in the commodities futures market. Igram has appealed from judgment against him awarding plaintiff Blunt, Ellis & Loewi, Incorporated (BEL), the sum of $137,542. That sum represents the deficit balance in Igram’s commodity account when BEL unilaterally closed the account on August 6, 1979, after five of Igram’s checks in the aggregate of $96,600 delivered to BEL to meet margin calls were returned because of insufficient funds. Igram also appeals from the dismissal of his counterclaim, and BEL has cross-appealed asserting that it should have been awarded prejudgment interest.

Igram, a long-time speculator in commodities futures, opened an account at the BEL Cedar Rapids branch office in March 1978. He represented that he had equity in assets worth $1.25 million, and annual income in the range of $80 — 100,000. No limitations were requested by Igram on either the amount he should be permitted to expose to risk or the losses he was willing to sustain. Igram engaged in only a few futures trades in 1978. Beginning in February 1979, however, Igram became active in trading following employment by BEL of an acquaintance of Igram’s, one Michael Langer, who joined BEL’s Cedar Rapids office as a registered commodities broker. At Igram’s request, his account was switched to Langer, and Igram began heavy speculation in futures traded on the Chicago Board of Trade *191 and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. Frequently, Igram’s account became under-margined for short intervals, and on eleven occasions prior to the end of June 1979, he deposited new funds by check in response to calls for more margin. Two of those checks were initially dishonored by the drawee bank because of insufficient funds, but each was resubmitted and cleared on the second presentment. Igram’s eleven margin deposits totaled $184,000. As the result of trading between February and the end of June 1979, Igram incurred a sizeable loss.

On July 5, 1979, Igram varied his trading pattern. That day he sold extensively, retaining primarily long positions in live cattle contracts, but spread that position by selling short an equal number of live cattle contracts in another month. This action substantially reduced his margin requirement, and the equity in his account, thus having been increased by the liquidations on that day, rose to $137,380. The following day Igram demanded that BEL wire $100,000 from his commodity account to his bank account; BEL complied. At the close of trading on July 6, Igram had an equity credit of $31,670, considerably more than the amount needed to cover the positions he then held.

The next business day, Monday, July 9, Igram took off all of his spreads and returned to his more familiar course of trading, dealing primarily in live cattle and soybean meal contracts. By the following day, his account was undermargined and a call was made for him to meet the margin requirement. During the remaining days of that week Igram took more positions and the undermargined condition of his account increased. Meanwhile, Langer was reminding Igram that he must meet the margin calls being made, and Igram was giving assurances that those calls would be met.

On Monday, July 16, the first of several ultimately dishonored checks was delivered by Igram to BEL to meet margin calls. Having met his margin requirement with a $20,000 check, Igram was permitted to maintain and add to his market positions. Days later, when Igram’s check reached his bank, the funds in his account were insufficient to cover the check. Consequently, that bank marked, the check “NSF” and returned it to BEL’s bank, where it was received on Monday, July 23. Langer, upon being informed of this, asked the bank to resubmit the check as had been successfully done in at least two prior instances. Also on July 16, the market price of live cattle began a decline. That adverse price movement not only reduced Igram’s equity, but worsened the undermargined condition of his account.

We need not recount in detail what the evidence discloses of ensuing events; a summary will suffice. By July 25, BEL was demanding $60,000 additional margin. On July 26, Igram wrote and handed Lan-ger two checks of $30,000 each. Late that same day, BEL’s bank reported to Langer that the $20,000 check presented to Igram’s bank for the second time had again been dishonored. There followed in short order the delivery of a replacement check of $20,-000 drawn by Igram upon a different account — a check which he declared to be “as good as gold” — and also Igram’s tender of a $16,600 check in response to yet another margin call. After July 26, no additional credit was extended to Igram. His account was then long fifty live cattle contracts and short three soybean oil contracts, and it remained in those positions until liquidation began. Throughout this entire period, Igram appeared daily and spent time at BEL’s office during trading hours.

The culmination of these events occurred after the market closed on Thursday, August 2, when BEL learned that all of Igram’s checks were being returned dishonored. At that time, Igram’s account was in deficit by $47,000, even before reversing credits of $96,600 previously entered for the four dishonored checks. Upon being notified of this, the BEL home office directed that all of Igram’s positions were to be liquidated. This directive was modified, however, to permit Igram to benefit from an upward price movement then underway in live cattle futures by putting stop-loss orders under his positions rather than sell *192 ing them out immediately. The price rally continued to the closing on August 3, and held during the early trading on Monday, August 6. Later in the Monday session, however, the prices broke downward, hit the stop-loss prices put in the previous week, and Igram’s positions were sold out. The account deficit after the sell-out was $40,942. Two days later, the dishonored checks were returned to BEL and debited to Igram’s account, thus reflecting Igram’s total deficit to be $137,542.

Shortly after liquidation was completed, BEL commenced this action. Trial to the court was conducted in July 1980, and judgment was entered on September 22,1980. This case having been tried to the court, the scope of our review is for correction of errors of law. Iowa R.App.P. 4. We are mindful that trial court’s findings of fact have the force of a special verdict, id, and are binding on us if supported by substantial evidence, Iowa R.App.P. 14(f)(1). Evidence reviewed for its substan-tiality is to be viewed in the light most favorable to the judgment. E.g., Packwood Elevator Co. v. Heisdorffer, 260 N.W.2d 543, 544 (Iowa 1977). We are not bound by trial court’s determinations of law, however, nor precluded from inquiry into whether trial court applied erroneous rules of law which materially affected its decision. E.g., Kurtenbach v. TeKippe, 260 N.W.2d 53, 55 (Iowa 1977).

I. Determination of issues presented by Igram’s appeal.

A.

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Bluebook (online)
319 N.W.2d 189, 1982 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blunt-ellis-loewi-inc-v-igram-iowa-1982.