Brown, Graves & Co. v. Alexander

29 Ill. App. 626, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 199
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 1, 1889
StatusPublished

This text of 29 Ill. App. 626 (Brown, Graves & Co. v. Alexander) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown, Graves & Co. v. Alexander, 29 Ill. App. 626, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 199 (Ill. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Phillips, J.

Appellants sued out their writ of attachment against appellee, and the same was levied on lands in St. Clair county. Appellants filed their declaration, founded on two promissory notes, each of date of August 26, 1886, each due three months after date, one for the sum of $3,741.17, the other for $5,000. Both notes were made at Culpepper county, Virginia, and were made payable at Franklin Bank, Baltimore, Maryland. Appellee appeared and filed various pleas, to some of which demurrer was sustained and issue was joined and trial had on the following pleas:

1. General issues.

2. “And for second amended plea in this behalf, defendant says, actio non, because he says that the several causes of action mentioned in the plaintiff’s said declaration are for the same causes of action mentioned in the first two counts thereof, and not different or other causes, and that the consideration of the notes sued on herein and mentioned in said first two counts was a sum of money due and owing upon a gambling contract under which he purchased options to sell and buy grain to be nominally delivered at a future time, but with the understanding between plaintiff and defendant that no grain would be delivered under said contracts, and that said contracts were to be filled on the maturity thereof by adjusting the difference in the market values. And this the defendant is ready to verify, wherefore he prays judgment,” etc.

3. “And for further plea in this behalf defendant says actio non, because he says that the several causes of action mentioned in plaintiff’s declaration are one and the same, namely, the promissory notes mentioned in the first two counts thereof, and that the consideration of said notes was a sum of money due and owing upon a gambling contract under which he purchased options to sell and buy grain at a future time, in violation of the statute in such case made and provided; and said defendant avers that said contract is in violation of the laws of Virginia, where it is alleged to have been made, and in violation of the laws of Maryland, where said contract was specifically made payable. And this defendant is ready to verify, wherefore he prays judgment,” etc.

On trial before the judge, without a jury, a verdict was rendered for defendant. The plaintiff brings this appeal. The notes were offered in evidence for plaintiff. The defendant offered no evidence as to the laws of the State of Maryland, where the notes were- payable, nor of the laws of the State of Virginia, where made. The assignment of errors must be considered with reference to the second plea, and the evidence offered 'thereunder. “ Agreements for the future delivery of grain, or any other commodity, are not prohibited by the common law, nor by any statute of this State, nor by any policy adopted for the protection of the public. What the law does prohibit, and what is deemed detrimental to the general welfare, is speculating in differences in market values. The alleged contracts for August and September come within this definition. No grain was ever bought and paid for, nor do we think it was ever expected any would be cabed for, or that any would have been delivered had demand been made. What were these but optional contracts in the most objectionable sense? That is, the seller had the privilege of delivering or not delivering, and the buyer the privilege of calling or not calling for the grain, just as they chose. On the maturity of the contracts they were to be filled by adjusting the differences in the market values. Being in the nature of gambling transactions, the law will tolerate no such contracts.” Pickering v. Cease, 79 Ill. 328. The case of Wolcott v. Heath, 78 Ill. 433, was one before our present statute was in force, and the court held: “What the law prohibits and what is deemed detrimental to the public interests is speculations in differences in market values, called, perhaps, in the peculiar language of the dealers 6 puts and calls,’ which simply means a privilege to deliver or receive the grain or not at the seller or buyer’s option. It is against such fictitious gambling transactions, we apprehend, the penalties of the law are leveled.”

We hold the defense set up by the second plea is one that at common law is to be held as a gambling transaction and being such, the plea presented a defense regardless of where the notes were made or were payable.

Does the evidence in this case, then, show that the notes sued on were for the consideration of “ a sum of money due and owing upon a gambling contract under which he (the defendant) purchased options to sell and buy grain, to be nominally delivered at a future time, but with the understanding between plaintiff and defendant that no grain would be called for or delivered under said contracts, and that said contracts were to be filled on the maturity thereof by adj listing the differences in the market values?” The appellee testified that the notes offered in evidence were given in consideration of other notes made by him and which were taken up, which notes so taken up, he states, were given for margins.

The appellee states that the margins were put up on option trading, and that he both bought and sold. That he gave orders to buy wheat in New Fork, Chicago, or anywhere. No wheat was ever delivered. He further' states it was not the intention of the parties to ever deliver wheat; that no wheat was ever tendered to him on the one hand or offered by him on the other. The appellee offered in evidence numerous telegrams sent by appellants to appellee, about forty-two in number, from which we select certain ones as indicative of the others:

“ Market very quiet. Scarcely anything doing. Sept, wheat 96f on a break would cover part Chicago short wheat and sell on advance. Where shall we write you to ? ”
“Bought twenty-five Sept. Chicago eighty-eight half. Will sell again on any advance.”
“ Sold twenty-five Oct. wheat Chicago closes weak, on report hot wheat.”
“Market looks rather heavy. If advances to nine will sell again. Will make up the wheat bought to-d.ay against the highest sale.”
“ Sold forty-five M. Oct wheat Chicago at ninety one-eight.”
“ Bought forty-five M. Sept, wheat eighty-eight Chicago. Looks for higher prices.”
“ Looks like a good sale in St. Louis. Might be well to hold for a profit.”
These last three telegrams are of the same date.
“ Bought sixty Oct. eighty-three three-eights. Think would put out again on bulge and keep short double-long here.”

Eleven letters of a similar character to the telegrams, with numerous accounts of sales, were offered in evidence. The evidence shows many transactions of buying and selling grain at widely different points—Hew York, Baltimore, Chicago and St. Louis—with dates and time of delivery nearly the same.

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Related

Wolcott v. Heath
78 Ill. 433 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1875)
Pickering v. Cease
79 Ill. 328 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1875)
J. B. Lyon & Co. v. Culbertson, Blair & Co.
83 Ill. 33 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1876)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 Ill. App. 626, 1888 Ill. App. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-graves-co-v-alexander-illappct-1889.