C. H. Albers Commission Co. v. Spencer

103 S.W. 523, 205 Mo. 105, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 102
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 29, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 103 S.W. 523 (C. H. Albers Commission Co. v. Spencer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. H. Albers Commission Co. v. Spencer, 103 S.W. 523, 205 Mo. 105, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 102 (Mo. 1907).

Opinion

VALLIANT, P. J.

This is a suit in equity. There were five suits of the same nature and in reality between the same parties, but the real defendants having acted in the transactions involved by different agents or brokers those were also made parties defendants and for that reason separate suits seemed advisable. The only defendants having any real financial interest in the suits are the executors of the will of Corwin H. Spencer (one of the original defendants who has died since the appeals were taken) and John T. Milliken, and therefore for brevity they will hereinafter be called the defendants; the St. Louis Merchants Exchange and the individuals composing its board of directors, and the National Bank of Commerce are also parties defendants, but when it becomes necessary in this opinion to mention either of them the mention will be by name. When the five suits came on for hearing they were by agreement of the parties consolidated and tried as one.

The plaintiff and the defendants at the time of the transactions involved were members of the St. Louis Merchants Exchange and the transactions were conducted on the floor of the Exchange and subject to its rules. The controversy grows out of sales by the plain[112]*112tiff to the defendants, during the fall of 1903, of No. 2 red winter wheat to he delivered on any day, at the option of the plaintiff, during the month of December, 1903. The plaintiff, under the rules of the Exchange, to secure the performance of its contracts deposited in the National Bank of Commerce certain sums of money to cover what is called in the language of the Exchange “margins.” All during the month of December the market price of No. 2 red winter wheat was higher than the price at which the plaintiff had sold it to defendants and the plaintiff failed to deliver it according to contract, therefore according to the strict terms of the contract the defendants were entitled to receive from the bank the moneys deposited as margins. But by the terms of the certificate of deposit the money was payable to defendants only on the indorsement of both parties to the contract, the seller and the buyer, or under order of the board of directors of the Exchange.

The plaintiff refused to endorse the certificate of deposit and, apprehending that the board of directors of the Exchange would make the order, filed these suits in equity, alleging that the defendants had entered into an unlawful combination or conspiracy whereby they had cornered the No. 2 red wheat market and forced it up to an unreasonable and fictitious price, in violation of. the statute law of the United States and that of the State of Missouri, and praying that the plaintiff’s contracts be cancelled, that the board of directors be enjoined from ordering the moneys deposited for margins to be paid to defendants, and enjoining the bank from paying the same. On filing the bills temporary injunctions issued as prayed, after which answers were filed and the causes came on for hearing-on motions to dissolve the injunctions. On a very elaborate hearing apparently of all the points in dispute, during which evidence was introduced that cov[113]*113ers over 700 printed pages of the record in this court, the trial court sustained the motions and dissolved the injunctions, hut did not dismiss the bills for the reason as stated in the order dissolving the injunctions that other than injunctive relief was sought. From the order, dissolving the temporary injunctions the plaintiff appealed and plaintiff also moved the trial court to continue the injunctions in force pending the appeal which the court refused and plaintiff excepted.

The main proposition on which the plaintiff relied at.the trial was that the defendants had by combination and conspiracy cornered the market and forced the price of the wheat up to an unreasonable and fictitious figure.

The sales in question were made by the plaintiff at various dates running through September, October and November, 1903, at prices ranging from 80 to 84 cents, and they aggregated more than 300,000 bushels. The prices of the wheat during December ranged from 90 to 93 cents and closed on the 31st of that month at 92 cents, so that there was a wide margin on the contracts in favor of defendants.

The trial judge made a very careful review and summary of all the evidence in the case, a copy of which is in the record, in which he says that there can be no doubt but there was a comer in No. 2 red winter wheat, but he does not lay the blame therefor to the buyer any more than to the seller, it was influenced as well by those who thought the price was too high and would decline (of whom was plaintiff) and therefore speculated by selling short, as by those who thought it would advance (of whom were the defendants) and speculated by buying long. Both parties were buying or selling as in their respective judgments the market would go up or go down; there was nothing more praiseworthy or blameworthy in the conduct of one [114]*114than of the other. There is no more merit in depressing the market to the disadvantage of the farmer who has wheat to sell than there is in advancing it to the disadvantage of the miller who comes to buy. There is nothing in the evidence to indicate that either the plaintiff or the defendants were in the market for any other purpose than their own gain and there is no suggestion of fraud attached to either.

We have said that the trial court, though finding that a corner existed, did not attribute its existence to the buyers more than to the sellers, and we think the court was right in that conclusion. The first tendency of selling short is of course to depress the market but after sales for future delivery in great quantities have been made and crop conditions and market conditions indicate that there will be a considerable rise in the market price those large outstanding contracts of sales for future delivery signify to those who have the commodity for sale that there must come a demand in the market to meet those contracts, and they stiffen in their demands, then the efforts on the part of those who have sold short to buy against the day of the maturity of their contracts excite the market, and when that condition comes if those who have previously been purchasers have purchased to such an extent that there is not enough of the commodity outside of their purchases to supply the demand of those who are forced to make purchases to fill their former contracts the result is a comer and the early purchasers are, to some extent at least, masters of the situation. That is what occurred in this case. Selling short in great quantities for December deliveries created a demand for December wheat with which to fulfill those contracts and if the supply was not sufficient an inflamed market was the natural result. But when buyer and seller are dealing with each other on terms of equality the one is no more responsible for the result than the other.

[115]*115The evidence shows that No. 2 red winter wheat is a special feature of the pt. Louis market, it is sold elsewhere, hut St. Louis is the main market for it; the evidence also shows that the crop of No. 2 red winter wheat of 1903 was very short, not much more than one-half what it was in 1902, and there were other disturbing influences that tended to enhance the price of this commodity in this market. The defendants did not acquire by their purchases all the crop of No. 2 red winter wheat but in realty only a small part of it, the total crop grown in Missouri, Illinois and Indiana in 1903 was 62,760,000 bushels while the total purchases of the defendants amounted to only 7,500,000.

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Bluebook (online)
103 S.W. 523, 205 Mo. 105, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-h-albers-commission-co-v-spencer-mo-1907.