Clarke v. Foss

5 F. Cas. 955, 7 Biss. 540
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedMarch 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 5 F. Cas. 955 (Clarke v. Foss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clarke v. Foss, 5 F. Cas. 955, 7 Biss. 540 (W.D. Wis. 1878).

Opinion

BUNN, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity begun by the assignee of C. B. Stevens & Sons, bankrupts, to set aside and cancel six certain promissory notes for the sum of one thousand two hundred and thirty-one dollars and ten cents each, aggregating seven thousand three hundred and eighty six dollars and sixty cents, and a mortgage upon real estate in De Soto, in Yernon county, Wisconsin, to secure the same, executed by C. B. Stevens & Sons to the defendants, December 1, 1874, on the ground that the same are void as being given to secure a consideration arising out of certain option con-' tracts for the sale and delivery of grain, which it is claimed were wagering contracts, under the laws of Illinois in force at that time.

The bankrupts were and for many years prior to the fall of 1S74, when these transactions occurred, had been merchants and dealers in grain and produce upon the Mississippi river at De Soto, Wisconsin, and, as such, had for several years purchased and shipped wheat and other grain to the defend[956]*956ants, who were commission merchants at Chicago, and members of the board of trade for twenty years or more, doing business under the firm name of S. D. Foss & Co., and had, also, from time to time speculated in grain in the Milwaukee market, and also in the Chicago market, through the defendants, acting as their factors and commission men at that place. They were then in good financial circumstances, though with small capital; had a running account, and were in good credit and standing with S. D. Foss & Co. In October, 1874, the bankrupts ordered defendants, at different times, by telegraph, to make sales of grain for them upon the Chicago market for November delivery, amounting in the aggregate to seventy thousand bushels of corn, and five or ten thousand bushels of wheat. The defendants, upon receiving these orders, went upon the market in Chicago and executed them, by making, as was the custom, contracts, generally in writing, and in their own name, with different parties, for the sale of the grain for November delivery, in lots of five thousand, or multiples of five thousand bushels, and immediately and from time to time, notified bankrupts, by telegram and by letter, of what they had done, and their acts were fully ratified and approved by the bankrupts. No “margins” were required to be put up by C. B. Stevens & Co., as they had an account with defendants, and were accounted by them responsible.

At about the time or a little before these contracts matured, as they did on the last day of November, the defendants performed a part of them on the behalf of C. B. Stevens & Sjons, by a purchase and actual delivery of the grain to the parties to whom the sales were made. The evidence, shows that, as to twenty thousand bushels of com, there was an actual delivery of the grain, and as to ten thousand more, a delivery of warehouse receipts for that amount As to the balance of the grain contracted to be sold, the defendants went upon the market and purchased it of different parties and had it ready for delivery; and then finding other parties who had similar deals for November purchases and sales, formed rings, or temporary clearing houses, through which, by means of a system of mutual offsets and cancellations that had grown up on the board, the contracts were settled by an adjustment of differences, saving an actual delivery and change of possession. It so happened that there was a considerable rise in the market price of corn during the month of November; and it was found that, after these transactions were closed out, there had been a loss to O. B. Stevens & Sons of something over ten thousand dollars, and which the defendants, having paid in cash for them on the purchase of the grain, debited to their account, according to the previous course of dealing between the parties.

The notes and mortgage in suit were soon afterwards given by the bankrupts to secure a portion of these sums so advanced by the defendants for them, including also about three hundred and seventy-five dollars, charged by S. D. Foss & Co. as their commissions. Unsecured notes were also given for three thousand dollars, balance of the ten thousand three hundred and eighty-six dollars and sixty cents indebtedness, which were afterwards paid by C. B. Stevens & Sons.

Two years afterwards, on November 19th, 1876, C. B. Stevens.& Sons filed their petition in bankruptcy in this court, and were on the same day adjudged bankrupts. The assignee in bankruptcy brings this suit to set aside the notes and mortgage, and in substance claims that C. B. Stevens & Sons, at the time the orders for the sale of grain were made and executed in October, 1874, had no com to sell, and no expectation of having any, with which to fill these contracts. That these facts were known to both parties, that is to the bankrupts and to the defendants, S. D. Foss & Co., and that it was understood by and between them at the time, that no grain was in fact to be delivered by C. B. Stevens & Sons, but that the contracts were to be settled by the payment or receipt of differences, according as the market should rise or fall in the month of November, and that they were thus mere wagers upon the November market, and, as such, contrary to law, and void, and that the notes and mortgage confessedly given to secure cash advances made by defendants, as the factors of the bankrupts, and with their approval, to pay the losses sustained upon these sales, should be cancelled and delivered up.

The question is whether this should be done. The question is, of course, a mixed question of fact and law. But I regard it as more a question of fact than of law; and I cannot help thinking, in looking through the cases on the subject, that more confusion and discrepancy has crept into them, from a failure to determine precisely the facts, than from any essential difference of opinion upon the abstract propositions of law applicable to them. This seems to be notably the case in Bumsey v. Berry, Go Me. 570, where, in the trial court, instead of submitting the question of fact as to what the contract really was, it not being in' writing, to the jury, instructions were asked, that, as a matter of law, the contract was a wagering contract. This instruction was properly refused, but there was a total failure to fairly submit the question of fact to the jury. It is not to be wondered at, that on an appeal to the supreme court, the facts not being fairly determined, the opinion sustaining the transaction as legal should have been given by a divided court, four judges concurring in the decision of the court, one judge delivering a dissenting opinion, one judge concurring in the dissenting opinion, and still another judge “inclined to concur” in it. If there [957]*957had been an eighth judge, it might not be improbable that he would have been “inclined to concur” in both opinions. And all this simply because the facts themselves not having been determined, there was no tangible, well-defined question of law before the court.

The testimony in the case at bar is quite exhaustive and voluminous. It is confined, however, to a few points, and though somewhat conflicting, I have had no great difficulty in determining the facts to my satisfaction. It is proven that, at the time these contracts were made, C. B. Stevens & Sons had not the grain on hand at De Soto, where they purchased grain, or elsewhere, nor any expectation of having it, with which to fill the contracts.

Olías. B.

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Bluebook (online)
5 F. Cas. 955, 7 Biss. 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarke-v-foss-wiwd-1878.