Cyrus v. Portman

1 N.Y. City Ct. Rep. 1
CourtNew York Marine Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 1 N.Y. City Ct. Rep. 1 (Cyrus v. Portman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Marine Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cyrus v. Portman, 1 N.Y. City Ct. Rep. 1 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1879).

Opinion

JUDGE MOADAM’S CHARGE'.

It appears that the plaintiffs and defendant in this action had various dealings together between August 8, . 1877, and December 4, 1877, in the course of which the plaintiffs rendered services for the defendant in and -about the procuring and carrying of contracts, for the sale, and also for the purchase of cotton to be delivered at a future time for his account upon margin put up by him, and that at his request, and for his account, and in pursuance of their employment, they paid out money for which the defendant agreed to allow . and pay the plaintiff a commission upon the aforesaid transactions, - at an agreed rate.

[3]*3The plaintiffs claim, that thereafter, and on Decernher 5, 1877, an account was stated between them and the defendant, and that, upon such statemant, a balance of $235.51 was found due from the defendant to the plaintiff, and for this amount they demand judgment.

The defense pleaded is, that the transactions had between the plaintiffs and defendant, at the times set forth by the plaintiffs, were pretended purchases and sales of contracts for the future delivery of cotton; that no cotton was ever purchased, sold, received, or delivered; that the contracts were never performed, and were never intended to be performed, and that all that was ever contemplated was the settlement of the difference between the amount of the pretended purchase or sale, and the market price at the time when the pretended receipt or delivery was to be had, and that the transactions were simply wagers upon what the price of cotton would be at a future day, and that any and all contracts between the plaintiffs and defendant growing out of said transactions, were illegal and void, being gambling contracts, prohibited by the statutes of the State.

Now were these bona fide transactions ? were they real purchases of cotton, or cotton transactions, with the intention on the part of all the contracting parties, that the contracts, whatever they are, should be performed at maturity, that is, at the agreed time. If you find that they were real bona fide transactions, made with the intent stated, the plaintiffs are entitled to recover, otherwise not.

The court of appeals say (70 N. Y. 205), “ Mercantile contracts of this character are not infrequent, and they are consistent with a bona fide intention on the part of both parties to perform them,”- or (p. 206), They may be mere disguises . for gambling, and where an optional contract for the sale of property is made, and there is no intention on the one side to sell [4]*4or deliver the property, or on the other to buy or take it, but merely that the difference shall be paid according to the fluctuation in market values, the contract is a wager within the statute, but th is matter of defense, and must be established by proof and found by the jury.” If you find, therefore, that the transactions in question, instead of being real, were mere devices to obviate, evade, or get around the statutes in regard to gambling wagers, I charge you that in that event, the contracts were void, and no recovery can be had in favor of the plaintiffs. The law upon this subject is plain. An English case holds that a, contract for the sale and purchase of cotton, where neither party intends to deliver or accept the cotton, but merely to pay the difference, according to the rise or fall of the market, is void.

A Pennsylvania case holds that a contract to purchase shares of stock without the intention to deliver or receive them, but to pay the difference on a day certain, is a gambling contract, and not enforceable.

Similar rulings have been made by our supreme court, which have met the approval of the court of appeals. If, therefore, you find that these contracts were made in good faith, as I before remarked, and the parties intended to perform, the plaintiffs are entitled to recover, while on the other hand, if you find that an evasion of the statutes was intended, no recovery can be had.

Although the law does not invalidate actual business transactions, it strikes at everything that partakes of wagering or gambling, in whatever form it appears. Another question arises as to the effect of the statute upon persons who, like the plaintiffs, act as agents in' such 'transactions. Judge Story, in his work on Agency, says: “ In respect to agencies in illegal transactions the same principles apply, as to advances and disbursements by agents, as apply’to their [5]*5commissions, none are recoverable either in law or in equity. For the law will not assist any person in evading obligations imposed upon the whole community to conform to its directions and prohibitions. As between principal and agents in all such cases the guilt is deemed to be equal; and the maxim is in pari delicto potior est conditio defendentis.”

The parties, therefore, must trust exclusively to the personal faith of each other, as to the fulfillment of their mutual stipulations in illegal transactions. The law will not assist the agent to recover his expenses or advances, or the principal to recover his property or its proceeds. Each party is left precisely where he is found at the time ■ of the controversy, to bear the burden of his own abandonment of his duty to the law of his country.

• If an agent should be employed to buy smuggled goods, and he should pay for the goods, and they should come to the hands of his employer, the agent could not recover for such advances from the employer.

So, if an agent should knowingly advance money to pay for illegal insurances, or for stock-jobbing transactions for his employer, he could not recover it from the latter.

So, if an agent should knowingly advance money to his employer to game with, it would not be recoverable.

Therefore, in conclusion, let me remind you that the case comes back to this : Were these transactions bona fide, made with the intention on the part of all the contracting parties to carry them out, in which case the plaintiffs are entitled to recover, or were they mere pretenses or disguises to avoid the statute against gambling wagers, by paying the difference according to the rise or fall of the market price of cotton ; for, in' that event, the contracts were, as I have already intimated, [6]*6void, and the defendant will "be entitled to yonr verdict.

The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiffs for the amount claimed.

Editor ill comments.

It is now generally agreed^ and indeed in this State is fully settled, that contracts on time for the sale of personal property—whether gold or other currency, stocks, bonds or merchandise,— are not void as wager contracts, merely because made for future delivery and at the option of one of the parties, nor because the seller did not have the wherewithal to fulfill. He who impeaches such a contract must show that it was the intention of the parties that it should not be fulfilled, but merely “settled ” by payment of differences according to the course of the market. .

Some difference-of opinion exists as to what is the appropriate evidence of this intent. There is no question, at least in our courts, and probably not in any of those where parties are received as witnesses in their own behalf, that a party may be interrogated as to what was his intent in this respect at the time of making the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.Y. City Ct. Rep. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cyrus-v-portman-nymarct-1879.