Farnum v. Pitcher

24 N.E. 590, 151 Mass. 470, 1890 Mass. LEXIS 247
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 10, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 24 N.E. 590 (Farnum v. Pitcher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farnum v. Pitcher, 24 N.E. 590, 151 Mass. 470, 1890 Mass. LEXIS 247 (Mass. 1890).

Opinion

Deyens, J.

While thirteen issues were submitted to the jury, they were to be answered under such instructions from the presiding judge, in matter of law, as a proper examination and decision of them required. If, as the legal result of the facts as they appeared, it was required that the issues presented, or any of them, should be answered in a particular manner, he might properly direct that such answer should be returned. If, by the answers to certain questions, it necessarily followed that others involved in or related to them should be answered in a particular manner, he might properly so instruct the jury. Equally, if by the answers to certain questions, the answers to others became superfluous, he might properly instruct the jury to leave the latter unanswered. As in other investigations of fact by a jury, neither party has any ground of complaint against the course pursued by the presiding judge, unless he shall show that some erroneous direction in point of law was given, or other error' committed, as by the wrongful admission or rejection of evidence, by which the rights of such party were injuriously affected.

The issues presented were intended to determine whether

[472]*472certain transactions between the plaintiffs and the defendant Pitcher, as to several alleged purchases and sales of corn, were merely gaming transactions, in which no corn was actually bought and sold, or to be bought and sold, but the gain or loss in which pretended purchases or sales was to be ascertained by the differences in the market price at the time of these pretended transactions, or whether they were bona fide transactions of actual purchase and sale. The transactions between the plaintiffs and the defendant took place in Boston, while the purchases and sales, or what were alleged to be such, took place in Chicago, being there conducted by the plaintiffs’ correspondent. Besides the matter of defence that the whole series of transactions was gaining, and that no purchases were ever really made on his orders, the defendant relied, in his answer, upon the ground that, if any were made, the plaintiffs wrongfully had released and discharged the sellers of the corn from the contracts of purchase made on behalf of the defendant. The presiding judge, in general instructions, to which no exception was taken except as hereafter appears, fully defined to the jury gaming transactions and real contracts for the purchase and sale of merchandise, and the differences and distinctions between them.

The defendant objects to the direction of the court to answer the fourth, seventh, and tenth questions in the negative. These questions all relate to the alleged release or discharge of the sellers of the corn from their several contracts if made on behalf of the defendant Pitcher. Such direction was correct. Carter v. Goff, 141 Mass. 123. If the defendant relied upon the fact that there had been such releases or discharges, it was necessary to offer some evidence in support of this defence, and the bill' bf exceptions distinctly states that there was no evidence that the plaintiffs had ever released or discharged the sellers of the corn from any contract entered into by them on behalf of the defendant in the purchases of corn, which were made in compliance with what are called the defendant’s “buy orders.”

The defendant especially objects to the instructions given in regard to the third, sixth, and ninth questions, which he considers were a virtual direction that these should be answered in [473]*473favor of the plaintiffs. The controversy arose as to three several transactions between the plaintiffs and the defendant, of the dates respectively of September 20, October 13, and October 15, 1884. The second, fifth, and eighth questions had been whether the buy orders given by the defendant in Boston, of these dates respectively, contemplated gaming contracts or bona fide transactions. The third, sixth, and ninth questions inquired whether the plaintiffs ever did make contracts in Chicago for the genuine purchases of corn there, which were included in the buy orders of those dates respectively. The learned judge, in regard to these, referring to the instructions which he had given as to the distinction between gaming and bona fide transactions, added, that if the jury should find that the second, fifth, and eighth questions related to bona fide transactions, “ that answer would be a decided help to you in answering the third, sixth, and ninth, because if these different orders, and the execution of them, were not gaming transactions, but bona fide transactions, real and not fictitious, it would seem as. though questions third, sixth, and ninth, relating to the same transactions as to whether they were genuine or not, would have to be answered on the same lines. That is a matter of suggestion to you, whether it would be of assistance to you in the matter.” The judge then recapitulates the various branches of the evidence on the inquiries whether actual purchases were made in Chicago, and submits to the jury the inquiry whether such purchases were genuine, “ as distinguished from mere fictions, — mere pretended purchases, by which no property passed on one side, and no liability to pay for any arose on the other.” It would be entirely possible that while the orders to buy given by the defendant were bona fide, and intended by the plaintiffs to be carried out by actual purchases, that no such purchases were in fact ever made by the plaintiffs. In instructing the jury that if these different orders and the execution of them were not gaming, but bona fide transactions, the third, sixth, and ninth questions, it would seem, should be answered on the same lines, embarrassment is created by the use of the words “ the execution of them,” as the inquiry involved in these questions was whether the plaintiffs had honestly executed the orders they had received, and thus performed the commission with [474]*474which they were intrusted by making genuine purchases in accordance with such orders. But the evident object is not to direct the jury to find that these purchases were actually made, if they found that the orders were honestly given, as the defendant contends, but to suggest to them, that, if the orders and the execution of the orders were not gaming, but bona fide transactions, they might be answered on the same lines, that is, in accordance with the bonafides in which, in the case supposed, the parties would have been found to have acted. That this was the meaning of the court is clear from the careful review of the various heads of the evidence which follows, in which the attention of the jury is called to all which bears on the question of actual purchases. Nor, in connection with this, do we think that the jury could have supposed that they were either directed or advised to find that purchases were actually made if orders were given in good faith.

The defendant also contends that the remark of the judge in referring to the purchases, that “how it was done was identified by account 70,” was an instruction to the jury to take that account, which was the account of the plaintiffs’ correspondent in Chicago, as an infallible guide for the answers to these three issues. But an examination of the context of the remark shows that it was used in connection with calling the attention of the jury to the testimony of one Baldwin of Chicago and his bookkeeper, as to what was done with respect to purchases under each of the orders, and by reference to account 70, of how it was claimed to identify their alleged proceedings.

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.E. 590, 151 Mass. 470, 1890 Mass. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farnum-v-pitcher-mass-1890.