Goodman v. Benson

286 F.2d 896
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 16, 1961
DocketNo. 12920
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 286 F.2d 896 (Goodman v. Benson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodman v. Benson, 286 F.2d 896 (7th Cir. 1961).

Opinion

DUFFY, Circuit Judge.

The petitioner seeks to review and set aside an order of the Judicial Officer of the United States Department of Agriculture,1 ordering all contract markets to refuse all trading privileges to the petitioner for a period of 20 days because of violations of the Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C.A. §§ 1-17a) and the regulations pursuant to the Act. The order has been stayed pending determination of this appeal.

The Judicial Officer found that during the period from December 1, 1957 through February 21, 1958, petitioner Goodman 1) failed to file reports as to his rye futures contracts as required by the Act and regulations, and 2) held a speculative position in rye futures contracts in excess of 500,000 bushels, the maxi[898]*898mum permissible quantity established under the Act.

The Commodity Exchange Act previously known as the Grain Futures Act, confers upon the Secretary of Agriculture authority to regulate boards of trade, futures commission merchants, floor brokers and persons trading on regulated markets. 7 U.S.C.A. §§ 6-17a. The Act requires all trading in futures in commodities specified in the Act to be conducted upon designated markets.

The Commodity Exchange Commission, acting under authority of the Act, issued a regulation effective December 3, 1945, providing that the speculative “limit on the maximum net long or net short position which any person may hold or control in rye on or subject to the rules of any one contract market is 500,000 bushels in any one future or in all futures combined.”2 17 C.F.R. § 150.3(a).

Regulations issued by the Secretary set forth the procedure to be followed in filing reports as to futures transactions and positions. Regulations applicable to persons trading in rye futures contracts provide that reports must be filed by every person who holds or controls open contracts in any one future on any one contract market which equal or exceed 200,-000 bushels. No signature was required on these reports, but they each bore a code number which had been assigned by the Commodity Exchange Authority (C EA).

Petitioner is and has been engaged in the real estate business in the city of Evanston, Illinois. However, since 1927, he has been a member of the Chicago Board of Trade, a designated contract market under the Act. At various times he has purchased and sold in substantial volume, contracts involving various grains such as wheat, corn and rye.

In August or September, 1957, petitioner decided to buy some rye futures contracts on the Chicago Board of Trade. He inquired of one of his brokers as to the maximum permissible number of bushels of rye futures contracts he could lawfully buy. The broker told him the ceiling or limit was 2,000,000 bushels. This broker testified that after he had informed petitioner that the limit was 2.000. 000 bushels on all commodities, he was not definitely sure that he had given the correct information, so he called the Commodity Exchange Authority and someone there, whose name he could not recall, told him the limit was 2,000,000 bushels. The broker further testified that on the same day or the following day, he called petitioner and informed him that the information he had given to him was correct.

At his office, sometime in September, 1957, petitioner told his secretary that he was allowed to buy 2,000,000 bushels of rye futures contracts; that she should keep track of petitioner’s purchases of rye futures and inform the petitioner when the total purchases approached the 2.000. 000 bushel limit.

Petitioner proceeded to accumulate rye futures contracts on the Chicago Board of Trade, and between December 31,1957 and February 21, 1958, he owned such contracts in amounts ranging from 580,-000 to 1,085,000 bushels.

Petitioner claims he did not know, pri- or to February 21, 1958, that his secretary had not been filing the required reports with the CEA. Her explanation was that she had taken the information given to her by petitioner in September, 1957 to mean that no reports were necessary until petitioner had acquired 2,000,-000 bushels of rye futures. However, the evidence showed petitioner’s secretary had filed reports for petitioner for many years including reports on rye. Also, during the period here under consideration, she filed reports as to certain other commodities when petitioner’s position reached 200,000 bushels.

On February 21, 1958, on a visit to the Chicago Board of Trade, petitioner learned that investigators had been checking [899]*899Into his rye accounts at seven brokerage houses through which he did business. He claims he was again informed at this time by representatives or employees of brokerage houses, that the limit on rye was 2,000,000 bushels. Petitioner was not satisfied with this information, and directed his attorney to make an investigation. On February 23, petitioner was informed by his attorney that the limit on rye was 500,000 bushels. On February 24, 1958, he sold all rye futures contracts in excess of 500,000 bushels.

Petitioner claims he acted in good faith and had a right to rely on the information given to him by his broker. He argues there is no evidence and findings which are a proper basis to demand a forced sale of his grain assets, and that the Secretary’s order as to him amounts to cruel, unusual and unconstitutional punishment. He also attacks the constitutionality of the applicable sections of the Commodity Exchange Act.

Shortly after December 3, 1945, when the Commodity Exchange Commission reduced the limit on the maximum speculative position in rye for future delivery which any person could hold or control on any one contract market, the Chicago Board of Trade addressed a letter to its members, setting forth in full the order of the Commission. Petitioner was a member of the Board of Trade at that time. The 500,000 bushel limit for rye has remained in force continuously since December 3, 1945.

During the period February 23 through March 2, 1956, petitioner held a speculative position in rye futures on the ■Chicago Board of Trade in excess of 500,-000 bushels. When his attention was called to this matter by the Commodity Exchange Authority, petitioner explained he did not know the limit had been reduced to 500,000 bushels. Within a day or two, petitioner brought himself into compliance. As a result of this occurrence, petitioner received from the Chicago office of the CEA, a document specifying the speculative limits on trading and positions under the Act which stated the maximum allowable position in rye was 500,000 bushels. Shortly thereafter, petitioner received a letter from the Administrator of the CEA in Washington, D. C. containing similar information, and stating, “We are sure that we can depend upon your cooperation in the future to see that there is no recurrence of trading or holding of positions in excess of the permissible limit.” At that time, no complaint was filed and no sanctions were imposed upon petitioner.

It was less than eighteen months later that petitioner again commenced dealing in rye futures. Apparently he did not refer to the documentary material previously supplied to him. He did not communicate directly with the regulatory agency which had admonished him in 1956. He made inquiry only of a partner of a brokerage firm that dealt primarily in securities, and only on a relatively small scale, in commodity futures.

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286 F.2d 896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodman-v-benson-ca7-1961.