Gwathney v. Burgiss

82 S.E. 394, 98 S.C. 152, 1914 S.C. LEXIS 17
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 13, 1914
Docket8871
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 82 S.E. 394 (Gwathney v. Burgiss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gwathney v. Burgiss, 82 S.E. 394, 98 S.C. 152, 1914 S.C. LEXIS 17 (S.C. 1914).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Hydrick.

This action was brought to recover a balance alleged to be due to plaintiffs from defendant, arising out of dealings in cotton futures on the New York Cotton -Exchange by plaintiffs as agents of defendant. The plaintiffs state their case in three causes of action. The complaint is too long to report in full. It contains a good deal of repetition in stating the details of the various transactions, so that we shall state only the substance of the allegations, omitting formal allegations and such as aré not material to the consideration of the question made by the appeal.'

The facts alleged are: Plaintiffs are cotton commission merchants and brokers of the city of New York and members of the New York Cotton Exchange. Defendant is a resident óf Spartanburg, S. C. The purchases and sales hereinafter mentioned were made by plaintiffs for defendant, as his agents, subject to the by-laws, rules and regulations of said exchange. Except those of January 4, 1912, *158 which will be specially noticed later, each was made at the request of defendant, and he was promptly notified of each by wire and mail, and also of the results of the transactions, as they were closed out by statements, showing- the details of the transactions, including the deduction or addition of the commissions which plaintiffs were entitled to • charge under the rules of the exchange. Each purchase and sale was made in the name of the plaintiffs, without disclosing the name of the defendant. The foregoing facts are stated in each cause of action to which they are appropriate. The intention of the parties as to the transactions is alleged in the following- language: “It was the bona, fide intention of both parties—seller and buyer—at the time of making such contract that the cotton should be actually delivered and received in kind at the future period méntioned, and certainly such was the bona fide intention of plaintiffs, as agents for defendant.”

The transactions set up as the first cause of action were as follows:

1. Aug. 24, 1911, bought 100 bales for January, 1912, delivery. Sept. 8, 1911, closed this transaction by selling-100 bales for January, 1912, delivery, making for' defendant $110.00.

2. Aug. 25, 1911, bought 100 bales for October delivery. Aug. 28, 1911, bought 100 bales for October delivery. Sept. 5, 1911, closed these transactions by selling-200 bales for October delivery, making- for defendant $40.00.

3. Sept. 29, 1911, sold 400 bales for December delivery. Oct. 7, 1911, closed this transaction by buying- 400 bales for December delivery, making for defendant $820.00.

4. Sept. 30, 1911, .sold- 100 bales for October delivery. Oct. 11, 1911, closed this transaction by buying 100 bales for October delivery, making for defendant $295.00.

5.. Oct. 16, 1911, sold 200 bales for May, 1912, delivery. Oct. 28, 1911, closed this transaction by buying 200 bales for May, 1912, delivery, making for defendant $100.00.

*159 6. Nov. 26, 1911, sold 400 bales for May, 1912, delivery. Dec. 13, 1911, closed this transaction by buying 400 bales for May, 1912, delivery, making for defendant $340.00.

7. Dec. 13, 1911, bought 100 bales for May, 1912, delivery. Dec. 18, 1911, closed this transaction by selling 100 bales for May, 1912, delivery, making for defendant $65.00.

8. Sept. 13, 1911, bought 200 bales for January, 1912, delivery. Dec. 28, 1911, closed this transaction by selling 200 bales for January, 1912, delivery, losing for defendant $2,680.00.

The difference between the sum of the previous gains and the loss on this transaction is $910.00, payment of which was duly demanded of defendant and refused.

The following transactions are set up as the second cause of action:

Dec. 18, 1911, sold 500 bales for May, 1912, delivery. Dec. 29, 19Í1, bought 200 bales for March, 1912, delivery. While plaintiffs were carrying these contracts, defendant became indebted to them, as stated in the first cause of action, in the sum of $910.00. In the meantime, the price of cotton for May and March deliveries so rose that on January 3, 1912, these contracts showed a loss of $510.00, which, with plaintiffs’ commissions, $105.00, and the previous loss of $910.00, amounted to $1,525.00. Thereupon, plaintiffs demanded of defendant a remittance of $1,500.00 to cover these losses and their commissions in part. Their demand was refused. Thereupon, plaintiffs notified defendant that unless they were notified by 11:45 o’clock the next day that remittance of said sum had been made they would liquidate said contracts. Defendant failed to make the remittance, and, on January 4, 1912, plaintiffs closed these transactions by. buying' 500 bales for May, 1912, delivery, and by selling 200 bales for March, .1912, delivery, the former resulting in a loss to defendant of $675.00, and the latter in a gain of $180.00, the net result being a loss to *160 defendant of $495.00, which, with the previous loss of $910.00, makes $1,405.00, for which judgment is demanded against defendant.

In the third cause of action, the transactions of the first and second causes of action are set up as a cause of action on an account stated, it being therein alleged that the account between the parties was stated on January 4, 1912; that it was found that the sum of $1,405.00 was then due to plaintiffs from defendant; and that defendant agreed to said statement of the -account and promised to pay the same, but no part thereof has been paid.

The defendant moved to strike out the third cause of action as irrelevant and redundant, and demurred to the first and second causes of action, and, also, to the whole complaint for insufficiency. The motion was refused, and the demurrer was overruled.

1, la The ground of the motion to strike out the third cause of action is that it was merely a repetition of the facts of the first and-second, and, therefore, redundant. This ground is not well taken. Thére is this difference: The first and second causes of action are based upon items of an open account, while the third is upon an account stated.

There are material differences in the rights of the parties in an action on an open account, and in an action on the .same account, as an account stated. Some of them are: In the first, plaintiff must prove each item of the account, and cannot recover interest, except, in equity, under peculiar circumstances, or upon an express agreement to pay interest. In the second, he may rest his case upon proof that defendant agreed to the account, as stated, and promised to pay it, and interest is recoverable on such an account by statute. Civ. Code, sec. 2516. There are also differences in the defenses which are available under a general denial in the two cases.

*161 It is permissible, under section 318 of the Code of Procedure, to join in the same complaint, a cause of action on open account and one on the same account, as an account stated, as both causes of action arise out of contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 S.E. 394, 98 S.C. 152, 1914 S.C. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gwathney-v-burgiss-sc-1914.