Harvey & Co. v. Doty

32 S.E. 501, 54 S.C. 382, 1899 S.C. LEXIS 49
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 32 S.E. 501 (Harvey & Co. v. Doty) 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
Harvey & Co. v. Doty, 32 S.E. 501, 54 S.C. 382, 1899 S.C. LEXIS 49 (S.C. 1899).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Pope.

This action was once before in this Court, when the nonsuit granted defendant was reversed— 50 Y. C., 548. At September, 1898, term it was tried be[383]*383fore Judge Gage and a jury. After a verdict for defendant and judgment thereupon, plaintiffs appealed to this Court on. the following grounds: “I. For that his Honor erred in charging the jury that where an agent makes contracts in good faith, in his own name, with other parties as principals to such contracts, for the sale of property for future delivery, and there is a bona fide intention on the part of such agent and other principals to the contracts, at the time of the making of the contracts, to actually deliver, on the one hand, and actually receive on the other, at the time or period men - tioned in the future, such agent cannot recover losses or advances made on such contracts from his principal, unless he shows that it was the bona fide intention of his principal and the other parties to the contracts at the time of the making thereof, to actually deliver and receive the property so sold at the maturity of the said contracts. II. For that his Honor erred in charging the jury that where an agent makes contracts for future delivery in his own name with other parties, such agent and other parties being the principals to said contracts, and it being the bona fide intention of both of said parties, at the time of the making of the said contracts, the one to deliver and the other to receive the property in kind at the maturity of the contract, the burden of proof is upon such agent to show that it was the bona fide intention of both his principal and the other parties to the contracts, at the time of the making of the contract, to actually deliver and receive the property in kind at the period fixed in the future for the delivery thereof. III. For that his Honor erred in not holding, and so charging the jury in this case, that section 1859 of the Revised Statutes contemplates the making of contracts, the sale and transfer of property therein mentioned for future delivery, by and through agents; that under said section such agents may make saicj. contracts in their own names with other parties as principals thereto; and if at the time said contracts are made it is the bona fide intention of the said agents and other parties to the said contracts to deliver and receive the prop[384]*384erty so sold,'as required by said section, then said contracts of sale and transfer for future delivery are good and valid under said section, are binding on the principal of such agents, and the agents may recover from their principal for all losses incurred on said contracts or advances made thereon for their principal; and the undisclosed intention of their principal not to deliver the property so sold will not vitiate the said contracts, nor prevent a recovery by the agents for losses and advances arising upon such contracts. IV. For that his Honor erred in not holding and so charging the jury in this case, that where an agent is authorized to-sell for future delivery any of the property mentioned in said section 1859, and makes the contracts of sale and delivery in his own name with other parties as principals, and both parties have the bona fide intention required by said section to deliver and receive said property, then it is the intention of such agent and such other parties that makes the contracts valid, and not the intention of such other parties and the principal of the agent; and if such contracts are made in good faith by the agent, his principal is estopped from disputing the validity of such contracts. V. For that his Honor erred in not holding and charging the jury in this case, that where an agent is authorized to sell for future delivery, and makes the contract in his own name with other parties as principals, and with the bona fide intention on the part of both such agent and such other parties, as is required by section 1859, then said contracts are good and valid under the law of this State; and section i860 simply places the burden of proof on the agent to show such fact, to entitle him to recover from his principal for advances made, or losses incurred, in executing such contracts; and the undisclosed and secret intention of his principal not to deliver as required by section 1859, cannot affect or invalidate said contracts, or prevent a recovery of such advances and losses made and incurred by the agent. VI. For that his Honor erred in not granting a new trial upon the minutes of the Court, When it was brought to his attention that he had [385]*385erred in charging the jury that an agent could not recover for advances and losses upon such contracts, if it was not the intention of his principal to deliver the property according to the provisions of the law of this State, even although it was the bona Ude intention of the agent and the other parties to the contracts to make the delivery as required by law.”

The plaintiffs, appellants, are grain brokers in the city of Chicago, the defendant is a merchant in Winnsboro, S. C. In October, 1891, the latter procured the former to buy 20,000 bushels of corn for delivery in the month of November, 1891. The corn was bought at 52 and sold at 74^ and 75. The margins advanced by defendant and the sale of the corn on 30th November, 1891, left defendant due plaintiffs $910. This action is brought to recover that sum. Defendant interposed two defenses; one was that plaintiffs had negligently attended to his business, which negligence was the cause of this debt of $910; the second was that the purchase of the grain was naught but gambling in grain futures, and this $910 arising therefrom was null and void under our State Statutes. Both of these defenses were submitted to the jury, and they found a general verdict for the defendant. It is not claimed by the plaintiffs, appellants, that Judge Gage committed any error in charging upon the first branch of the defense. Nor is there any complaint against the Judge for his charge upon the requests to charge, submitted by the plaintiffs. Indeed, when reduced to a careful analysis, the main objection of the plaintiffs, appellants, to the Judge’s charge is to that part which bore on the agency of the plaintiffs for defendant, and this embraces them all. Stress is laid upon the matter of the agency of the plaintiffs, appellants, for the defendant. We must have recourse to the legislation of this State, whose purpose was to destroy, root and branch, gambling in futures, as they are called. This legislation struck at purchases for future delivery of bonds, cotton, grain, meat — in fact, it spared nothing in the animal or vegetable world which could be made the subject of sale for future delivery. The legisla - [386]*386tion in question may be found at sections 1859 to 1863, inclusive, of the Revised Statutes of the year 1893. Section 1859 provides that “Every contract * * for the sale or transfer at any future time * * of any grain * * shall be void unless the party contracting * * to sell or transfer the same is at the time of making such contract * * the owner or assignee thereof, or is at the time authorized by the owner or the assignee thereof, or his duly authorized agent, to make and enter into such contract * * or unless it is the bona fide

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 S.E. 501, 54 S.C. 382, 1899 S.C. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harvey-co-v-doty-sc-1899.