Heinold Commodities & Securities, Inc. v. Hunt (In Re Hunt)

30 B.R. 425
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Tennessee
DecidedMay 9, 1983
DocketBankruptcy No. 381-04076, Adv. Nos. 382-0133, 382-0134
StatusPublished
Cited by92 cases

This text of 30 B.R. 425 (Heinold Commodities & Securities, Inc. v. Hunt (In Re Hunt)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heinold Commodities & Securities, Inc. v. Hunt (In Re Hunt), 30 B.R. 425 (M.D. Tenn. 1983).

Opinion

REPORT OF STANDING MASTER 1

KEITH M. LUNDIN, Bankruptcy Judge, Standing Master.

At issue in this case is the dischargeability of losses incurred by the debtor through trading commodity futures in United States Treasury Bonds. The plaintiffs assert that the debtor’s losses are nondischargeable because fraudulently procured by the issuing of bad checks and the making of a false financial statement. For the reasons discussed below, the standing master concludes that the debts to plaintiffs are dischargea-ble.

I. FACTS

The plaintiffs, E.F. Hutton & Company, Inc. (“Hutton”) and Heinold Commodities & Securities, Inc. (“Heinold”) are brokerage firms which provide facilities for the trading of securities, including transactions in the futures markets for commodities.

The debtor, William Everette Hunt (“Hunt”), is 47-years old and has been a college physics instructor for approximately half of the 20 years since receiving his Ph.D. When not teaching, Hunt owned and operated a distributing company and traded in the stock market.

A. HEINOLD TRANSACTIONS

In 1979, Hunt went to work for Clayton Brokerage Company (“Clayton”), a St. Louis brokerage firm which briefly opened an office in Nashville. After a one-week course, Hunt took an examination and became a licensed stock broker. Prior to his employment with Clayton, Hunt had traded stocks and options for his personal account, but had never traded in the bond futures market. At Clayton, Hunt began trading in futures contracts for United States Treasury Bonds. 2 Hunt was assisted by Mr. Bill Bowen (“Bowen”), a licensed commodities broker. Bowen met Hunt several years earlier when Hunt was teaching. At Clayton, Hunt never took delivery of the bonds for which he contracted. Rather, he bought and sold contracts mostly in day trades and made money or lost money on the swings of the market. Bowen was aware that Hunt maintained the role of speculator, not long term investor. At Clayton (and later at Heinold) Hunt’s trades in bond futures were carried out through Bowen because Hunt was not a licensed commodities broker. In April of 1980, Clayton closed its Nashville office. Clayton was succeeded in its Nashville operations by the plaintiff, Heinold and Bowen became the manager of the Nashville Heinold office.

Hunt formally opened a bond trading account with Heinold in May of 1980. The account was opened through Bowen and designated as a “speculation account.” *429 Heinold never required or received a financial statement from Hunt. However, Bowen testified that he personally investigated Hunt’s financial condition. Bowen determined that Hunt owned land, farms, several buildings and had access to large sums of cash. Bowen ascertained that Hunt had family wealth in the Trenton, Tennessee area. Heinold established no particular credit limit for Hunt. Instead, Heinold employed a concept of “risk capital” which, as Bowen explained, is the money Heinold determined a client could afford to lose. Bowen claimed, however, that Heinold never required its brokers to limit customers to “risk capital.” Hunt specified “$50,000” as his risk capital on his account application at Heinold.

Bowen explained that Heinold and other commodity brokers impose margin requirements on their bond trading customers which are usually paid in advance of trading. The margin procedures are codified in the Rules and Regulations of the Board of Trade for the City of Chicago. 3 Regulation 431.01(12) provides as follows:

Members shall not accept orders for new trades from a customer, unless the minimum initial margin on the new trades is deposited and unless the margin on old commitments in the account equals or exceeds the initial requirements on hedging and spreading trades and/or the maintenance requirements specified in Regulation 431.03 on all other trades. If the customer has a credit in excess of the initial margin requirements on all old commitments in his account, this may be used as part or all of the initial margins required on new commitments. However, credits in excess of maintenance margins and less than initial margin requirements may not be used. When a customer states that funds required to fully margin his account are being transmitted at once, the member may consider this assurance in lieu of cash for a reasonable period. Members are required to keep written records of all margin calls, whether made in writing or by telephone.

The rules further provide at 431.02(15) that:

A member may use his discretion in permitting a customer having an established account to trade during any day without margining each transaction, provided the net position resulting from the day’s trading is margined as required by Rule 286.-00, 431.00 and Regulation 431.02 and 431.-03.

On a one contract U.S. Treasury Bond future purchase (face value $100,000), Heinold required a margin of $2,000. By requiring a customer to post the $2,000 per bond margin, the brokerage house protects itself from liability for losses incurred by the customer. Regulations prohibit the market for Treasury Bond futures contracts from shifting more than two points up or down on any one day of trading. A two point maximum shift computes to approximately $2,000 per contract. Thus, the standard margin requirement for bond futures trading is a single day’s maximum swing— $2,000 per bond contract.

Bowen disclosed it was common for Hei-nold to ignore the Board of Trade Regulation regarding margins in advance of bond trading. A bond trader who is an established customer in the Heinold office may day trade by merely covering account deficits at the close of the day. An established customer who tenders a check to cover the deficit in his trading account is permitted to immediately trade again without posting a margin against the possibility of future losses. Bowen testified that Heinold had a rule that a customer would not be allowed to trade if the customer’s account was in an uncovered deficit position. The proof at trial, however, demonstrated that on numerous occasions Bowen permitted Hunt to buy and sell bond futures contracts without first covering the deficit in his trading account.

Hunt advanced a “very sufficient” amount of money when he opened his bond trading account with Bowen. Bowen testi *430 fied that Hunt would trade as many as 50 bond contracts on day trades and 50 more on position trades three or four times a week. The same procedure was employed for all trades: Hunt would give Bowen a check to cover any deficit in his trading account and Bowen would allow Hunt to trade at will in the bond futures market. Bowen testified that Hunt wrote checks for $40,000, $66,000, and $90,000 to meet margin requirements or as payments of deficits. At one point, Hunt’s trading account reflected a surplus of $120,000. Hunt became Bowen’s largest bond trader and as manager of the Heinold office, Bowen received a percentage of the commissions earned on Hunt’s transactions.

In June or July of 1981, one of Hunt’s checks given to Bowen failed to clear Hunt’s account.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 B.R. 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heinold-commodities-securities-inc-v-hunt-in-re-hunt-tnmd-1983.