Justh v. Holliday

13 D.C. 346
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 7, 1883
DocketLaw. No. 20,516
StatusPublished

This text of 13 D.C. 346 (Justh v. Holliday) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Justh v. Holliday, 13 D.C. 346 (D.C. 1883).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hagner

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action brought by the plaintiff against the •defendant, upon a promissory note, of which the following is a copy:

■“ $8,500 New York, Feb. 10,1876.
“Six months after date I promise to pay to the order of myself, with interest at 7 per cent., eighty-five hundred dollars, at the office of Justh & Co., 19 Broad street, value received.
“ Gf. A. 'Custer.
-“ Endorsed:
“G-. A. Custer.
“Ben. Holliday.
“Received, New York, March 21, 1878, nine hundred and -twenty-six dollars ($926.00).
“Justh & Co.
A. E., Jr.”

[347]*347Besides the pleas of non assumpsit and not indebted, the ■defendant interposed the following :

“ And for further plea, the said defendant says that the note in the declaration mention ed was executed by the said Custer, and endorsed by this defendant for the amount of an alleged account' which the said plaintiffs claimed to have against the said Custer, growing out of certain alleged purchases and sales of stock by the said plaintiffs for and on account of the said Custer. And the defendant avers that there were no bona fide sales of stocks by the plaintiffs, to or for said Custer, but the alleged amount for which said note was given was for the difference between the price of 'said stocks at the time of the pretended sale of them by the said plaintiffs to said Custer, or the pretended purchasing thereof by them for him, and the prices thereof at the time of the pretended sale thereof by said plaintiffs for said Custer, and that said Custer did not deal in said stocks, or buy them of or sell them to the said plaintiffs, or buy or sell them through the agency of the said plaintiff's,-or otherwise, and no stocks were ever delivered to said Custer by or through the plaintiff's, or intended so to be, but that the transactions between them, in consideration of which said note was made and endorsed, were -wagers upon the prices of said stocks, and that no other or different consideration passed between the said plaintiff's and Custer, or defendant, for the giving or endorsement of said note, and the defendant did not know, at the time he endorsed the same, what the consideration thereof was.”

Issue was joined upon these pleas, and the case was tried before a jury, which rendered a verdict for the plaintiff'for the amount of the note and interest, after crediting the $926, which the plaintiff stated he had received on account from the estate of Custer.

At the trial, the plaintiff proved the execution and endorsement of the note and its due protest, and there rested.

The defendant thereupon read in evidence the testimony taken under a commission issued on the order of the plaintiff, who was the only witness examined.

[348]*348He testified in chief, in his own behalf, and was cross-examined by the defendant. There were produced by the plaintiff, and returned with the commission, three communications addressed by General Custer to the plaintiff, and several accounts, which he stated represented the transactions between him and General Custer, so far as he was able to furnish the same. And this being all the evidence in the case, the defendant prayed the court to grant the following instruction:

“If the jury believe from the evidence that the note in the declaration mentioned was given by the said Custer and endorsed by defendant for a balance of accounts, alleged to be due from said Custer to the plaintiff,, and that such alleged balance arose upon alleged purchases and sales of stocks by Justh & Co., in the name of said Custer, or to or for him, and that no stocks so alleged to be purchased by Justh & Co., in the name of said Custer, or alleged to be sold to or for him, were ever delivered to him, aud that it was the intention of the said parties that such stocks should not be delivered to said Custer, but that he should receive only the profits on the alleged purchases and sales of said stocks, if any should be made, or be liable for the losses, if any should occur, then such transactions were illegal, and the plaintiff’ cannot recover.”

The case comes here upon exceptions to the refusal of the court to give this instruction to the jury :

1st. The general principle is well settled as to the conditions which will invalidate contracts of the description referred to in the prayer.

In the excellent work of Mr.. Dos Passos, of the New York bar, on the Law of Stock Brokers, it is thus stated : “ Where a contract is made for the delivery or acceptance of securities at a future day, at a price named, and neither party, at the time of making the contract, intends to deliver or accept the shares, but merely to pay differences, according to the rise or fall of the market, the contract is void, either by virtue of statute or as contrary to public policy.” P. 477-

All observers agree that the inevitable effect of such deal[349]*349ings is to encourage wild speculations ; to derange prices to the detriment of the community ; to discourage the disposition to engage in steady business or labor, where the gains, though sure, are too slow to satisfy the thirst for gaming when once aroused; and to fill the cities with the bankrupt victims of such disasters as any “ Black Friday ” may develop. As was well expressed in 55 Pa. State, 298, Bruce’s Appeal, “Anything which induces men to risk their money or property without any other hope of return than to get for nothing any given amount from another, is gambling, and demoralizes the community, no matter by what name it may be called.”

The extent of this form of speculation now rife in our country is unprecedented, unless perhaps by the almost universal gambling transactions that distinguished the era of the famous South Sea Bubble.

Mr, Dos Passos states in his work that according to financial authorities the sales of stocks alone, at the New York Stock Exchange, in the year 1881, reached the enormous total of 128,162,466 shares, representing in cash at $106 each share, the prodigious sum of twelve billion eight hundred and sixteen millions two hundred and forty-six thousand dollars. No one doubts that much the larger part of these transactions were illicit as gaming contracts. And wheh it is remembered that this fierce greed for gain without labor has to so great an extent subjected to the same wild speculation the commodities necessary to sustain life, that the humblest housekeeper is frequently the innocent sufferer by mere wagering ti'ansactions, the far-reaching extent of this pernicious traffic may, in some degree, be realized. The plainest principles of propriety and public policy, therefore, should warn the courts to adhere tenaciously to such protection against the further spread of the evil, as they have been able to interpose to the recovery upon contracts ■ originating in stock gambling.

2nd. That the endorser of a note given on account of such ■dealings as are recognized as gaming transactions can rely upon their illegality as a defense to :an action on the -note, [350]*350was settled as far back as 1794, in the case of Steers vs. Laskley, 6 T. R., 61.

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13 D.C. 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/justh-v-holliday-dc-1883.