Kahn v. Harris, Upham & Co.

253 S.W.2d 647, 151 Tex. 655, 1952 Tex. LEXIS 437
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1952
DocketA-3635
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 253 S.W.2d 647 (Kahn v. Harris, Upham & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kahn v. Harris, Upham & Co., 253 S.W.2d 647, 151 Tex. 655, 1952 Tex. LEXIS 437 (Tex. 1952).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The parties will be identified as in the trial court.

The price of cotton fell during October of 1946 resulting in a loss in the purchase and resale of 700 bales of “December” cotton. This suit determines whether that loss falls upon the cotton broker or upon his customer.

Defendant, Dr. Jack Kahn of Victoria County, is alleged to have purchased 7 separate contracts of cotton (each 100 bales) on October 15th and 16th of 1946. Two of these contracts were sold by the plaintiff broker on the following day (October 17th), and the other five were sold five days later (October 21st) for a loss of approximately $11,577.50. Defendant contended that he did not authorize the transaction, but the jury found against him on this point. The trial court has entered a judgment for plaintiff in the amount of its damages with interest. This has been affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals in an opinion reported at 247 S. W. 2d 139.

Plaintiff, Harris, Upham & Company, a member of the New Orleans Cotton Exchange, is a duly registered and licensed broker in Texas.

Defendant contends that the contracts sued upon were illegal for the reason that they are sales of cotton “futures” not made with the intention to make actual delivery, but rather with the intention of speculating on the cotton market.

*657 Arts 656-664 of the Penal Code prohibit “Bucket Shops”. Under Art. 657 it must be “contemplated” by the parties at the time of sale that there will be an “actual delivery” of the cotton. Under Art. 658, any futures contract is void where two circumstances concur which are, first: where there is no “bona fide intention” to deliver the commodity; and second, where there is no “actual bona fide execution” and “carrying out” of the sale upon the floor of an exchange.

Whatever their precise meanings and differences may be, the words “contemplate * * * an actual delivery” found in Art. 657 are not the same as the words “bona fide intention” to deliver found in Art. 658. Art. 658, a felony, is directed at what is commonly called a “bucket shop,” i.e. a place where no sales are actually consummated but instead the parties gamble on the rise and fall in a bona fide and different market. Art. 657 does not define a criminal offense and is not aimed primarily at “bucket shops” but validates “futures contracts” made as genuine sales on a bona fide exchange and clearly exempts them from the operation of the penal laws. The Legislature recognized a distinction between a contract which contemplated an ultimate delivery of cotton to the holder at maturity and a contract “where it is not the bona fide intention of parties that the things mentioned therein are to be delivered” but instead of delivery it “is to be settled according to or upon the basis of public market quotation * * *.”

The invoice from plaintiff to defendant covering each sale or purchase contained the following words:

“It is understood that the within and all other transactions made for your account by us contemplate actual receipt and delivery of the property and payment therefor and that all property sold for your account is sold upon the representation that you have same in your possession actually or potentially.”

The uncontroverted evidence established that a “futures contract” is a present purchase of cotton at current market price for delivery at a fixed place and time in the future. By its very nature it does “contemplate” a delivery of a specific amount of cotton at a future date. The fact that either party to the same or both may know that the purchaser intends to sell before delivery date and has no intention at the time of purchase of keeping the contract until maturity does not keep it from being “contemplated by the parties thereto that there shall be an actual delivery.” The purchaser may decide to keep the contract. If he does *658 keep it, there will be delivered to him the specific amount of cotton at a definite time and place. Morgan v. Rose, 62 S.W. 2d 1022:

Defendant plead that one Jim Allen, a customer’s man for plaintiff, who had theretofore sold him certain stocks and bonds, suggested that the time was good to purchase cotton futures and that by the purchase of cotton futures defendant could make “some easy and quick money”; that he, defendant, was not interested in purchasing cotton futures, but that the said Allen insisted and represented that the margin rates on cotton futures had been lowered subsequent to June 30, 1946, and were much lower than comparable margin rates for the purchase of stock; that Allen on October 15, 1946, told the defendant that he was going to purchase for defendant 100 bales of cotton which purchase he, the defendant, refused to authorize; that notwithstanding the absence of an authorization Allen, on October 15, 1946. advised defendant that he had purchased 100 bales for the account of defendant; that defendant protested but Allen insisted; that shortly afterward the price of cotton declined and such fact was made known to defendant.

“* * * and he thereupon authorized the said Jim Allen to purchase two additional contracts of cotton for defendant. Defendant, however, specifically instructed Allen to sell the three contracts of cotton so purchased on the day trade. In clarification, it is stated that ‘day trade’ in the parlance of stock brokers means that any stocks or commodities purchased on a given day shall be sold on the same day that such stocks or commodities were purchased. That Allen, in complete disregard of the instructions of defendant, as aforesaid, refused, for reasons unknown to this defendant, to sell the three contracts of cotton so purchased on the day trade basis, that is to say, that said Allen did not sell the three contracts of cotton before the close of the market on October 15, 1946.

“That on October 16, 1946, the said Allen again communicated with defendant, and advised defendant that the cotton market would soon stabilize itself, and that he would make additional purchases of cotton for defendant so that the losses sustained on the previous day could and would be recovered. That defendant advised Allen at that time that he did not desire to purchase any additional contracts of cotton, and, inasmuch as Allen had disregarded defendant’s specific instructions to dispose of the cotton purchased on October 15, 1946, on a day trade basis, that all cotton held by Allen to defendant’s account was held by Allen at Allen’s own risk and expense; and *659 further, that no additional purchases of cotton contracts were desired by defendant or authorized by defendant, and that defendant did not thereafter authorize Allen, or any other agent, servant, or employee to plaintiff, or plaintiff, to purchase any other contracts of cotton.”

Defendant’s claim that the purchases were unauthorized has been determined against him by an adverse jury verdict not attacked on appeal.

Art. 658 has no application to the case at bar because the above pleadings and undisputed evidence established that the “futures” were bought and sold on the floor of the New Orleans Cotton Exchange.

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Bluebook (online)
253 S.W.2d 647, 151 Tex. 655, 1952 Tex. LEXIS 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kahn-v-harris-upham-co-tex-1952.