Seeligson v. Lewis & Williams

65 Tex. 215, 1885 Tex. LEXIS 338
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1885
DocketCase No. 1811
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 65 Tex. 215 (Seeligson v. Lewis & Williams) 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
Seeligson v. Lewis & Williams, 65 Tex. 215, 1885 Tex. LEXIS 338 (Tex. 1885).

Opinion

Stayton, Associate Justice.

This action was instituted by the appellees to recover the amount of three promissory notes executed to them by the appellant.

The appellant answered by a general denial and by a sworn plea, which was as follows :

“And for farther answer to plaintiffs’ original and first supplemental petitions in the cause filed, this defendant says, that the three notes sued on herein by plaintiffs were not, nor was either of them, executed by the defendant for any consideration, good, valuable or sufficient in law. This defendant avers, that for some time prior to the giving of the notes, the plaintiffs were engaged in the business of brokers, in the city of 27ew Orleans, and as such, among other things, bought and sold what is generally and commonly known as cotton futures, or futures in cotton, with the understanding between [218]*218all the parties concerned that no cotton was actually to be received or delivered, but that the sale or purchase was to be completed and finished by the paying or receiving of the difference in the price at which the cotton was sold or purchased, and the price that cotton bore on the date fixed for delivery; that this defendant employed plaintiffs to buy and sell such cotton futures for him, with the distinct understanding and agreement between them that no cotton was to be received or delivered in pursuance of any such sale or purchase, but that the difference between the price at which the purchase or sale was made, and the price of cotton on the date fixed for delivery, was to be paid by the buyer or seller, as the rise or fall in the price of cotton might require; and plaintiffs did make purchases and sales of cotton futures for defendant under and in accordance with the employment, understanding and agreement; that the purchases and sales were mere gambling transactions, with no intention, understanding or expectation, on the part of either plaintiffs or defendant, or any other party to them, at the time they were made, or at any other time, that a real sale, purchase or delivery of the cotton was made or to be made.

That after these transactions between plaintiffs and defendant had been going on for some time, plaintiffs claimed that defendant owed them a balance for advances made by them under the employment in making the sales and purchases, and in paying margins, and plaintiffs’ commissions thereon, and for this balance so claimed by plaintiffs, and for no other consideration whatever, defendant executed three notes, and probably one or two other notes not sued on herein. This defendant never received any money, or other good or valuable consideration for the notes, or either of them, and there was no consideration for said notes, or either of them, except as above stated j and plaintiffs, as well as defendant, all the time well knew that the sales and purchases were gambling transactions, and that no cotton was t.o be received or delivered under them.

Wherefore defendant says the notes and each of them are illegal and void, and entitle plaintiffs to no recovery against defendant, and he prays hence to be dismissed with all his costs.”

To this answer impeaching the consideration of the notes, the plaintiffs filed a demurrer, which was sustained by the court, and judgment then went against the defendant for the sum shown by them to be due. The action of the court in sustaining the demurrer, which was general in form, but went only to the answer set out, is assigned as error, and this presents the only question in the case. If the matters set up in the answers are true, there can be no doubt that the [219]*219transactions which form the consideration for the notes sued upon transpired in the furtherance of wager contracts, in which the appellees actively participated. We have no statute in this state prohibiting such transactions as that set out in the answer, and the matter rests with us as at common law. That at common law actions might be sustained on wager contracts was not universally true, and distinguished judges have regretted that courts ever felt authorized to enforce them in any case.

In Monroe v. Smalley, 25 Tex., 587, it is said: “ It is true that by the common law an action could be maintained on a wager, although the parties had no previous interest in the question on which it was laid. But this proposition was always subject to qualifications. These qualifications were that an action could not be maintained on a wager if it was contrary to public policy, or immoral, or in any other respect tended to the detriment of the public, or if it affects the interests, feelings or character of a third person.”

After reviewing cases at some length, which illustrate the tendency of later decisions, the opinion proceeds to declare the result and rule which we believe to be sustained by authority, and in harmony with the present time, in the following language: “Theuniform tendency of the later decisions is to treat all gaming contracts and all wagers as utterly void. We feel ourselves authorized to conform our decisions to the public policy and to the sense of morality which the modern decisions and the modern legislation on the subject of gaming and wagers so clearly indicates. We find that the ancient rule of the common law was subject to certain exceptions, and in proportion, as the courts have considered these questions, these exceptions to the ancient rule have been adjudged to be more and more comprehensive in their embrace, until, as has been said, the exceptions to the rule have taken the place of the rule itself. We think that in the true spirit and meaning of the exceptions to the old rule, all idle wagers and all gaming contracts may be properly held to be void.” To the same effect is Conner v. Mackey, 20 Tex., 748.

The transactions stated in the answer were essentially gambling transactions with no facts to give them semblance of legitimate business, and all such dealings but tend to unsettle fair and legitimate trade and to make market values to depend, not on the supply and demand, but on the fictitious elevation or depression in prices, which in extent, in any given case, will depend on the amount of capital invested in the one direction or the other.

As was well said in Melchert v. Telegraph Co., 11 Fed. Rep., 195— “such a dealing amounts to a mere speculation upon the rise and [220]*220fall of prices. It requires no capital except the small sum to put up margins and pay differences. It promotes no legitimate trade. Any impecunious gambler can engage in it with infinite detriment to the bona fide dealer It enables mere adventurers, at small risk, to agitate the markets, stimulate and depress prices and bring down financial ruin upon the heads of the unwary. It enables the unscrupulous speculator, with little or no capital, to oppress and ruin the honest and legitimate trader. Corners and black Fridays and sudden ' fluctuations in values are its legitimate progeny.”

In the absence of any statute prohibiting such transactions, we believe the ruie thus stated by the supreme court of the United States to be that generally approved: “ The generally approved doctrine in this country is, as stated by Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
65 Tex. 215, 1885 Tex. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seeligson-v-lewis-williams-tex-1885.