Taylor v. Starr

1924 OK 649, 234 P. 756, 109 Okla. 135, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 757
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 24, 1924
Docket13263
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1924 OK 649 (Taylor v. Starr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Starr, 1924 OK 649, 234 P. 756, 109 Okla. 135, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 757 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

FOSTER, C.

This action was commenced in the district count of Oklahoma county, Okla., by Wm. B. Starr and Charles Little, defendants in error, plaintiffs below, against Joe Taylor and John Sparks, plaintiffs in error, defendants below, to recover the sum of $1,251.27, alleged to be due them on a verified account. The parties will hereinafter he referred ‘toi as they appeared in ithe trial court. ;

I-t was ‘the claim of the plaintiffs that said balance wias due them from tbe defendants on account of certain losses which they bad sustained in certain transactions conducted upon the New Orleans Cotton Exchange and the Chicago Board of Trade, wherein they represented the defendants as brokers in the purchase and sale of commodities handled on said exchanges.

It was claimed hy the plaintiffs that they were members in good standing of the.New Orleans Cotton Exchange, -and that on the 31st day of January, 1919, held for the use and benefit of -the defendants the sum of $1,-257.90 representing a balance due the defendants on certain transactions conducted by them for the defendants on the New Orleans Cotton Exchange, and that on said date, at the request of the defendants, this sum was transferred from New Orleans to Chicago to form ithe basis of certain transactions which, -they were toi conduct for the defendants on the Chicago Board of Trade through Clement-Curtis Company, brokers and members of the -Chicago Board of Trade. That under this arrangement acting through the Clement-Curtis Company, they sold on -the 31st day of Jan-ary, 1919, 10,000 bushels of May com for $1,193.10 which wias filled on February 5, 1919, by tbe purchase of 10,000 bushels of May corn at $1.16 per bushel, netting a profit to the defendants of $320.10; that on February 10, 1919, they sold 250 barrels of May pork at $38.75 per barrel, and again on February 14th, a like quantity a,t $40.12 per barrel; that on the 5th day of March, 1919, to protect tthe defendants as far as possible from loss, occasioned by tbe advance in tbe price of pork, on their previous pork transactions, they purchased 250 ban-els of July pork at $38.20 per barrel, and again on March 7th, 250 barrels of July pork at $39.05 ppi barrel, which they sold on March 8, 1919, at a profit of $496, all of *136 which was done at the special instance and request of the defendants. That on Marchs 33, 3939, the defendants having refused to put up the margins made necessary by the advance in the price of May pork, they purchased 500 barrels of May pork at $46.00 per barrel to fill the contract for Mayt deliveries made on February 10th and February 14th, respectively, whereby they sustained a loss on the pork transaction, including commissions, of $3,325.25, on Which the defendants were entitled to a credit of $2,074. representing the balance due them on the New Orleans transaction, plus the profits on the May com and the July pork, leaving a balance of $1,251.27, all as set forth in an itemized statement of account duly verified and attached to their petition.

The defendants answered: (1) By general denial; and (2) pleaded a counterclaim against the plaintiffs for the aggregate and admitted amounts shown by the verified account as being transferred from New Orleans in the sum of $1,257.90, and the sum of $315.-10, as being realized on the com deal, or a total of $1,573, and repudiated, the pork transactions, alleging that they had had no pork transactions with the plaintiffs whatever.

On the issues thus presented, the cause proceeded to trial before the court and a jury, which resulted in a verdict arid judgment in favor of the plaintiffs in the sum of $1,251.27 with interest thereon from March, 1919, 'at the rate of six per cent, per; annum until the date of judgment.

Motion for a new trial was filed and overruled, and the defendants bring the. cause regularly on appeal to this court on petition in error and ease-made.

At the commencement of the trial, the following .stipulation was admitted in evidence:

"It is stipulated and agreed, for the purpose of the trial in the above cause that Clement, Curtis & Co, were in the year 1919, and at the time hereinafter mentioned, brokers in the city of Chicago, Ill., operating on the Board of Trade of Chicago, accepting and executing orders for the purchase and orders for the sale of products including com, pork, oats, etc.
“That on February 10, 1919, said Clement, Curtis & Co., on telegraphic orders signed 'Starr,' sold 250 barrels May pork, at $38.75 per barrel; that on February 14, 1919, said Clement, Curtis & Co., on like order, sold 250 barrels May pork at $40.12 per barrel, and on March 5, 1919, said Clement, Curtis & Co., on like order from Starr to buy, bought 500 barrels July pork at $38.20 per barrel; that on March 7, 1919, said Clement, Curtis & Co., on like order to buy, bought 250 barrels July pork at $39.05 per barrel; that on March 8, 1919, said Clement, Curtis & Co., on like order to sell, sold 250 barrels July pork at $39.75 per barrel, and 500 barrels July pork at $39.60 per barrel; and on March 13, 1919, said Clement, Curtis & Co., ion like order to buy bought 1,500 barrels May pork, at $46.00 per barrel, 500 barrels thereof, to be delivered to the purchasers under the said sales contracts of February 10, and February 14, 1919, respectively; that on January 31, 1919, said Clement, Curtis & Co., on like order to sell, sold ten May corn at $1.19-3, and on February 5, 1919, bought the same at $1.16.”

The first proposition relied upon by the defendants for a reversal of the case is that the verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence, and that the trial court erred in not sustaining their demurrer to the evidence of the plaintiffs interposed at the conclusion of plaintiffs’ ease, and in not sustaining a motion for a directed verdict interposed at the conclusion of all the evidence. A careful review of the evidence convinces us that this proposition is without merit. While the defendants strenuously deny .that they had ever had any transactions whatever with the plaintiffs relating to pork in Chicago or elsewhere, this testimony was disputed by the plaintiff Starr, who testified to hearing a conversation over the telephone between one of the defendants and Mr. Crawford, the office manager of the plaintiffs, on March 6, 1919, and subsequent to the time when it is claimed the pork transactions on the 10th and 14th of February took place, in which the defendant Taylor authorized Crawford to buy some July pork in order to hedge against prospective losses on the May pork, and to draw a draft on him for $750 to cover margins called for by the Chicago office on account of the advance in the price of May pork over the price at which it was sold in the transactions had in February.

This testimony is substantially corroborated by the witness Crawford himself, who testified that he purchased, upon request of the defendants, July pork to 'hedge against the danger of loss on the February contracts, which he sold the next day for a small profit.

There was other evidence introduced by the plaintiffs tending to show that several conversations had occurred between defendant Taylor and one E. D. Roach after the alleged pork deals in February had been consummated, in which the defendant sought from the plaintiff information regarding the pork market and the pork situation generally.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 649, 234 P. 756, 109 Okla. 135, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 757, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-starr-okla-1924.