Van Dusen-Harrington Co. v. Jungeblut

77 N.W. 970, 75 Minn. 298, 1899 Minn. LEXIS 471
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 20, 1899
DocketNos. 11,879—(231)
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 77 N.W. 970 (Van Dusen-Harrington Co. v. Jungeblut) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Dusen-Harrington Co. v. Jungeblut, 77 N.W. 970, 75 Minn. 298, 1899 Minn. LEXIS 471 (Mich. 1899).

Opinion

CANTY, J.

The plaintiff corporation is a member of the Chamber of Commerce of Minneapolis. On January 11,1897, plaintiff received from defendant the following letter:

“You will please purchase for me 5,000 bushels No. 1 May wheat at 78 cents, and advise. Yours truly, N. Jungeblut.”

[301]*301Plaintiff executed the order the next day on the open board of the chamber, notified defendant at his place of business in St. Paul to that effect, and requested him to send check for $250. He sent the check the same day, — January 12, — stating:

“Enclosed $250, option on 5,000 bushels May wheat.”

On January 28 defendant wrote plaintiff as follows:

“I note from today’s market report that my margins on the purchase of 5,000 bushels May wheat are exhausted, and herewith enclose check for $150 additional margins.”

May wheat continued to fall until April 7, when it had fallen to 64§ cents, and plaintiff called on defendant for $400 more margins, which he refused to put up, and on the next day plaintiff closed out the deal for the 5,000 bushels at 65£ cents per bushel, leaving a loss or deficiency below the amount of margins so put up by him of $243.75 and $6.25 commissions, or a total of $250. This action is brought to recover this amount.

Defendant did not plead that it was a gambling transaction, and, as he did not set up any such illegality in his answer, was not able to make the defense on the triai. Dodge v. McMahan, 61 Minn. 175, 63 N. W. 487.

At the close of the trial each party moved that the court direct a verdict in his favor. The judge granted the motion of plaintiff, and ordered a verdict for it for $250. Defendant thereafter moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, or for a new trial. The court ordered judgment that plaintiff take • nothing, and that defendant recover his costs and disbursements. From this order plaintiff appeals.

1. It is contended by respondent that he never requested or authorized plaintiff to pay out the money for him, and that it should have closed out the transaction as soon as the margins put up by him had run out. The monthly statement sent him by plaintiff January 30 contains the following notice:

“On all marginal business the right is reserved to close transactions when margins are running out, without giving further notice, and to settle contracts in accordance with the rules and customs of the Minneapolis Chamber of Commerce.’?

[302]*302Similar notices were sent in the monthly statements of March and April. It appears by the evidence that, according to such rules and customs, this closing out was done by going upon the open board of the chamber, and selling to the highest bidder the interest of the purchaser (or seller, as the case might be) in the particular deal. - •

Respondent claims that under' the above notice plaintiff was bound to act on this rule, and close out the deal when his margins were exhausted. We cannot so hold. The notice merely reserved to plaintiff the right to close it out. We are of the opinion that by the course of dealing between the parties it conclusively appears that plaintiff had implied authority to advance money for defendant in order to keep up and continue the transaction on his part until the time came to settle it in the month of May, unless orders to the contrary were given in the meantime.

No money accompanied his order sent January 11 to purchase the wheat. Plaintiff made the purchase, informed him of that fact, and requested him to send his check, which he did. When he found, on January 28, by the market report, that his margins had been exhausted, he did not inquire of plaintiff whether it had closed out or sold out the deal, but assumed that plaintiff had not, and sent it an additional $150. As we shall hereinafter show, it must be presumed that defendant knew the course of dealing on the Chamber of Commerce.

It was conceded by defendant on the argument that plaintiff wrs personally responsible for all loss on this deal to the full extent of the fall in the market, and that, if it did not have on hand a sufficient deposit of defendant's money to cover the loss, it would have to pay the balance of such loss out of its own funds. It is plain that when defendant sent in the order on January 11 he expected plaintiff to make the deal, and thereby incur liability for loss, without first receiving any deposit at all from him, and it did so make it.

Again, after he had put up such a deposit, if, after his margin ran low, the market fell suddenly to a point where the loss would exceed the amount of the deposit, plaintiff might not have an opportunity to go upon the open board of the chamber, and sell out the deal after the amount of such deposit was exhausted, and be[303]*303fore the market dropped below, the point at which, the deposit was exhausted, and thereby prevent loss to itself. Defendant knew all of this. On January 28 he promptly and voluntarily put up additional margins without being asked for them, when he found by the market reports that his margins were exhausted, and yet until April 7, when plaintiff demanded still more margin after the loss here in question had occurred, he failed to notify plaintiff that he would not pay anything more for carrying the deal.

2. Respondent contends that he employed plaintiff to act as his agent in purchasing wheat for him from some third party, and to carry and continue the contract in that form; that it appears by the evidence that a wholly different contract was made, whereby plaintiff was to become and did become the opposite party to a contract with him to sell him wheat for future delivery; that, while plaintiff was acting as his agent to buy, it attempted to become the opposite party to the contract, and sell to him wheat through itself as such agent. The contract made was of this peculiar kind, and respondent contends that it was so made without his knowledge or consent. We cannot so hold.

The Chamber of Commerce is a corporation. Its members meet daily in a certain room at a certain hour, and buy and sell large quantities of grain for both present and future delivery. No 6ne but members are allowed these privileges. While in the great bulk of the transactions the members act as brokers or agents for others, the rules require them to buy and sell in their own names, without ■disclosing their principals; and this is the uniform custom. The contracts of purchase and sale are oral, and each member makes at the time a memorandum of the transaction on a card, and retains it for his own convenience. At the close of each day’s transactions, it is usually found that each member has bought from and sold to various other members for future delivery, and a universal system of set-off is then resorted to.

There is another corporation, known as the Clearing Association, which acts as a universal go-between, or clearing house, for these transactions. At the close of each day’s business, all of these transactions are reported to the Clearing Association, which then becomes the opposite party to the transactions of each member for [304]*304the purpose of offsetting the same. When the member is the buyer, the Clearing Association becomes the seller, and, when the member is the seller, the Clearing Association becomes the buyer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 N.W. 970, 75 Minn. 298, 1899 Minn. LEXIS 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-dusen-harrington-co-v-jungeblut-minn-1899.