Zeller v. . Leiter

82 N.E. 158, 189 N.Y. 361, 27 Bedell 361, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 948
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 29, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 82 N.E. 158 (Zeller v. . Leiter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zeller v. . Leiter, 82 N.E. 158, 189 N.Y. 361, 27 Bedell 361, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 948 (N.Y. 1907).

Opinion

Willard Bartlett, J,

This is an action on a promissory note made at Chicago on December 15, 1898, whereby the defendant promised to. pay to the order of Allen, Crier and Zeller Company in that city three years after date the sum of $52,021.97, with interest at the rate of three per cent per annum.

The defense was that the plaintiff, being the liquidating trustee of Allen, Crier and Zeller Company, an Illinois cor *363 poration, and formerly its treasurer, had acquired the note with full cognizance of the fact that it was given for a balance arising out of wagering contracts for the purchase of wheat and other grain, and consequently that it was void under the law of Illinois, where the said note was given and was payable.

After the defendant had introduced evidence in support of this affirmative defense, and had sought to give other evidence which was excluded upon objection and over his exception, the trial court directed a verdict against him for the full amount of the note with interest. The judgment entered upon this verdict has been unanimously affirmed by the Appellate Division.

The Illinois statutes upon which the defense is based read as follows :

“ Section 130. Gambling in Grain. Whoever contracts to have or give to himself or another the option to sell or buy, at a future time, any grain, or other commodity * * * or corners the market, or attempts to do so in relation to any of such commodities, shall be fined not less than $10 nor more than $1,000, or confined in the county jail not exceeding one year, or both, and all contracts made in violation of this section shall be considered gambling contracts, and shall be void.”

Section 131. Gaming contracts. All promises, notes, bills, bonds, covenants, contracts, agreements, judgments, mortgages, or other securities, or conveyances made, given, granted, drawn or entered into or executed by any person whatsoever where the whole or any part of the consideration thereof shall be for any money, property or other valuable thing won by any gaming * * * shall be void and of no effect.”

Section 136. Ho assignment of any bill, note, bond, covenant, agreement, judgment, mortgage or other security or conveyance as aforesaid shall in any manner affect the defense of the person giving, granting, drawing, entering into or executing the same, or the remedies of any person inter *364 ested therein.” (Criminal Code of Illinois, chap. 38; Hurd’s Rev Stat. of Illinois, 1905, pp. 698, 699, Y00.)

It was conceded by counsel for the plaintiff upon the trial that if a defense under these statutes Avas good against the payee of a note it was good against the indorsee.

The defendant endeavored to establish a defense thereunder against the payee by testifying that it Avas not his intention at the time of making any of the contracts which formed the basis of the note in suit to call for wheat or deliver wheat, but that he intended simply to settle Avith Allen, Crier and Zeller Company on differences. His counsel realizing that the defendant’s intention, alone and of itself, was not enough to bring the contracts within the prohibition of the law, but that such intention must be shared by the other party as Avell, tried to prove the existence of a like intention on the part of Allen, Crier and Zeller Company, by asking the defendant whether he had any conversation Avith any member of that concern which would tend to sIioav what their intention was. This question was objected to as leading, and if the ruling of the learned trial judge in sustaining the objection had been limited to the form of the interrogation, counsel for the defendant would doubtless have changed it. But the court went further than counsel for the plaintiff, and declared that the question was incompetent, saying, The court also excludes it as incompetent; ” thus giving counsel for the defendant to understand, in the plainest and most unmistakable manner, that the court would not permit the defendant to prove by means of conversations betAA’ecn him and the payees of the note that they shared his intention merely to speculate in differences in the market value of grain, without contemplating any actual delivery or receipt thereof.

I think that the defendant’s exception to this ruling presents error which requires the reversal of this judgment. If I understand the position of the learned Appellate Division on this question, it is that the ruling was correct under the authority of Scanlon v. Warren (169 Ill. 142). That case, however, so far as it has any possible application here, only *365 decided that the undisclosed intention of one party to a grain contract to violate the law, or make a contract which could not be enforced, did not affect the right of the other party to recover money advanced upon an agreement which by its terms was legally valid. The court says: It was not claimed that his intention in this respect was communicated to the plaintiffs or that they had any conversation with him on that subject.” Here, on the contrary, the manifest effort of defendant’s counsel, in which he was thwarted by the ruling of the trial judge, was to prove a conversation with the payees of the note in suit which would show that they shared the plaintiff’s intention as to what was to be the character of the contract between them. “I am asking for a conversation between him and the plaintiffs,” said counsel for the defendant ; to which the court responded, I understand that fully.”

The learned counsel for the respondent seeks to uphold the ruling which I have discussed on the ground that the question which the court would not allow to be put to the witness related only to put and call transactions as distinguished from contracts for the future delivery of grain ; and he argues that inasmuch as puts and calls are illegal under the law of Illinois, irrespective of the intention of the parties, the exclusion of the evidence which the question called for was harmless.

The following extract from the record will show precisely what the counsel for the defendant sought to obtain from the witness:

Q. I ask you now, was it your intention at the time these contracts or any one of them was made, to call for wheat on call contracts or to tender the wheat on the put contract, or merely to settle upon differences ? A. Ho.

Q. It was not your intention ? . A. Simply to settle on differences.

“ Q. Did you have any conversation with any member of the firm of the Allen, Grier & Zeller Company which would tend to show what their intention was ?

“ Hr. Goldbeck: I object to this question as leading.

“The Court: Objection sustained. I think you might *366 add incompetent, but the court excludes it also as incompetent. He cannot give his opinion as to that.

“ Mr. Baldwin : I am asking now for a conversation between himself and the plaintiffs.

“ The Court: I understand that fully.

Exception.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Liss v. Manuel
58 Misc. 2d 614 (Civil Court of the City of New York, 1968)
Cody v. . Hovey
14 S.E.2d 30 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1941)
Horbach v. Coyle
2 F.2d 702 (Eighth Circuit, 1924)
Cohen v. Rothschild
182 A.D. 408 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1918)
Equitable Trust Co. v. Newman
69 Misc. 494 (City of New York Municipal Court, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 N.E. 158, 189 N.Y. 361, 27 Bedell 361, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zeller-v-leiter-ny-1907.