Zeltner v. Irwin

25 A.D. 228, 49 N.Y.S. 337
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 15, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 25 A.D. 228 (Zeltner v. Irwin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zeltner v. Irwin, 25 A.D. 228, 49 N.Y.S. 337 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Rumsey, J.:

The action was brought by the assignee of Annie W. Smith and Annie W. W. Smith to recover from the defendant sums of money which the two assignors had sent to the defendant to be used in the purchase of futures in grain in the Chicago market. The claim of the plaintiff is that the money was to be used ostensibly in the purchase and sale of grain in that market for future delivery, but that it was understood between the two assignors and the defendant that no actual delivery of grain should be received or made, but that the entire transactions had with the money should be mere wagers or bets, dependent upon the rise and fall of the prices of grain in the market, which prices fluctuated from day to day, and were unknown and contingent.events.

It was claimed by the plaintiff that these contracts were unlawful under the statute of this State enacting that all wagers,'bets or stakes made- to depend upon any chance, casualty or unknown or contingent event whatever should be unlawful, and providing that such contracts should be void ; and he sought to recover under the authority of that provision of the statute which authorized any person who should deliver or deposit- money upon any such contract to recover it back. (1 R. S. 662, §§ 8, 9.) The defendant admitted that, when the money was delivered to him, it was understood between himself and the assignors of the plaintiff that no actual delivery of the grain should he received or made, but that all the transactions had with the money should be mere wagering contracts upon the rise and fall of prices of grain in the market, which said prices fluctuated from day to day and were unknown and contingent events. But while-admitting these facts, the defendant insisted that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, because he claimed that, although the contract, as it was admitted to be, was void by the laws of the State of New York, yet that it was not made in the State of New York, but was made in the State of Pennsylvania, and that there was nothing to show either that such a contract was illegal in the State of Pennsylvania ; or, if it wás illegal, that the plaintiff’s assignors being in jyari delioto with the defendant could not recover the money which they had willingly invested in a contract of that kind. There is no doubt that wagering contracts as such were not invalid at common law unless, in addition to being wagering contracts, they contravened [230]*230some recognized rule of public policy. The wagering element merely was not sufficient to make the contract invalid ór to authorize a person who had invested money upon it to recover that money-from the person to whom he had paid it. (Chitty Cont. [11th Am. ed.] 135; Bunn v. Riker, 4 Johns. 426.) The right to recover of the plaintiff, then,.must stand upon the statute.'of the State of New York. But that statute has-no extraterritorial force and it cannot operate to make unlawful any contract which was valid in the jurisdiction where it was made. If the plaintiff’s assignors entered into-, this contract in the State of Pennsylvania, they were bound by it if it was a valid contract there. (Story Confl. Laws, § 282; Jewell v. Wright, 30 N. Y. 259.) There is no-proof in the case and no allegation in the complaint that in Pennsylvania such contracts were invalid, or that by the laws of that State money paid upon them could be recovered back. Such invalidity and the right to recover only comes to exist by the statute, and there is no- presumption that the statute of Pennsylvania in that respect is like -the statute of the State of New York (Cutter v. Wright, 22 N. Y. 472); but, on the contrary, in the absence of proof on the subject, the presumption is that the law which obtains there is the common law. (Greenl. Ev. [14th ed.] § 43, n.; Harris v. White, 81 N. Y. 532.) By that law this contract was not illegal. Therefore, it is material to consider whether the plaintiff’s contention that the contract-was made in the State of New York is well founded, because, if it. is not, he has failed to' establish a right to recover. No evidence-was offered on the part of the defendant. The ease' stands solely upon the testimony which the plaintiff produced. At the close of the plaintiff’s case each party moved for the direction of a verdict, and, after consideration, a verdict was directed for the plaintiff, to which the defendant excepted. That exception fairly raises the question which the defendant seeks to present. • There was no disputed question of. fact in the case, and the only question is whether, giving to the evidence of-the plaintiff all the weight to which it can fairly be entitled, it can be said that the court was right in: concluding that the contract was made in the State of New York, and is governed by the laws of that State.

It was made to appear that the defendant lived and had his place of business in Pittsburgh, in the State of Pennsylvania. The evi[231]*231dence of the, plaintiff was to the effect that, at a certain time in 1893, one of his assignors received through the mail a printed circular, postmarked “Pittsburgh,” at the bottom of which was printed the name of the defendant, and upon which was given the address, 10 Ferguson Block, Pittsburgh, Penn. That paper had been destroyed by the witness before the trial of the action, but she "gave her version of the contents of it, which were, as stated by her, to the effect “ that people down in Wall Street were content to put in large sums of money and get large gains, whereas the people of smaller means would put in smaller sums; that they could add up all together, and then they would be content with smaller accounts,, while rich people would not be content with smaller amounts. That poor people would be content with ten dollars gain, while rich people would not be. bothered looking at that, and that he would put the whole lot together in the markets in Chicago, where he had facilities of knowing all about it, and that he rarely ever failed in his judgment on the market.” The witness further stated that there was a little printed circular containing statements of profits: “ One month, $10; another month, $10'; sometimes $12 or $15 ; one month, $20, and each month you got a whole lot of money. If you spent $100 each month, yon got $10 extra, and if you put that $10 back you would get more, and in a short time you would get quite wealthy.” This is the substance of the circular as given by the witness. She stated that after she had received that circular she sent a letter to Irwin from New York to the address which- was given in the circular. The contents of that letter are given. She says that she sent a check and a note at the same time, stating that “ so many dollars were from Mamma, and so many from myself,, and when he sent the receipts would he credit my mother with so-much money, and me with so much money, and send each a sepa_ rate receipt, s.o as not to get things mixed 1 ” The letter contained no-reference to the circular, and no suggestion that it was sent in pursuance of any proposition or offer or request contained therein. It is conceded that the defendant, in answer to the letter, returned a receipt containing substantially a contract to use the. money in the-purchase and sale of future contracts in grain for the account and risk of the person sending the money in accordance with the rules of the Chicago board of trade, the receipt containing pro[232]*232visions as to the commissions to be paid to the defendant and as to the. payment of the profits and the liability for losses, and that neither party should incur any liability for. any sum beyond the amount invested..

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Bluebook (online)
25 A.D. 228, 49 N.Y.S. 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zeltner-v-irwin-nyappdiv-1898.