77 Ga. 606 | Ga. | 1886
The suit is brought by Brown against Clarke, Harrison & Co. for the recovery of some seven hundred dollars deposited with them to fill margins in the purchase of contracts in pork and grain for future delivery. The jury
The point made is, whether money deposited by a principal to agents to purchase futures can be recovered by the principal from the agents, the same not being the fruits of the gambling transaction, as denominated by this court— not profits made by the agents for the principal over and above the sum deposited with them, but an amount of money within the sum total originally entrusted to the agents. It is immaterial whether it is the identical money so deposited, or deposited in bank with other deposits of the agents therein, and used by them and replaced by other funds, or used for filling margins for futures and afterwards replaced by the agents to the credit of the principal; the question is, whose money is it, the agents’ or the principal’s ?
If it had been won as profits on the venture, it could not have been recovered back from agents, who got it for the principal with the use of the principal’s money on the illegal venture, because that would be money recovered on a chance venture, and considered by this court as equivalent to a gaming venture. But when it is not at all the profits made on futures; when no profits at all were realized, but when the entire venture was over, this money was held by the agents, if, on the final accounting, it remained unspent for their principal, it was his money, won from nobody, but entrusted to his agents, for an illegal purpose it is true, yet left in the hands of the agents, after the game is over, as the sum or part of the sum he first entrusted to them. It is true that upon wagering contracts there can be no recovery. Code, §2750. But this is not a suit upon a wagering contract. It is a suit for money in the hands of agents by the principal, furnished him to buy and sell grain for him, and it is alleged that this money now sued for is the money so furnished. There is nothing illegal in the contract set up in the declaration. It is the defence
It does seem that these principles decide this case. The plaintiff need not invoke the contract at all to help him. It is wholly immaterial for what purpose the agents got it. That they got it to be used for him is enough; that they got and hold his money is enough, without any agreement
Nor is there anything in 45 Ga. 501; 59 Id. 25, or 68 Id. 299, or the more recent decisions that question the cases in the 45th and 59th Georgia Reports which militates against, and collides with, the ruling in favor of the recovery here.
The code, in sections 2191, 2638 and 2570, does not collide with this ruling. The first is that “ no rights can arise to either party out of an agency created for an illegal purpose.” The right to recover this money does not arise out of this illegal contract. The second, 2638, is in substance that a contract for futures, no skill or labor entering into the contract, is a pure speculation upon chances, contrary to the policy of the law and cannot be enforced by either party. This is not an effort to enforce a contract for futures,
We think that the facts of the case .require the verdict, from our standpoint in applying law to them; and as this is the only point argued and pressed before us, we affirm the judgment.