149 F. 346 | 8th Cir. | 1906
T. A. Cleage, Jr., was adjudged a bankrupt upon the petitions of W. H. Laidiey, Thomas E. Price, and the W. C. Lamping Grain Company, upon the ground that, while insolvent and within four months before the filing of the petition against him, he paid to the C. >H. Albers Commission Company, one of his creditors, $3,000, and thereby preferred it. This adjudication is assailed because, as counsel for the defendant insists, he was a speculator in grain, and was not engaged in trading or in mercantile pursuits, because he was not indebted to any of these alleged creditors for the reason that their claims are founded upon transactions with him in the purchase and sale of grain wherein he never intended to deliver or to.receive the articles which he bought or sold, but meant to settle his contracts by the payment or the receipt of the differences between the contract prices and the market prices at the times of the performance of the contracts, and because he was not insolvent when he made the payments to the Albers Commission Company. The bankruptcy law of 1898 reads:
“Any natural person, except a wage-earner or a person engaged chiefly in farming or the tillage of the soil, any unincorporated company, and any corporation engaged principally in manufacturing, trading, printing, publishing, or mercantile pursuits, owing debts to the amount of one thousand dollars or over, may be adjudged an involuntary bankrupt upon default or an impartial trial, and shall be subject to the provisions and entitled to the benefits of this act. Private hankers, but not national banks or banks incorporated under state or territorial laws, may be adjudged involuntary bankrupts.” 30 Stat. c. 541, § 4b, p. 547, 3 U. S. Comp. St 1901, p. 3423, § 4b.
The creditors whose claims are challenged were brokers who bought and sold grain for future delivery for the defendant, Cleage, either on the Board of Trade of Chicago or upon the Merchants’ Exchange of St. Louis, and their claims are for amounts which they paid for the defendant in excess of the amounts which they received for him in the settlement or performance of contracts which they made or assumed on his behalf, and also for expenses, commissions, and interest. There is no doubt that the defendant owes these balances unless the transactions from which they sprang were illegal and Cleage’s contracts were void for the reason that he did not intend to receive the grain he purchased nor to deliver the grain he sold, but to settle his obligations by the payment of differences.
Before entering upon the discussion of this question under the evidence, we lay aside certain purchases and sales of puts and calls, privileges, or options to deliver or to take grain at specified prices which appear in some of the accounts, because the master and the court below eliminated these from the claims allowed and held that such purchases and sales were wagers. The claims of the petitioners and of the Albers Commission Company which were sustained are for balances of moneys expended by the brokers above the amounts they received in the settlement or performance of contracts for the purchase and sale of grain for future delivery, which the brokers had made for the defendant by his direction upon the Board of Trade or the Merchants’ Exchange. These contracts were not options, but by their terms complete agreements of both parties, of the one to buy and to take, and of the other to sell and to deliver, the commodity. The only option contained in them was that the seller had the right to' select the day in the future month in which the delivery was to be made when that should be done. The transactions of the defendant with these four brokers were, in all respects material to the question to be determined,' of the same character. Each of the brokers was a member either of the Chicago Board of Trade or of the Merchants’ Exchange of St. Louis, and was governed by its rules which were
The rules of the Board of Trade and of the St. Louis Exchange were such that, where one had bought and had also sold large quantities of grain upon the board or upon the exchange to be delivered in a certain future month, these purchases and sales might be set off against each other so that he would be required to pay the difference in the price of the grain thus set off and to deliver or receive only that portion of the grain which was not thus set off. This was accomplished in two ways, by the direct method and by ringing.off. In Board of Trade v. Christie Grain & Stock Co., 198 U. S. 236, 247, 25 Sup. Ct. 637, 49 L. Ed. 1031, Mr. Justice Holmes describes these methods in this way:
“The direct method consists simply in setting off contracts to buy wheat of a certain amount at a certain time against contracts to sell a like amount at the same time, and paying the difference of price in cash at the end of the business day. The ring settlement is reached by a comparison of books among the clerks of the members buying and selling in the pit, and picking out a series of transactions which begins and ends with dealings which can be set off against each other by eliminating those between — as, if A. has sold to B. 5.000 bushels of May wheat, and B. has sold the same amount to C., and C. to D. and D. to A. Substituting D. for B. by novation, A.’s sale can be set off against his purchase, on simply paying the difference in price.”
The only effect of the use of these methods is to avoid the useless expense and trouble of the physical delivery of the grain, and still to preserve the legal rights and remedies of the parties. If A. has sold to B. 5,000 bushels of grain at 75 cents per bushel to be delivered on a certain day, and B. has sold to A. the same quantity at 74 cents per bushel tó be delivered on the same day, it is evident that the legal, financial, and actual result is the same whether A. delivers the grain to B., B. pays 75 cents per bushel for it to A. and delivers it back to A., who pays to B. 74 cents per bushel for it, or they set off the two contracts and B. pays to A. the difference in price or 1 cent per bushel. In either event, the grain ultimately remains in A.’s posses
The defendant was operating through his brokers under these rules, and was trying to run a corner. He bought through his brokers during the years 1902 and 1903 immense quantities of grain for future delivery amounting to about 14,000,000 bushels, and he sold nearly as much as he bought, so that more than 98 per cent, of his contracts were settled by set-offs and by ringing off without any actual delivery of grain. All the transactions which the defendant had with Laidley were disposed of in this way, and there remained a balance of $3,650 due from him to Laidley on account of the payments the latter had made of differences upon contracts thus set off, commissions, expenses, etc., for which he gave to Laidley his promissory note. Through the Lamping Grain Company he bought about 3,000,000 bushels of grain for future delivery. Most of this grain was sold or other grain was sold to offset it, but 50,000 bushels of wheat were delivered to the Lamping Company under the defendant’s contracts in July, 1903, for which that company was compelled to pay the contract price, and in July, 1903, there was due to it on account of these transactions $3,922.97. He was also indebted in July, 1903, to the petitioner, Thomas E. Price, in the sum of $18,235.85 on account of similar transactions. In October, 1903, he owed C. H. Albers Commission Company upon a like account a debt of several thousand dollars, and he paid thereon $2,000 in October and $1,000 in December.
Under the rules of the board and of the exchange, when one fails upon the delivery day to take and pay for the grain which he has •purchased under a contract which has not been settled by set-off or by ringing off, all his trades are closed up and thrown upon the market. Cleage had no elevator or warehouse, and he testified .that he did not intend to receive any of the grain he bought, but intended to settle on differences. On cross-examination he said:
•‘I expected to have to take some of this com or wheat, as the case might ■be, but I would only take that amount that was forced on me in order to keep my trades from being thrown over, as I knew very well that if I failed to take cash wheat or com that they delivered to me that my contracts would ¿11 be closed up and thrown on the market.”
Under the common law and under the statutes of Illinois a contract for the sale for future delivery of grain or other commodities, the parties to which intend that the goods shall not be delivered, and that the obligation of the contract shall be discharged by the payment
In other words, contracts for future delivery made with the intention of settling them by paying to the other parties to the contracts the difference between the contract prices and the market prices at the times of delivery are wagers and are void. But contracts for future delivery made with the intention of settling them by set-off or by ringing off and by the payment of differences in accordance with the rules and practice of the Board of Trade are valid and enforceable agreements under this decision.
Nor does the fact that the defendant dealt in 14,000,000 bushels of grain, and that the contracts for more than 9.8 per cent, of this property were settled by set-off or by ringing off and by the payment of differences, demonstrate an illegal intention. Since the intention to settle in this way is not unlawful, the fact that contracts were so settled cannot evidence an illegal purpose. “In the view which we take,” says the Supreme Court, “the proportion of the dealings in the pit which are settled in this way throws no light on the question of the proportion of serious dealings for legitimate business purposes to those which fairly can be classed as wagers or pretended contracts. No more does the fact that the contracts thus disposed of call for many times the total receipts of grain in Chicago. The fact that they can be and are set off sufficiently explains the possibility, which is no more wonderful than the enormous disproportion between the currency of the country and contracts for the payment of money, many of which in like manner are set off in clearing houses without any one dreaming' that they are not paid, and for the rest of which the same money suffices in succession; the less being needed the more rapid the circulation is.” Board of Trade v. Christie Grain & Stock Co., 198 U. S. 236, 250, 25 Sup. Ct. 637, 49 L. Ed. 1031.
It is the public policy of the United States to suppress wagers, but it is also its policy to enforce the obligations of valid contracts, and one who would avoid his agreements and escape his obligations by his own wrong should be required to establish it by clear and convincing proof. Contracts for the future delivery of grain and other personal property are lawful and valid. The legal presumption is that the parties who make them intend to perform them, and the burden is on him who avers that the illegal intention of one or more of these .parties has made them void to establish his allegation by plenary proof. Clews v. Jamieson, 182 U. S. 461, 489, 21 Sup. Ct. 845, 45 L. Ed. 1183; Pixley v. Boynton, 79 Ill. 351. An intention by one or both.of the parties to sell such an agreement, or their rights
In reaching this conclusion the claim of counsel for the. defendant that there was no competent evidence of insolvency has not been overlooked. It is true that there was no evidence of the amount of the assets of the defendant at the times when the payments were made to the Albers Commission Company in October and November, 1903. But it is also true that the defendant admitted in July of that year that he was “broke,” and that he hadho property except the furniture in his offices, which was not worth more than $50. There was uhcontradicted evidence that he owed the petitioners more than $35,000, and that
The findings of the master and of the court are sustained by the evidence, the facts warrant the adjudication, and tire decree below is affirmed.