149 Pa. 163 | Pa. | 1892
Opinion by
A purchase of stock for speculation, even when done merely on margin, is not necessarily a gambling transaction. If one buys stock from A, and borrows the money from B to pay for it, there is no element of gambling in the operation, though he pledge the stock with B as security for the money. So if instead of borrowing the money from B, a third person, he borrows it from A, or in the language of brokers, procures A to “ carry ” the stock for him, with or without margin, the transaction is not necessarily different in character. But in this latter case, there being no transfer or delivery of the stock, the doubt arises whether the parties intended there should ever be a purchase or delivery at all. Here is the dividing line. If there was not under any circumstances to be a delivery, as part of and conqjleting a purchase, then the transaction was a mere wager on the rise and fall of prices, but if there was in good faith a purchase, then the delivery might be postponed, or made to depend on a future condition, and the stock carried on margin or otherwise in the meanwhile, without affecting the legality of the operation. Peters testified that he bought and sold the stock, that it was kept protected by him, that is he paid up
But this question is not really material in the present case. Whatever the character of the transactions they were closed and done. When the last sale was made by Peters’ order a profit was made, an account rendered, and the entire profit paid over, leaving in defendant’s hands only the amount of the original deposit, which was recognized by both parties as plaintiff’s money, held as such by defendant subject to plaintiff’s order, on the expectation to be sure that it would be used again in similar transactions, but with no authority in defendant, or anybody else, to use it in that or any other way, without plaintiff’s direction. Peters was asked on cross-examination : “ When the stock was sold you left the five hundred dollars with him to be invested again in the same sort of transaction ? A. Yes, provided I felt like investing—it was in his hands subject to my call. Q. That is you could either authorize it to be invested or call the money back? A. Yes.” In the business view of the witness this was a new start, and the legal view is the same. If when the first deposit was made by plaintiff with directions to buy the stock, he had countermanded the directions before anything was done under them, it could not be pretended that defendant could have retained the money on the ground of illegality in the contemplated transaction. Intent as to a future act does not make illegality. There is always a locus penitentise, and just as much in regard to a second act, as to a first, if the second is distinct and separate. Even therefore if it be conceded that the transactions of plaintiff and defendant were gambling they were over 'and settled, the money that was in defendant’s hands was there not as profits, but as a new. deposit of plaintiff’s money in contemplation of new transactions as to which plaintiff changed his mind, as he was entitled to do, and which therefore never took place. The
No precise precedent has been found for the present state of facts, but the principles upon which it is to be determined are perfectly plain, and are moreover in entire accord with the law heretofore declared in Swan v. Scott, 11 S. & R. 155; Lestapies v. Ingraham, 5 Pa. 71, and Fox v. Cash, 11 Pa. 207. The distinction which later cases have so fully developed between the application of the maxim nemo allegans lurpitudinem suam audiendus est, to cases of private fraud between the parties, and cases of acts made illegal by statute or by public policy (see Bredin’s Ap., 92 Pa. 241) does not affect the present controversy. In dealing with stock transactions falling within or in any way connected with wagering contracts the law of Pennsylvania is of exceptional, and for myself I would say, of illogical and untenable severity in its interference with the business contracts of parties sui juris, and entirely competent to manage their own affairs. But even in this class of cases the decisions have only gone so far as to sustain the opening of the whole transaction after it has nominally closed where the demand is for a part of the actual gains or losses of the illegal acts. See Brua’s Ap., 55 Pa. 294; North v. Phillips, 89 Pa. 250; Dickson v. Thomas, 97 Pa. 278; Griffiths v. Sears, 112 Pa. 528. Even Fareira v. Gabell, 89 Pa. 89, and Ruchizky v. De Haven, 97 Pa. 202, two extreme cases of which it is justly said by Mr. Biddle in his Law of Stock Brokers, p. 808, that they are “ opposed in principle to all the decisions, both of the English courts, and of every court of every state in the Union,” were decided upon the ground that the cause of action was loss in the illegal transactions. Gains in the same transactions would undoubtedly stand upon the same footing, but it must be said to the honor of a class of business men often harshly criticized, that cases of refusal by a broker to pay over profits to his customer, are of the rarest occurrence.
As already said, there must be a time when the transactions are closed and their illegal character no longer attaches. It was reached in the present case, if the illegality ever existed, when the parties settled the account and defendant paid over the profits, leaving nothing in his hands but a deposit of plaintiff’s money for further operations. Such future operations
Judgment reversed and procedendo awarded.