281 Mass. 425 | Mass. | 1933
This is an action of contract in which the plaintiff seeks to recover upon a promissory note as set forth in its declaration. The answer is a general denial, payment, want of consideration, and the further answer that the note was void for illegality. At the trial the defendants waived so much of their answer as contained a denial of the genuineness of the signature and denial of the existence of the corporation. The plaintiff offered the note in evidence and rested. “The parties agreed to leave the question of counsel fee to the court, without offering any evidence on that point.”
The case was tried in the Municipal Court of the City of Boston. The report contains all the evidence material to the questions .reported. At the trial the defendants presented twelve requests for findings and rulings. On these requests the trial judge ruled that those numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 8 and 10 are requests for findings of fact and refused to pass upon them. He ruled that requests numbered 6, 7 and 9 are not applicable to the facts found by him and for that reason denied them. He denied requests numbered 11 and 12 and found for the plaintiff. In the Appellate Division the report was dismissed and the case is before this court on the appeal of the defendants from the decision of the appellate court.
The evidence of the defendants tended to prove that pursuant to the executed agreement the plaintiff handed to the defendant a check for $500 which the defendant in turn delivered to Mr. Cinamon, the attorney for the plain
By agreement of counsel it is stated in the report that, after the account was sold out by the broker, an action was brought by the plaintiff on the first of the notes required by the agreement. Respecting this action and its final disposition, the trial judge, presumably from the
At the trial in the instant case the defendant testified “that at the time the note here in suit was given, shortly after his bankruptcy, he was without funds to take up and pay for any stocks purchased by Mr. Cinamon on a fifty per cent margin and he had no intention of so doing. . . . He further testified that his sole purpose in borrowing the money and buying stocks on margin was to make money by speculating on the rise and fall, of market prices so as to enable him to repay out of the profits, the note owed the plaintiff at the time of his bankruptcy, and that this was the understanding with the plaintiff and the purpose of the loan”; that in none of these transactions were any certificates of stock delivered by the broker either to the defendant or to Mr. Cinamon. At the close of the evidence and before final argument, the defendants made the requests for findings and rulings previously referred to. The denial of requests numbered 11 and 12 presents the substantial question at issue.
The trial judge filed a memorandum of his findings and rulings. His rulings are above shown. Aside from inferential findings, he made a specific finding in respect to the agreement of February 27, 1930, as follows: “This arrangement was carried out and as a result of buying and selling on margin, with actual purchases and sales of securities (as was intended by both parties at all times) the account (which was in the name of Mr. Cinamon) realized by April 28, 1930, a profit of not less than $636.50. On that day, by agreement, $50 of this profit was transferred to a personal account of the defendant and $616.50 was paid to Mr. Cinamon. The latter paid $562.80 to the plaintiff in payment of the $500 note signed by the four people with interest and paid $53.70 to the defendant. Thereafter the specula
The defendants posit their demand for a reversal of the decision of the Appellate Division upon the proposition that the trial judge erred in his refusal to give requests numbered 11 and 12, (1) “Because the note was void for illegality, in that the contract provided a loan for a wagering purpose”; and (2) “Because the defendant’s liability had been discharged by operation of law, in that the contract recited that the consideration for both notes was the new loan of $500, and that loan was discharged under G. L. c. 140, § 90, by the payment of $562.80 on April 28, 1930.”
The plaintiff concedes that a contract for the purchase and sale of securities or other commodities, when all parties intend that no actual purchase or sale shall be made but when the time of performance arrives settlement shall be made by payment of differences between the market price and the contract price, is a wagering contract, illegal and void. This admission is required by Northrup v. Buffington, 171 Mass. 468, Lyons v. Coe, 177 Mass. 382, 383, 384, Rice v. Winslow, 182 Mass. 273, 275, Beers v. Wardwell, 198 Mass. 236, 239, and Bazirgan v. Arnold & Sears, Inc., 275 Mass. 207, 215-216. It also concedes rightly that even the purchase of securities or other commodities may not save the contract from the taint of illegality if the contract be such that delivery shall never be required but the purchases and sales shall be set off against each other and the principal receive the profits or make good the losses. Harvey v. Merrill, 150 Mass. 1. Barnes v. Smith, 159 Mass. 344, 347. Gibney v. Olivette, 196 Mass. 294. Bazirgan v. Arnold & Sears, Inc., 275 Mass. 207. The plaintiff further admits that no one knowingly participating in a transaction intended to accomplish a purpose forbidden by law can bring an action and recover for any cause directly connected with the illegality. Foster v. Thurston, 11 Cush. 322, 323. Haller v. Workingmen’s Co-operative Bank, 263 Mass. 37, 38, 39. See also Gibney v. Olivette, 196 Mass. 294, 295, where it
The fact that stock so bought is not delivered at any time by the broker, as here, was evidence of greater or less weight that the parties to the purchase and sale were concerned merely with speculative gains or losses, depending upon the rise and fall of the stock market. In view of the special finding of the trial judge, quoted in full, the only question here to be decided is, Does the contract printed in the report, read in the light of the circumstances present at its execution, import in the reasonable construction of its terms an intention by the parties to it to engage in a contract of wager prohibited by the common law or by statute? The burden of proof to establish illegality is upon the defendants. We are of opinion that the contract in terms does not contemplate any violation of law. The trial judge to arrive at the conclusion reached by him must have found that the testimony of the defendant was not credible. His finding was one of fact, arrived at after seeing the only witness, the defendant, and hearing his testimony. His conclusion cannot be said to have been wrong. Rejecting the testimony of the defendant in support of his contentions and answer of illegality in the contract and in the performance of it, we think that the finding of the trial judge on the evidence was right. We find nothing in the contention of the defendants that the case falls within the provisions of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 140, § 90, nor in their contention that the note in suit has been paid.
Order “Report dismissed” affirmed.