Wiggin v. Federal Stock & Grain Co.

The complaint averred that, under the contracts which were annexed to it, it was the defendant's duty to advance any moneys necessary to cover declines in the market value of the stocks named in each, notifying Mrs. Wiggin, who was then to repay such advances on demand; that there was a sharp decline, but instead of so doing the defendant thereupon sold out all the stocks, without notice, whereby she was damaged to an amount equal to the sum of her deposits; that as soon as she learned of this she tendered it a sum equal to any deficiency which existed in her deposits, demanding that the defendant carry out the contracts or return her deposits; and that the defendant refused to do either.

This was demurred to on various grounds. One was that the parties to the contracts contemplated a mere payment of differences between the market price of the stocks on the day of closing the contract and the agreed price, and it was not alleged that they intended an actual delivery or that the defendant ever owned such stocks.

The contracts do not appear upon their face to be gambling ones. Each was headed "Buyer's Contract." It stipulated for the delivery by the defendant to the plaintiff, on three days' notice, of certain shares of stock at a price named, and required her to receive them, unless she elected to surrender the contract, in which case the defendant was to pay her "a sum equal to the then advance in the market price" of the stock. In case of a decline in the market price, equal to the amount of all the deposits, the contract was to terminate and the deposits become the absolute property of the defendant. *Page 512

When the terms of an executory contract are so expressed as to leave it uncertain whether the purpose to be accomplished and the things to be done are legal or illegal, illegality will not be presumed, but the contract will be so construed, ut res magis valeat quam pereat. Hamden v. Merwin,54 Conn. 418, 424. In addition to her deposits, the plaintiff, at the date of each of the contracts in question, paid to the defendant a brokerage commission on the purchase of the stock named in it, and also a commission of the same amount for selling such stock, should she order a sale. Should she not order it, the latter payment was to be refunded. These provisions were either a device to conceal the real nature of an illegal transaction, or a proper mode of compensation for services to be performed. The plaintiff was entitled, on the demurrer to the complaint, to have them treated as the latter. Thus construed, they were not inconsistent with the other terms of the contract, and the contract was not inconsistent with the law.

It follows that it was not necessary to insert in the complaint an averment that an actual delivery of the stocks was intended; still less one that the defendant owned them. Any one may lawfully agree to deliver in the future what he has not now got, if it be a thing which he may get.Porter v. Viets, 1 Biss. (U.S.) 177.

Another ground of demurrer was that it did not appear that the defendant ever owned the stocks specified, or came under any obligation to buy them until it received three days' notice from the plaintiff. This assumes that it is unlawful for one to give to another an option to call for goods not then owned by the former, at a future time, upon tender of a certain price. On the contrary, a bona fide contract of this nature is unexceptionable. Story v. Salomon, 71 N.Y. 420.

Further causes of demurrer were assigned to the effect that, even if the contracts were valid, no breach of duty on the part of the defendant was shown.

It is true that no duty to make any advances to anybody or under any circumstances, was thrown upon it by the contracts, *Page 513 so far as can be determined from their face. But in addition to setting up such a duty, the plaintiff averred that the defendant, without notifying her, sold out all the stocks at a time when there had been a sharp decline in their values, whereby she had been damaged to the extent of her deposits. It could not, under the provisions contained in any of the contracts, have sold them unless they were under its ownership or control, nor unless the amount of the decline was equal to that of all the plaintiff's deposits previously made on account of them. The complaint did not show that such a decline had occurred. The plaintiff was not bound to deny that it had. Without it, the contract could not be treated by the defendant as terminated, nor the deposits as its own property. Nor could it be assumed as matter of law that a sale of such stocks on which the plaintiff had an option, and for the purchase of which by the defendant it had received from her a broker's commission, could be made without such notice as would give her a reasonable opportunity to protect her interests.

That her option had not been exercised; that she had never surrendered her contracts, nor asked for an accounting, nor ordered a sale at any particular price; and that it did not appear that the stocks had ever advanced in value, was all immaterial. None of these things excused the defendant from treating her reasonably and fairly, in respect to any action affecting her title to her deposits.

The particular paragraph in which the duty of the defendant to make advances was alleged, was demurred to as a mere statement of a claim of law. While it is not necessary to allege matters of law, it is not always improper. Bliss on Code Pleading, § 212; Wills v. Wills, 34 Ind. 106. Whether any such duty existed or not depended on the proper construction of the contracts pleaded. To state the construction in this respect on which the plaintiff relied, was a mode of applying the law to the facts which was helpful rather than harmful to the other party. Gould on Pleading (Hamilton's Ed., 1899) p. 59. If it was an unwarranted construction, a demurrer for that cause would *Page 514 have been well grounded. That filed, however, was not for that cause, and was properly overruled.

Nor was the fourth paragraph demurrable for the cause specified, namely, that it was made up of statements of fact and of law so involved in and dependent upon each other as to be wholly inseparable. Its allegations were that the defendant, in violation of its duty under the contracts, failed to make advances and to notify the plaintiff of any deficiencies in her deposits, but sold, without notice to her, all the stocks referred to in the contracts, entailing a loss to her of a sum equal to that of all her deposits. The terms "P. full", "Protect in full", and "Protect", used in several of the contracts, were in themselves meaningless. The plaintiff claimed, and the defendant afterwards admitted, that they required some notice to her before the stocks with reference to which they were used could be sold out. If this was their legal effect, the sale alleged was a breach of each contract on which these words appeared. They did not appear upon all, but this was not made a cause of demurrer. That which was assigned was untenable. The meaning of the words in question was to be alleged and proved as a matter of fact. The demurrer asserted that the allegations of law were inseparable from those of fact. If then the latter were material, the former were also. Hill v. FairHaven W. R. Co., 75 Conn. 177, 180.

The evidence offered on the trial to prove that the plaintiff never in fact intended to receive any stocks on the contracts was properly excluded. The answer was substantially a general denial. As the contracts were not illegal on their face, the defendant could not show their illegality by extrinsic proof of that character, in the absence of allegations of the facts on which it might rely as invalidating them. Rules of Court, p. 48, § 160.

The defendant offered evidence that when it had made several contracts with a customer, of the nature of those in suit, and on some of these the margins had become exhausted by a fall in the prices of the stocks, although on others the margins remained sufficient, its custom was, if *Page 515 upon all the contracts together there was a deficiency in the margins, to sell out all the stocks. Such a custom was inconsistent with the terms of the respective contracts, and these could not be thus varied by parol.

Evidence was properly admitted of the market quotations of the stocks named in each of the contracts from the day when they were sold out until that when the plaintiff ordered their sale.

The contracts appeared on their face to be of a speculative character. That they were such did not necessarily affect their validity. Hatch v. Douglas, 48 Conn. 116. If a broker who has purchased and is holding stocks under such an agreement makes an unauthorized sale at the stock exchange, he can hardly fail to get what is at the time their full market value. To hold him liable to account for this, and nothing more, would be to give the other party a very inadequate remedy. The real loss of the latter is that he can reap no benefit from a subsequent rise in value. Justice can only be done in such cases by requiring the broker to pay a sum sufficient to put the other party in as good a position as he had before the sale. This (except in a case calling for vindictive damages) is generally measured by the excess, if any, over the price realized, of the lowest sum for which the latter could have repurchased the stocks, after notice of the sale, had he given an order to that effect with reasonable promptness, or for which, as the case may be, he did repurchase the same, acting with reasonable promptness, after such notice. In case, however, of fluctuations in the market price between the day of the wrongful conversion and the latest day to which it would have been reasonable to defer a repurchase, or the date of a repurchase, if a repurchase be made prior to said last mentioned day, the rule of damages would, as was correctly stated in the charge, be the difference, if any, between the price obtained when the shares were converted and the highest market price, in excess thereof, attained during such intermediate period. Wright v. Bankof Metropolis, 110 N.Y. 237; Galigher v. Jones, 129 U.S. 193.

The jury were correctly instructed that each contract was *Page 516 independent of every other, and that the stocks bought under one stood as security for the plaintiff's performance of her obligations under that alone.

The jury were instructed that the ruling on the demurrer had conclusively established the validity of all the contracts, and removed any question as to that both from their consideration and from that of the court. While it is customary for a judge, in disposing of points of law in a cause that may have been raised before other judges at an earlier stage of the proceedings, to follow their decisions, he is not bound to do so. New pleadings intended to raise again a question of law which has been already presented on the record and determined adversely to the pleader are not to be favored.Hillyer v. Winsted, 77 Conn. 304. But a determination so made is not necessarily to be treated as an infallible guide to the court in dealing with all matters subsequently arising in the cause. If it be erroneous, and if the same point be presented in argument at a later stage of the proceedings, although before a different judge, he has the same right to reconsider the question, or to grant a rehearing on the issue closed on the prior pleadings, as if he had himself made the decision upon it. It is immaterial that the prior ruling was made at a previous term. While a final judgment cannot be reversed after the term during which it was rendered, except upon such new proceedings as may bring the cause again into life, an interlocutory one may be.

As the prior ruling on the demurrer was correct, no injustice would have been done by the charge in this respect, had the question to which it pertained been in all respects the same as that which came before the jury. But it was not the same. Evidence had been properly introduced upon the trial to show that the contract had been made with reference to the general customs and usages of those engaged in the kind of business conducted by the defendant. These usages formed a part of each contract. Hatch v. Douglas,48 Conn. 116; Skiff v. Stoddard, 63 id. 198, 219. They might serve to explain the meaning of such terms as "P. full", and the acts to be done by each of the contracting *Page 517 parties under certain conditions. These were matters which did not fully appear upon the face of the complaint. There may have been something in the evidence before the jury to lead to the conclusion that the contracts, though fair in external form, were in fact a cover for illegal practices. That such may have been the case is indicated by the instruction to which exception is taken. It would have been unnecessary to tell the jury that any question as to the validity of the contracts had been removed from their consideration, unless they could fairly have assumed that it was, except for that, one of the matters left for their determination.

There is error and a new trial is ordered.

In this opinion TORRANCE, C. J., HALL and PRENTICE, Js., concurred.

HAMERSLEY, J. I concur in the result, on the ground that the court erred in overruling the demurrer to the complaint.