Gunther v. Shepherd
Gunther v. Shepherd
Opinion of the Court
We have seldom investigated a case evidencing transactions between merchants and business men presenting more inconsistencies in the statement of the accounts between the parties and with pleadings that are really less consistent than their accounts. The appellees must have known when they made their defense the nature of the contract between them and the appellant, namely, Mullins, that it was a mere gambling transaction or a purchase in good faith for the sale and delivery of the cotton. They insisted in the first place that it was not in good faith a purchase by them, and each maintains that the contract was not made with the appellant, but with other parties and if left to consider alone the pleadings of the appellee, we would not hesitate to reverse this judgment. The appellant, however, insists and so states both in his pleadings and depositions that the contract was made in good faith for the actual delivery in the future of the cotton contracted for, and also pleads that the contract was made alone with him, and not with the cotton brokers in either New York or New Orleans.
The defense that it was a gaming transaction was withdrawn, and the appellees relied on the fact that at the institution of the action, the appellant was indebted to them and that the subsequent indebtedness grew out of losses sustained after the action was instituted by reason of the wrongful closing out of the cotton contract by appellant before the contracts matured or before the time for delivery. Both parties are here insisting on the good faith of the transaction and such is the state of the pleadings now before us.
It seems from the facts of the record that the appellant was a cotton broker, or made purchases of cotton for others not as agent but on his own responsibility. The cotton purchased by him on account of Shepherd' & Co., so far as the proof shows, or as the appellant himself admits, was a firm in New Orleans and a firm in New York. A member of each one of these firms has testified in this case and filed exhibits containing a statement of the losses and profits made by the appellant in his speculation for the benefit of Shepherd & Co. From their statements it is evident that at the time of filing this action or the two actions the appellant was indebted to the appellees in a sum exceeding $2,000. Their accounts as appellant admits are correct and while he held the two notes of Shepherd & Co. they must have been executed with a view of male
The appellees, however, insist that the losses accrued after the bringing of the action should have been awarded him upon the ground that the appellant sold their cotton before he had the right to sell it under the rules of either the New Orleans or New York Exchange. If the action of the appellant was prematurely brought and we think it was, so far as this subsequent loss was concerned, we do not well see how the chancellor could have been called upon to give damages to the appellees.
The appellees insist that the action was prematurely brought but again urge their claim to damages by reason of what transpired after the institution of the action. If it was the duty of the chancellor to settle up and adjust the entire account, the appellees may be correct in the position assumed, but even then the attitude of the parties who, on asserting claim to damages, does not require that the chancellor should exhaust his power as such to give them the relief they ask in their counterclaim. Whether the appellants had the right to close out the contracts regardless of the rules of the cotton exchange when those for whom he purchased or to whom
Judgment affirmed on original appeal.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.