v.
Bauder & Co.
— On the twenty-eighth day of July, 1886, the plaintiff’s assignor, the Whitebreast Coal Company, by a traveling salesman named Russell, entered into an agreement with the defendants for the sale and delivery to them, on the cars in Chicago, of a quantity of coal. It is the claim of plaintiff that this agreement required the coal company to ship during the 'months of August and September, to points to be designated, one hundred and fifty cars of coal, but subject, so far as the time of shipment was concerned, to the custom and rules governing the hard-coal trade; and also subject to the condition that the coal company should not be liable for delays and failure in shipment, when such delays and failure were the result of causes beyond its control, such as its inability to procure transportation from the mines in Pennsylvania, or from Chicago. Plaintiff further claims that the coal company notified defendants about August 11, 1886, that it would [*552] become difficult, in a short time, to secure prompt shipments of coal, and requested liberal orders for coal for shipment in that month; that notwithstanding such request defendants ordered but sixteen cars during August; that, from the latter part of that month it was so difficult to obtain transportation that from that time to the end of the following December only eighty-six more cars of coal could be shipped to defendants ; and that the total number of cars so shipped was one hundred and two. The defendants claim that their agreement with the coal company was verbal, • but that Russell delivered a written memorandum thereof, as follows :
“80 cars No. 4, d $4 65 f. o. b. Chgo.
70 “ Nut, | $4 65 “
45 “ Stove, ’ § $4 65 “ “
5 “ Egg, | $4 40 “
“Shipped as ordered, Aug. & Sept.
“ Privilege of 250' cars more. No larger proportion of No. 4 during Aug. & Sept. Terms, 30 days.
“ Whitebkeast Coal Co.
“ S. Gr. Russell, Sales Agent.”
Defendants further claim that the agreement required the delivery to them of one hundred and fifty cars of Scranton coal, of the kinds and for the prices per ton named; and that it gave to them the privilege of ordering, during August and September, 18S6, two hundred and fifty additional cars of the coal on the same terms; that they exercised this privilege, and ordered four hundred car-loads before the end of September ; that the coal company failed to furnish two hundred and ninety of the car-loads so ordered ; that by the custom of trade, and as understood by the parties, a car-load was to contain at least fifteen tons ; that after the agreement was made the price of coal advanced to $6.25 per ton; and that defendants sustained damaige, by reason of the failure of the coal company to fill their orders, to the amount of $6,860. They demand that this amount be treated as a counter-claim to any demand held by plaintiff, and admit that he is the assignee of the coal company. The plaintiff denies that a privilege was given to defendants to order two [*553] hundred and fifty additional car-loads, and alleges that Russell had no authority to give such a privilege; that, if given, it was within the statute of frauds, and void; that it was without consideration; that it was too indefinite and uncertain to have binding force; that it never became valid because of a mistake of the parties to it; that if given it was a contract entered into and to be executed within the state of Illinois, and is governed by the laws of that state ; that it was in violation of such laws, and therefore void. Demurrers to portions of the reply were sustained.
The claim that the contract was not to be performed within the state of Illinois is not sustained by the pleadings. They show that the duty of the coal company ended with the delivery of the coal free of charge on board the cars in Chicago; nor is the claim that the Illinois statute does not make contracts to which it applies void, well founded. The admitted language of the statute is that all contracts made in violation of it “ shall be considered gambling contracts, and shall be void.” The question for us to determine is whether the agreement in question falls within the provisions of the statute. It is claimed by appellant that the transaction between the coal company and defendants was virtually two contracts — one of which was legal, and the other illegal; while appellees claim that there was but one agreement, and that, since that contemplated an actual sale and delivery of at least one hundred and fifty carloads of coal, it must be held valid in all its provisions. If there was in fact but a single contract, a part of which [*555] was valid, the effect claimed by appellees would not result. If the contract is not separable, and is illegal in part, then it is invalid as an entirety, and cannot be enforced! Dillon v. Allen, 46 Iowa, 300; Casady v. Woodbury County, 13 Iowa, 116; 2 Pars. Cont. 673; Metc. Cont. 221, 246.
But we think the contract is separable. It is said that “if the part to be performed by one party consists of several distinct and separate items, and the price to be paid by the other is apportioned to each item to be performed, or is left to be implied by law, such a contract will generally be held to be severable; and the same rule holds where the price to be paid is clearly and distinctly apportioned to different parts of what is to be performed, although the latter is in its nature single and entire.” 2 Pars. Cont. 517. It is said in Mete. Cont. 246, “that, if one of two considerations of a promise be void merely, the other will support the promise; but that, if one of two considerations be unlawful, the promise is void. When, however, the illegality of a contract is in the act to be done, and not in the consideration, the law is different. If, for a legal consideration, a party undertakes to do two or more acts, and part of them are unlawful, the contract is good for so much as is lawful, and void for the residue. Whenever the unlawful part of a contract can be separated from the rest, it will be rejected, and the remainder established.” In this case the purchase price was to be paid on each shipment, thirty days after it was made, and the price was affixed to each ton of coal. Hence there was no difficulty in separating the parts of the contract, and no' injustice would result in so doing.
But the agreement must of necessity be considered as separable for the reason that it consisted of two parts — one of which was in effect a contract of purchase, and the other a contract for the privilege of purchasing. We shall therefore treat so much of the contract as relates to the two hundred and fifty car-loads of coal as separate and distinct from the remainder. Thus considered, there can be no [*556] question that it is a contract to give to defendants the right to buy coal at a future time. But it is said that this right is not an “ option,” within the meaning of the statute, and that the statute “ was passed to curb the gambling transactions of boards of trade in large cities, and to reach such contracts there made, and made in similar ways, and was never intended to reach contracts like the one in suit, when, upon an actual sale, a privilege, based upon the same transaction and consideration, was given to take more of the sold article upon the same terms.” We have no guide to the legislative intent in this case, excepting the language of the statute. That gives no color to the claim that its application is not to be as broad as its terms. It is true, the word “ option ” is not defined in the statute ; but the pleadings do not show that it was used with reference to any local definition or usage. The supreme court of Illinois has defined the word as used in the statute in a number of cases. It has said that “the true idea of an option is what are called in the peculiar language of. the dealers ‘puts’ and ‘calls.’ A ‘put’ is defined to be the privilege of delivering or not delivering the thing sold, and a ‘ call ’ is defined to be the privilege of calling for or not calling for the thing bought. ‘Optional contracts,’ in this sense, are usually settled by adjusting market values, as the party having the option may elect. It is simply a mode adopted of speculating in difference in market values of grain or other commodities. It must have been in this sense that the term ‘option’ is used in the statute. Such a contract is obviously fictitious, having none of the elements of good faith, as in a contract where both parties are bound, and is defined by statute as a gambling contract. . Fictitious purchases or sales, such as were in the contemplation of the parties, were as nothing; and it is a matter of no consequence where it is pretended they were made, whéther on the board of trade or elsewhere.” Pearce v. Foote, 113 Ill. 228 ; citing Pixley v. Boynton, 79 Ill. 351. In Tenney v. Foote, 4 Bradw. 594, approved, on appeal, 95 Ill. 99, the court said: “The word ‘ option,’ as used in the statute here, taken with the [*557] context, means a mere choice, right or privilege of selling or buying; and it is the contracting for such choice, right or privilege of selling or buying, at a future time, any commodity, that the statute was intended to prohibit, as contradistinguished from an actual sale or purchase with the intention of delivering and accepting the commodity specified.” The case of White v. Barber, 123 U. S. 392, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 221, is cited by both parties to this appeal. In so fa,r as it construes the statute under consideration, it is in harmony with the decisions quoted. By implication, it approved an instruction of the trial court which stated that “the statute is leveled against what are called ‘puts’ and ‘calls;’ that is, the right or the privilege which a party may have to buy or sell of you at a future day — not an absolute agreement now to sell, but where one man pays another five or ten dollars for the privilege of delivering to him one thousand or five thousand or ten thousand bushels of grain at a future time, or pays him a similar amount for the privilege of buying or accepting from him grain at a future time; a contract which cannot be enforced in terms, because it is wholly at the option of the party holding the option whether he will call for the grain or not. That is what is termed a ‘gambling contract,’ or a ‘put’ or ‘call,’ oran option to buy or sell at a future time, within the meaning of the Illinois statute.”
Many cases have been cited by counsel, which involve the principle that, “when the parties toan executory contract for the sale of property intend that there shall be no delivery thereof, but that the transaction shall be settled by the payment of the difference between the contract price and the market price of the commodity at the time fixed, the contract is void.” First National Bank of Lyons v. Oskaloosa Packiny Co., 66 Iowa, 46. But such cases are not directly in point. In the case at bar the intent of the parties at the time the agreement was entered into does not appear. So far as the pleadings show, the defendants may at all times have intended to demand the sale to them of the two hundred and fifty cars of coal. Under the contract and the statute [*558] pleaded, the intent with which defendants entered into the contract does not seem to us to' be material. It was nothing which the coal company could enforce. There was nothing in the contract to prevent defendants from changing their intent at pleasure. In the absence of legal or moral obligation, people usually do those things which they think will result in benefit, and avoid doing those which would result in loss. Therefore it must have been understood by both parties to the contract, when it was made, that defendants would not claim the privilege which it attempted to give, unless it should prove to be for their financial interest to do so. If the price of coal advanced after the contract was made, the defendants would insist on the privilege, and if the price declined the privilege would be abandoned. Conceding that the consideration of the optional part of the contract is found in the obligation of defendants to purchase one hundred and fifty car-loads of coal, yet it is clear that the option was designed for the benefit of defendants, and to secure to them the privilege of speculating on the changes in the market. In our opinion, such a transaction is as much a gambling contract, within the meaning of the Illinois statute, as though the parties to it had intended that no coal should be delivered, but that the coal company should pay to defendants the difference in their favor between the contract price and the market price at the date named for delivery. We therefore conclude that the demurrer which we have been considering should have been overruled.
IV. In view of the conclusion we have reached as to the validity of the optional part of the contract in suit, it becomes unnecessary to consider further various questions discussed by counsel. For the errors pointed out the judgment of the district court is
Reversed.