delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellee filed her bill in the chancery court of Lauder-dale county against appellants to cancel and have set aside a mortgage on real estate owned by her and thirty-five notes, for one hundred dollars each, to secure which said mortgage was given. The indebtedness and mortgage were executed by appellee in favor of appellant, C. E. Moritz. The cause was tried on bill, answers, and proofs, and a final decree was rendered granting the relief prayed for, from which appellant, C. E. Moritz, prosecutes this appeal.
The ground relied on by appellee for the cancellation of the indebtedness and the mortgage securing the same was that the indebtedness grew out of a gambling transaction, namely, what is known as dealing in futures.
There is little, if any, conflict in the evidence. The case made is as follows:
Appellant was engaged in the cotton, grain, and stock brokerage business, with an office at Vicksburg; a large part of that business was what is known as dealing-in-future contracts on margin. It was the character of business covered by section 1202, Code of 1906, Hemingway’s Code, section 932; section 2303, Code of 1906, Hemingway’s Code, section 1913; and sections 1914 to 1926, inclusive, Hemingway’s Code. Appellee’s nephew, O. S. Lumbley, was in charge of and managed the Vicksburg office, and while so engaged, in violation of his agreement with appellant not to do so, and without the consent or knowledge of appellant, engaged in the name of another person, without the knowledge or consent of the latter, in various dealings in future contracts with the appellant’s correspondents and upon appellant’s credit. The result was a loss of three thousand five hundred dollars. After the loss had taken place, C. S. Lumbley notified appellant thereof. Appellant made the losses good with his correspondents, and to secure appellant for the *458amount so paid, C. S. Lumbley induced appellee, his aunt, to execute the notes and mortgage involved in this case.
Appellee argues that the consideration for the notes grew out of gambling transactions, namely, future contracts, there being no agreement or intention between the parties thereto to deliver the actual commodities bought and sold. And that is true beyond question, and it is also true that the business in which appellant was engaged furnished O. S. Lumbley the opportunity to engage in the illegal business which resulted in the loss. .But does it follow that the indebtedness thus incurred by C. S. Lumbley, and which was paid by appellant for him at his request, became so affected with the illegal business out of which it grew that the appellant will not be permitted to enforce payment of it'? Putting the case as strongly as it can be put in favor of the appellee, it is this: Appellant was engaged in the unlawful business of dealing in future contracts. C. S. Lumbley, manager of his office, without the knowledge or consent of the appellant, and contrary to the agreement between them, in appellant’s name and on his credit, engaged in such illegal business resulting in the loss. The loss was C. S. Lumbley’s loss, not appellant’s. Appellant paid the loss for ILumbley, and thereupon the later induced appellee, his aunt, to join him in executing their notes in appellant’s favor for the amount so paid, and for the security of same to give a mortgage on her. property. Is it a law that where a gambler has already lost his money in gambling and has induced another who had no part in the gambling nor knowledge of it to pay such loss, the gambler cannot legally obligate himself to repay the amount so paid for him? If he can make a binding obligation of that character, then clearly another person may become legally bound therefor as comaker of the obligation with the gambler.
Sections 2300 to 2302, inclusive, Code of 1906, Hemingway’s Code, sections 1910 to 1912, inclusive declaring all contracts, judgments, securities, and conveyances *459made, given, or executed, based in whole or in part upon money or other valuable thing “won, lost, or bet at any g'ame or games, or on any horse race, cock fight, or at any other sport, amusement, or pastime, or on any wager whatever, or for the reimbursing or repaying any money knowingly lent or advanced for the purpose of such gaming or gambling, or to be wagered on any game, ’ ’ etc., shall be void, and providing that any transfer of property to secure the payment of such losses shall inure to the benefit of the wife and children of the loser, and that the loser may sue for and recover the money so lost, has no application to future dealing’s. That statute deals alone with the ordinary gambling games such as those therein enumerated and of like kind and character. The subject of the enforceability of com tracts growing out of dealings in futures on margin is specifically dealt with by section 2303, Code of 1906, Hemingway’s Code, section 1913, and sections 2 and 9, chapter 118 of the Laws of 1908, Hemingway’s Code,' sections 1915 and 1922, which follow:
“Sec. 1913 (2303). Future Contracts Not Enforced.-— A contract for the purchase or sale of a commodity of any kind, to be delivered at a future date, the parties not intending that the commodity is to be actually delivered in kind and the price paid, shall not be enforced by any court; nor shall any contract of the kind commonly called ‘futures’ be enforced, nor shall a contract in this section mentioned be a valid consideration, in whole or in part, for any promise or undertaking, and any person who shall make any such contract and by reason thereof lose any money, property or other valuable thing, real or personal, and shall pay or deliver the same or any part thereof, may, or his wife or children may sue for and recover such-money, property or other valuable thing so lost and paid or delivered, or any part thereof, from; the person knowingly receiving the same, either for himself or as agent for another, together with all costs of suit.”
*460“1915. Contracts for Sales of Anything Where Actual Delivery of the Goods is Not Intended, Declared to he Void and Illegal. — 2. That every contract or agreement, whether in writing- or not, whereby any person or corporation shall agree to buy or sell and deliver, or sell with an agreement to deliver, any wheat, cotton, corn or other commodity; stock, bond or other security to any other person or corporation, when in fact it is not in good faith intended by the parties that an actual delivery of the article or .thing- shall be made, is hereby declared to be unlawful, whether made or to be performed wholly, within this state, or partly within and partly without this state; it being the intent of this act to prohibit any and all contracts or agreements for the purchase or sale of any commodities or .thing of value or margin, commonly called ‘dealing- in futures,’ when the intention or understanding’ of the parties is to receive or pay the difference between the agreed price and the market price at the time of settlement. Provided, that nothing herein contained shall be construed to apply to transaction by mail or wire, between persons in this state and persons outside of this state, when neither person is represented, directly or indirectly, in this state by any broker, agent,. attorney or intermediary in said transaction. ’ ’
“1922. Legal Representatives May Sue for and Recover Any Losses Because of ‘Future’ Dealings Within Five Years. — 9!. That the parents or parent, wife, child or children, executor or administrator of the person sustaining a loss because of any such transaction made in this state as is prohibited by this act, or the assignee of any such person so sustaining a loss, may, within five year from the date such loss was sustained, recover by suit in the circuit or chancery court, the amount so lost, by the person making such contract, which sum, shall be considered as liquidated damages to the person suing therefor, from the broker, agent or intermediary who negotiated such transaction.”
*461Contracts growing ont of future dealings having been dealt with specifically by the legislature, the statute dealing with contracts growing out of gambling generally has no application to the former. Isaacs v. Silverberg, 87 Miss. 185, 39 So. 420.
The enforcement of the notes and mortgage involved here does not involve the enforcement of any contract growing out of future dealings between appellant and C. S. Lumbley. They had no such dealings. The future contracts made by Lumbley are in no sense whatever sought to be enforced. These contracts were completed and the loss of Lumbley was paid by appellant for him. Adler v. Searles, 86 Miss. 406, 38 So. 209, is in point. The defendants in that case were a future brokerage concern in New Orleans. The plaintiff: resided in Vicksburg. The latter, through the defendants, dealt in futures in New Orleans. The defendants charged the plaintiff a commission for their services. They were the ordinary future contracts, the actual delivery of the commodities dealt in not being contemplated by the parties. The contracts were therefore illegal under the laws of this state. In a settlement growing out of this business, the plaintiff paid the defendants, through error, one thousand dollars more than he owed them. Later discovering the error, the plaintiff sued the defendants for the one thousand dollars. The defense was that the one thousand dollars was part of the fruits of the illegal business carried on between plaintiff and the defendants. The court held that the one thousand dollars representing money paid by the plaintiff, through error, was recoverable, and that it was no defense to the action therefor that the contracts out of which the transaction took place were illegal where resort to such contracts was unnecessary to prove plaintiff’s case.
The court said in discussing the question that the illegal business between the parties had been settled and a new and independent element had supervened, namely, the payment, through error, of one of the parties to the *462other of one thousand dollars; that regardless of the fact that the one thousand dollars, paid by error, was part of the fruits of the illegal business, the plaintiff could recover it back. The illegal business had been put aside — it was a thing of the past and the recovery of the one thousand dollars did not involve the enforcement of any contract based on such business. That case is in line with the authorities generally. The statute dealing with the enforceability of -contracts growing out of future dealings declares such contracts to be gambling contracts. It is stated in 27 C. J., pp. 1075-, 1076, and 1079, sections 306; 307, and 314, and the text is supported by the -cases in the notes, that money loaned by a third person to the loser in a gambling transaction to pay his losses may be recovered back although the lender knew for what purpose the money was to be used; and moneys paid at the request of the loser in discharge of a gambling debt may be recovered by the payer; and securities given by the loser to the payer are enforceable by the latter; and that money or property lost in gambling may be recovered if such recoyery can be had without reference to the validity of the transaction and without causing the court to recognize or sanction the illegal transaction.
The illegal transactions out of which C. S. Lumbley suffered the losses had been completed. His losses had been suffered, and they had been discharged by appellant at his request, and afterwards to secure appellant for such payment, appellee, with her nephew, C. S. Liumbley, executed the notes involved and the mortgage to secure the same. We hold that the illegality of the transactions out of which the loss occurred was out of view, that the illegal contracts resulting in the losses are not here involved, and that there is no effort on the part of the appellant to enforce such contracts.
It follows from these views that the decree of the court below should be reversed, and judgment rendered here for appellant dismissing appellee’s bill.
Reversed, and judgment here.