Court Opinion

ID: 7964967
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 00:49:47.05853+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:36.942974
License: Public Domain

Gilfillan, C. J.
After the issues were made in this case the plaintiffs procured, on motion, from the court below, an order requiring the defendant Fairchild to make answer to certain written interrogatories prepared by plaintiffs for that purpose; The making of this order is alleged as error. The interrogatories were answered, but no use was made of the answers, — they were not introduced on the trial; so that, as that proceeding did not in any way affect the judgment •appealed from, the error was without prejudice so far as concerned this appeal. We deem it proper, however, to say that tnere is no .authority for such an order. The statute enables a party, by verifying his own pleading, to compel his adversary to answer or reply to it under oath, and to compel him to exhibit for inspection books, papers, and documents in his possession, and also to appear and testify m his behalf as a witness. These are the only means that the statute has provided to compel disclosures by the opposite party in lieu ■of the means which the system of pleading in the former court of chancery afforded by interrogatories appended to the bill or answer.
As to the merits, the facts, briefly stated, are: ' Up to June 2, 1883, one John Young owned a grain warehouse or elevator, at Has-son, and was engaged in the business of receiving into it, for storing, wheat of all grades from others, for which, as received, he issued to the parties depositing wheat the usual wheat warehouse receipts or tickets; and was also engaged in buying wheat on his own account, —all the wheat so deposited by others, and that bought by him, being commingled in the warehouse according to its grade, test, and •condition; and he also bought up, as he had opportunity, the receipts or tickets so issued by him; that for some time prior to said June 2d ihe was accustomed to ship by railroad to market, at Chicago, and *106there to sell, the wheat in his warehouse and so commingled, both, that owned by himself and that held in store for others. The business of shipping it was conducted in this way: He placed the wheat, on board the cars at Kasson; received from the railway company the usual bills of lading for it, in which the defendant the bank was. named as consignee; drew his drafts for round sums in favor of the-bank on the parties to whom the wheat so shipped was to be forwarded; procured the bank to discount the drafts, delivering them to it with the bills of lading. The bank thereupon, by defendant. Fairchild, its cashier, indorsed the bills of lading in blank, indorsed the drafts to its correspondent at the place of destination of the wheat, and forwarded the bills and drafts attached together to such correspondent, with instructions to present the drafts for payment, and, if paid, to deliver them with the bills to the drawee in the drafts; and it was so done. The bank, through its officers, had, at all times, knowledge that Young was receiving wheat for storing and issuing' receipts or tickets therefor, and mingling such wheat with that purchased by himself; but had no actual knowledge or notice of the actual condition of the storage accounts, or of the amount of the outstanding receipts or tickets, or of the amount of wheat in the elevator,, or of the financial condition of Young.
Bach of the plaintiffs had deposited wheat for storing in said warehouse, and received receipts or tickets therefor. After such deposits, so much wheat was taken out, shipped, and disposed of in the manner aforesaid, that on said second day of June there was not enough remaining to meet all such receipts or tickets outstanding and held, by the plaintiffs and others than Young. On that day Young was insolvent, and made an assignment for the benefit of his creditors to defendant Fairchild, who accepted the trust, and took possession of the warehouse, and all the wheat remaining in it. Afterwards each of the plaintiffs presented to Fairchild his receipts or tickets for wheat,, and demanded from him the amount and quality of wheat called for by them, at the same time tendering the amount due thereon for-storage; and without taking any exception to the form or manner of' such demands, he refused to comply with them. During the times aforesaid one John Fern was the agent and wheat inspector of Young,. *107and assisted him in operating said elevator, and managing the b ness thereof, and in all the foregoing transactions.
On these facts (stated much more in detail in the findings of th court) the court below found as conclusions of law — First, that the refusal of Fairchild to deliver, on the demands made upon him, the part of the wheat then in his possession to which each of the receipts or tickets presented to him was entitled, amounted to a conversion thereof; second, that the acts of Fairchild, the bank, Young, and Fern, in the matter of shipping and disposing of the wheat as here-inbefore recited, amounted to a conversion by them of so much of said wheat as was required to meet the outstanding receipts or tickets, after applying the wheat on hand to that purpose; third, and that the bank and Fern, each of whom had receipts or tickets for wheat deposited, were not entitled to share in the wheat on hand.
The first of these conclusions is right. The objection made to it is that the demand was not good, because, as is claimed, it was for more than the ticket-holder was entitled to of the wheat then in the hands of Fairchild; that it was for the whole amount that each ticket called for, when it should have been only for the proportionate share of the wheat on hand which belonged to such ticket. But it was the best demand that the ticket-holders could make. They could not b,e, expected to know the state of the warehouse accosts FiEt&v much wheat was on hand; and what amount of receipts or tickets were outstanding against it, and entitled to share in it. That is for the warehouseman to know when he is called on to deliver the wheat upon the tickets, which are prima facie entitled to all they call for. If, by reason of having just come into possession, Fairchild did not know, he would have been entitled, had he asked it, to a reasonable time to ascertain the share due on each ticket. But he unqualifiedly refused without asking for time. This constituted a conversion of the wheal] on hand that belpnged.to the tickets presented. I
No question is made that as to Young the second conclusion is right. As to the wheat covered by this conclusion, the bank and Fairchild, who .q,cted as its cashier and agent, stand on the same footing. The question as to their liability is of great practical importance. If banks and bankers cannot take security through the bills of lading *108yon grain shipped, for the advances made by them to the shipper, hot meddling with the grain itself, without becoming liable as for the conversion of the grain in case the title of the shipper fails, the risk attending such advances will be so great as will tend to deter parties from making them; and we apprehend that thereby the business of shipping grain to market will be seriously interfered with.
•As we understand the proposition of the respondents, — and the conclusion of the court below cannot be sustained by any other,— it is in effect this: that the bank being named as consignee in the bills of lading, its indorsement and delivery of them to the parties in Chicago, upon receiving the amounts of the drafts, was a sale of the wheat by it to those parties, and consequently a conversion. It is not necessary to decide, and we do not decide, whether, had the acts of the bank amounted to a sale, it would have been liable for a conversion. A bill of lading is a symbol of the property. The indorsement and delivery of it is a symbolical delivery of the property, but does not, of itself, constitute a contract of sale any more than does an actual delivery of the property. Either operates to pass the title, when so intended. The intention and purpose with which the in-dorsement and delivery are made, and any conditions attached to the transaction, are open to explanation by parol, just as in the case of the actual delivery of the property itself. Security Bank v. Luttgen, 29 Minn. 363, (13 N. W. Rep. 151.) Naming one as consignee in, or indorsing and delivering to him, a bill of lading may be shown by parol to have been intended as evidence of an absolute sale, a trust, a mortgage, a pledge, a lien, or a mere agency. Bank of Rochester v. Jones, 4 N. Y. 497, (55 Am. Dec. 290;) Cayuga Co. Nat. Bank v. Daniels, 47 N. Y. 631; Marine Bank v. Wright, 48 N. Y. 1. The relation to the property of the parties named in it, or of the holder, and the purpose and effect of naming one as consignee in or indorsing and delivering the bill, are therefore not conclusively determined by the instrument itself, but may be shown by other evidence.
Resorting, then, to such other evidence, to all the circumstances attending the transaction, as found by the court below, it is apparent that there was no sale to, nor vesting of the absolute title in, the bank, so that it could pass it to any one else; and no sale nor dispo*109sition of the wheat, nor assumption of right to dispose of it, by bank to the Chicago parties. Whatever right or interest was vested, or intended to be vested, in the bank, by naming it as consignee ir the bills of lading, was only for a temporary purpose, to wit, to hold until the drafts should be paid, and as security for their payment. It acquired, as against Young, a special property in the wheat, — a power to receive and dispose of it at Chicago upon a certain contingent event, (to wit, non-payment of the drafts;) an event which never occurred, and a power which it never assumed to exercise. The special property and power ceased to exist as soon as the drafts were paid, — would have ceased to exist on such payment, even though the bank had still retained the bills. The special property and power were extinguished, and did not pass with the bills of lading. The bank had nothing that it could pass, the drafts being paid. Whatever interest or right the Chicago parties had in or to the wheat they got under, and held by virtue of, their arrangement or contract with the consignor, Young, and not through any contract with the bank. If they were agents to receive and sell the wheat, they were his agents; if they were purchasers, it was because they had purchased from him.
Had the bank, on payment o'f the drafts, indorsed and redelivered the bills of lading to Young, no one, we think, would claim that to be a sale or conversion, even though it had held them as a means of lien or security; and it is impossible to see how it alters the ease that, on extinguishment of its lien or special property, it delivered them to a person indicated by him(£) Had it, without having any property in the wheat, transmitted and delivered them, by his direction or request, to such person, without being privy to any wrongful intent on the part of Young, that would not have been a conversion by it. In removing the wheat from the warehouse; in shipping it;' in determining to whom it was destined at Chicago; who should pay the drafts and receive it; what such person should do with it; and what right they should have in respect to it, — the bank had no part. Those were the acts of Young. It merely took a lien upon it to secure the drafts, and, when the lien was satisfied, surrendered the evidence and means of enforcing it to the persons indicated by Young. That was not an appropriation or assumption of such dominion over *110, wheat, to the exclusion of the real owner, as amounted to a conversion by it.
What we have said as to the liability of the bank is in view of the nding that the bank had no knowledge in fact that Young was wrongfully disposing of the property of others. Had it known that fact, it would have been in the position of the defendant in Dodge v. Meyer, 61 Cal. 405, and it might have been a party to the conversion. As to the bank and Fairchild, the second conclusion is therefore wrong.
As to Fern, it is to be assumed that, knowing Young was wrong, fully disposing of the property of others, he aided him in perpetrating the wrong. He was a party to the wrongful purpose and the wrongful act. He was Young’s agent and wheat inspector, assisted him in operating the elevator and managing its business, and in all the transactions above set forth. He did not stand, therefore, in the position oikan agent or servant,- who, acting solely for his principal or master, and by his direction, and without knowing of any wrong, disposes of property which the latter has no right to dispose of. While all the authorities agree that knowledge of his want of title is not necessary to the liability of one who, without right, disposes of, or causes to be disposed of, the property of another, there is some difference between them as to the liability of the innocent agent or servant; the cases in New York holding that the conversion is his act, while those in Massachusetts hold that the conversion is to be deemed the act of the principal or master, and not that of the agent or servant. But we are not called on to determine the question; for none of the authorities deny that in a case where the agent or servant not only knows that disposing of the property is a wrong, but to some extent directs as well as performs it, he is to be deemed a party to the wrong. This was the position of Fern. As to him the second conclusion is correct.
The decision upon the third conclusion necessarily follows that upon the second. As to Fern, it is correct; as to the bank, erroneous.
The cause will be remanded to the court below, and it is directed to modify its judgment to conform to this opinion.