Court Opinion

ID: 4936345
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-24 01:15:56.242625+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:14:42.078658
License: Public Domain

Emery, J.
At the return term of this trustee process October, 1897, Mr. Morse, the trustee, made his disclosure in due form under oath in which he stated that, at the date of the service of the process upon him, he had in his hands $1373 75-100 due Richman the principal defendant for horses sold by Richman to him. He *367did not then disclose that any other person claimed the fund. The case thereafter lay dormant until the January term, 1900, when it was brought up, and according to the bill of exceptions, “At a hearing on the question, as to whether or not the alleged trustee should be charged, the presiding justice adjudged the trustee chargeable for the funds in his hands.” The only issue regularly formed in the case was between the plaintiff and the trustee, and upon that issue between them the ruling was, of course, right and the trustee did not except.
One Emelinq W. Richman, however, did file a bill of exceptions as claimant of the funds disclosed, and this bill of exceptions the presiding justice allowed. So far as the record before us shows, Mrs. Richman is not in a position to have exceptions allowed or considered. Her appearance as claimant was entered upon the docket by counsel at sometime, but it does not appear when. She did not file any petition to be “admitted as a party to the suit so far as respects her title to the goods, effects or credits in question.” She did not file any pleadings or allegations of fact, nor take any steps to form an issue between her and the plaintiff upon which the court, with or without a jury, could render a judgment which should bind and protect them and the trustee. Her exceptions, therefore, should in strictness be dismissed without further consideration. R. S., c. 86, § 32; Bunker v. Grilmore, 40 Maine, 88; Hardy v. Colby, 42 Maine, 381; Dalton v. Dalton, 48 Maine, 42; Thompson v. Reed, 77 Maine 425.
All the three parties, however, have signed and filed a written stipulation submitting to the court the question between the plaintiff and the claimant as to which of them is entitled to the fund, disclosed by the trustee as in his hands, and agreeing to be bound by its judgment thereon. We venture, therefore, to consider what the evidence proves upon that question.
The undisputed evidence shows these facts; — Mr. Morse (the trustee) a horse dealer at Bangor had often bought horses from Mr. Chas. F. Richman (the principal defendant) a horsedealer at East Buffalo, N. Y. May 6, 1897, Richman wrote Morse proposing to sell him a car load of horses on thirty days time. May 9 following, *368Morse telegraphed Richman as follows: “ Ship sixteen or eighteen if you can ship them worth the money, good big stock, one pair extra drivers, make thirty days draft, answer.” May 10th, Richman shipped a car load of twenty horses to Morse at Bangor, and the same day drew his draft on him against the horses so shipped on thirty days for $1746 — payable to his, Richman’s, own order. This draft he indorsed and delivered to Jones Bros, in part payment of his note held by them. Mrs. Emeline W. Richman, the claimant, was Richman’s surety on this note, and paid it, and Jones Bros, thereupon indorsed and transferred the draft to her.
The horses arrived at Bangor on the evening of May 13, and were the same evening unloaded from the car by Morse and placed in his barn. The next morning, May 14', this trustee process was served upon Morse, whereupon he telegraphed Richman, the consignor, as follows: “Have been trusteed to-day action against you. Court makes me hold funds. Can’t honor draft, see letter.” A few days later he sold the horses. Before the return term of the trustee process he was notified that Mrs. Richman held the draft and upon it claimed the proceeds of the horses. As already stated, however, he made no mention of this in his disclosure, but Mrs. Richman has voluntarily appeared and submitted her claim to the judgment of the court.
Upon the foregoing facts there can be no question that Mrs. Richman is entitled to the' fund, that fund, being the proceeds of the horses, against which the draft held by her was drawn by the consignor at the time of the shipment, and in pursuance of the consignee’s direction at the time of the purchase. The draft drawn and negotiated under such circumstances was, at least, as an equitable assignment of the fund, which would be operative against a subsequent attachment by trustee process. Bobbins v. Bacon, 3 Maine, 346; Littlefield v. Smith, 17 Maine, 327; Simpson v. Bibber, 59 Maine, 196; Exchange Bank v. McLoon, 73 Maine, 498; Jenness v. Wharff, 87 Maine, 307.
But at the hearing in January, 1900, more than three years after filing his disclosure as above stated, Mr. Morse testified as a witness that, at the time he unloaded the horses from the car and *369put them in his barn after their arrival, he was very much dissatisfied with them, and did not accept them; — that after sending the telegram above quoted he wrote the consignor Richman, that the horses were not what he expected.
The plaintiff claims that this testimony proves that the horses were not accepted, — that, therefore, Mr. Morse at the time of the service of the trustee process did not owe the consignor, or his assignee, anything for the horses, but the horses were still the property of the consignor, “entrusted to and deposited in his [Morse’s] possession,” — and that the draft did not operate to pass any title to the horses. Assuming for the moment that the horses were not accepted and remained the property of the consignor, it may be questioned whether they were “entrusted to and deposited in his [Mórse’s] possession,” in the statutory sense of those words so as to be attachable by trustee process. The mere fact that the goods of one are in the possession of another and left there by the owner does not make them attachable by trustee process. The statutory words imply some fiduciary or at least contractual relation between, the owner and depositary as to the custody of the goods. Howard v. Card, 6 Maine, 353 ; Skowhegan Bank v. Farrar, 46 Maine, 293. In Grant v. Shaw, 16 Mass. 342, it was declared that the consignee of goods could not be held as trustee of the consignor until he had accepted the goods. In Staniels v. Raymond, 4 Cushing, 314, the owner left a cow with the alleged trustee upon trial to be purchased by the trustee if satisfactory. Before the expiration of the time allowed for the trial, the trustee declined to purchase and re-delivered the cow, but the owner nevertheless left the cow in the possession of the trustee. It was held that the trustee was not chargeable. The decision was put on the ground that to make a depositary of goods chargeable as trustee, he must be under some contractual obligation to the owner to return or pay for the goods in his possession.
It would seem, therefore, that if the plaintiff is correct in his assumption that the horses were not accepted, the consignee Morse could not be charged at all as trustee, and that exceptions by the trustee would have to be sustained.
*370We have no occasion, however, to decide that question. These exceptions are by the claimant alone. We are satisfied, also, that Morse did in effect accept the horses, and was chargeable as trustee for their price or value. He took the horses from the possession of the carrier into his own possession. He did not notify the carrier or consignor of any non-acceptance. He merely wrote the consignor that the horses were not what he expected. A few days afterward, without consulting the consignor, he sold the horses. This he could not have rightfully done unless he had accepted them.' His telegram on the day of the service of the trustee process, and his sworn disclosure within six months thereafter, show his then understanding that he had accepted them. These acts and statements, at or near the time, far outweigh his testimony given over three years afterward.
It is urged in argument that the draft was made in fraud of creditors. We find no evidence of fraud. The indorsees were all creditors of the drawer, and it was lawful for him to pay them rather than the plaintiff so far as this process is concerned.
From the above findings of law and fact it follows that the fund in the hands of the trustee belongs to Mrs. Richman, the claimant. This conclusion requires the exceptions to be sustained, and the trustee to be discharged from this suit. Porter v. Bullard, 26 Maine, 448.
According to the stipulation filed, it is also to be adjudicated that the fund in the hands of the trustee, Morse, belongs to the claimant, Mrs. Richman. Although the case came to the law court technically upon exceptions, yet upon exceptions in a trustee process the law court has full power, not only to sustain or overrule the exceptions, but also to re-examine and determine the whole case, to remand it for further proceedings, or to make such final disposition of it as justice requires. R. S., c. 86, § 79.

Exceptions sustained.

Trustee discharged from this suit.

Fund adjudged to the claimant.