Court Opinion

ID: 6990692
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 03:24:25.425225+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:09:36.355168
License: Public Domain

Garrett, P. J. The quasi negotiable character of ware- house receipts was judicially recognized long before the act of the legislature of this State for the regulation of public warehouses was passed. Prior to that time the principle applied by the courts was, that the delivery of warehouse receipts is a symbolic delivery of the property itself, and that it has the same effect as the delivery of the property and can have no greater, and that a transfer of the warehouse receipt, by the person in possession of it, gives no higher title than would the transfer of the property by the same person. Burton v. Curyea, 40 Ill. 320. And in the notes to Lickbarrow v. Mason, Smith’s Leading Cases, Vol. 1, Part 2d (7 Am. Ed.), 1197, it is-said thatCl the exigencies of trade have called a class of instruments into being, which are, substantially, acknowledgments by public or private agents, that they have received merchandise, and from whom or on whose account, and usage has made the possession of such documents eqnivalent to the possession of the property itself; and to this class helong warehouse receipts.” There are numerous authorities bearing more or less directly upon the question presented here and among them the following: Broadwell v. Howard, 77 Ill. 305; Western Union R. R. Co. v. Wagner et al., 65 Ill. 197; Chicago Dock Co. et al. v. Foster et al., 48 Ill. 507; Canadian Bank v. McCrea, 106 Ill. 281; Mida v. Geissman, 17 Ill. App. 207; Sargent v. Central Warehouse Co., 15 Ill. App. 553; Spangler v. Butterfield, 6 Col. 356; Durr et al. v. Hervey, 44 Ark. 301; Fourth Nat’l Bank v. St. Louis Cotton Com. Co. et al., 11 Mo. App. 333 ; State v. Bryant, 63 Md. 66; Hale et al. v. Mil. Dock Co., 29 Wis. 482; Griswold v. Haven, 25 N. Y. 595 ; Second Nat’l Bank v. Walbridge et al., 19 Ohio St. 419; Gill & Co. v. Frank, 12 Oregon, 507 ; Soloman v. Buslmell, 11 Oregon, 277; Benjamin on Sales (2 Am. Ed.), Sections 815-823; 2 Daniel on Neg. Inst. § 1713; .Planter’s Rice Mill Co., v. Merch.Nat’l Bank of Savannah, 3 S. E. Rep. 327. Conceding this array of authority “ speaks a various language ” on the question under discussion, as well as on other kindred and closely allied questions, we think the current of opinion in this country supports the doctrine of the note to Smith’s Leading Cases, quoted above. That such is the rule adopted in this State, and that warehouse receipts issued by private agents or by warehousemen, other than those described as public warehousemen, are placed on the same footing as bills of lading, in respect to their quasi negotiable character, we have no reason to doubt. If that be true, the case of Western Union B. B. Co. v. Wagner et ah, supra, must be held to control the case at bar. In that case the vendor of the goods delivered them to the railroad company and authorized the railway agent to issue a bill of lading to the vendee, with the verbal agreement between vendor, vendee and the railway agent that the property should not, in fact, be shipped, until the residue of the purchase money should be paid. The bill of lading was issued and placed in possession of the vendor, and he then handed it to the purchaser, one Hewitt, who, without notice of said verbal agreement, advanced to the vendee the value of the property on the pledge of the receipt. The court held that the document might be regarded either as a bill of lading or a warehouse receipt, but that in either case, the vendee was placed in possession of the property, so far as third persons knowing nothing of the verbal arrangement might become interested; that such verbal arrangement" was not of the slightest avail against Hewitt. The position of appellants here is not more favorable than that of the vendor in the Wagner case. The receipt to Smibert was issued after the first advance made to him by appel. lants. They might have provided in the receipt for their own protection, had they so desired, and unless they intended to waive the benefit of the lion for advances which Smibert had consented to, it was culpable negligence on their part to issue a receipt which is commonly regarded as representative of the property, without any mention therein of any claim except for storage. Appellee held other securities which appellant insists should have been exhausted before it is allowed to resort to the property covered by the warehouse receipt. That suggestion may possibly be listened to in a court of equity, but in this suit at law it is of no force. There was no error in the instruction given for the plaintiff. The judgment is affirmed. Judgment affirmed.