102 Mo. App. 158 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1903
Plaintiff is a corporation. In August, .1901, and for several years prior thereto, it, as lessee, operated a lead and zinc-producing mine in Jasper county, known as the Cornfield mine and made weekly sales of the products of the mine in carload lots. For two years previous to August, 1901, one T. C. M olloy made weekly purchases of the lead ore plaintiff had for sale for cash on delivery in carload lots f. o. b. cars. The plaintiff had a private switch track near its mine which connected with the Missouri Pacific railroad, and cars were set in on the switch by the railroad company on the orders of plaintiff, for its convenience in loading its ore. It was the custom for Molloy in person, or by agent, to appear at plaintiff’s office about the middle of each week and state the price he would pay for lead ore that week. If the price was satisfactory, the plaintiff would weigh and load its lead into the cars, seal them up and give Molloy the weights, when Molloy would pay for the ore, bill out the cars and send them forward. One L. B. Templeton was the purchasing agent of Molloy, in the Carterville district, and made about all of his purchases from the plaintiff, and bills of lading frequently were made out in Templeton’s name. Don D. Molloy, a son of T. C. Molloy, was his general agent and had entire charge of his office and usually looked after the shipments of ore and procured the bills of lading. The principal office of the plaintiff was in Joplin, Missouri. W. D. Fisher was its general superintendent, but W. C. Glenn was the superintendent of the Cornfield mine and looked after the loading of
The Markle Lead Works, a corporation, has its office in the Rialto Building, in the city of St. Louis; its plant is east of the river at Granite City, Ulinois.
The Miners’ Bank of Joplin is a hanking corporation located at Joplin, Missouri.
On August 2, 3, and 5, 1901, the plaintiff loaded two carloads of lead ore on cars standing on its private switch. The loading of the cars was superintended by Glenn, and after being loaded were sealed by him to protect the ores from theft. About the middle of the week Templeton, the agent of Molloy, appeared at the office of plaintiff near Carterville and told Glenn the price of lead ore for that week would be $23.25 per thousand. Glenn agreed to the price and gave Temple-ton a memorandum of the weight of one of the cars that was then loaded and told him that he would not have the other car ready until Monday morning. On Monday morning Templeton telephoned to him for the weight of the second car for the purpose, he said, of making a report to his company. Glenn gave him the weight. On August 8th, Don D. Molloy got from the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company, at its commercial office at Joplin, bills of lading for each of the ears showing the numbers of the cars, the pounds of ore each contained, that they were received from L. D. Templeton, and were consigned to the Markle Lead Works, Granite City, Illinois. Late in the evening of the same day Don D. Molloy presented these bills of lading to the cashier of the Miners’ Bank of Joplin to- which he attached a draft drawn by T. C. Molloy in favor of the bank on the Markle Lead Works for $2,203.08, the supposed value of the shipment. The next morning, August 9th, the cashier entered a credit of $2,203.08 to Molloy’s account with the bank and forwarded the bill of lading with the draft to its correspondent in St. Louis, the Commercial Bank. The Markle Lead Works refused
The Markle Lead Works answered that it owed either the plaintiff or the Miners’ Bank the value of the ore ($1,956.90) but did not know to which of them the money should be paid and asked that the Miners ’ Bank of Joplin be required to interplead for the money and that it be allowed to pay the money into court and for its costs, and go hence without day. The court permitted the Markle Lead Works to pay the money into court and ordered the bank to interplead for the same. The bank appeared and by its interplea alleged the transfer of the bills of lading to it with the draft attached; that it in good faith cashed said draft and placed the proceeds to the credit of T. C. Molloy; that it accepted and cashed the draft on the faith of the transfer of the bills of lading to it by Molloy and alleged that the transfer of said bills transferred to it the two carloads of lead ore.
The answer of plaintiff to the interplea alleged that plaintiff never parted with its title to the two carloads of ore; that it never delivered it to Molloy or his agent Templeton, and that its ears were taken from its private switch track without its knowledge or consent; that its
The bank filed a reply to this answer in which it is stated that the plaintiff permitted Molloy to take the cars of ore without first paying for them and that it was and had been a custom in the usual course of business between plaintiff and Molloy to permit Molloy to take possession of the cars of lead and to permit him to take out bills of lading in his own name, or that of another, and to pay for the ore subsequent to the taking out and shipping of the ore.
On the issues thus made up the cause was tried before the chancellor, who, after hearing the evidence, rendered judgment in favor of the interpleader; from which judgment plaintiff duly appealed.
Declarations of law were asked by the plaintiff, some of which were given, others were refused. Plaintiff assigns as error the refusal of declarations of law. As this is strictly an equitable proceeding (Duke, Lennon & Co. v. Duke & Woods, 93 Mo. App. 244; Funk v. Avery, 84 Mo. App. 491; Swain v. Bartlett, 82 Mo. App. 642), declarations of law given or refused by the trial court afford no ground for reversal for the reason an appellate court, in an equity case, tries the cause upon the whole evidence de novo, Hall v. Harris, 145 Mo. l. c. 620; Hunter v. Miller, 36 Mo. 143; Palmer v. Crisle, 92 Mo. App. 510, and will affirm the judgment, if for the right party, regardless of the error -in giving or refusing declarations of law. Hall v. Harris, supra. It seems to us that the justice of the judgment depends, upon whether Templeton, Molloy’s agent, was, according to the previous custom of dealing between him and Glenn, plaintiff’s agent, warranted in billing out the two carloads of ore before paying for them or whether he or Don Molloy willfully, wrongfully and unlawfully
Glenn testified that the terms of sale of all ores sold by plaintiff to Molloy were f. o. b. cars on the plaintiff’s piivate track and that the custom was that as soon as the cars were loaded the railroad company took them away and on Saturday evening Templeton would call at the office and pay for the ore loaded during the week; that the billing of the cars was made by the ore buyers themselves and that he had permitted the buyers to obtain the bills of lading from the railroad company and ship right out and that the cars would be taken away on any day of the week whenever loaded and sealed; that Templeton gave checks for the ore whenever he got the weights; that after the cars were loaded they were counted by the purchaser and he presumed he (the purchaser) ordered them away; that he had always received pay on Saturday nights or Monday mornings from the purchasers for the preceding week’s sales; that Molloy paid by checks on the Miners’ Bank of Joplin; that he knew in a general way that as soon as the cars were billed they were sent forward.
In respect to the two cars in controversy, his evidence is that after giving Templeton a memorandum of the weight of one of them, on Saturday, August 3d, he told him he could not be ready for him, until Monday morning, and that Templeton said that he would be over Monday morning and pay for the two. cars and one other that had been previously shipped to Argentina, Kansas; that Templeton called him up on Monday morning and said that he wanted the weight of the second car so as to report to his company and that he could not come over that morning; that witness gave Templeton the weight of the second car and said: “Very well, the cars are on the track, let things remain as they are and come over in the morning.” Templeton did not come over the next morning and witness tried to get him over the
Glenn further testified that he had sold ore in carload lots to Templeton, as agent of Molloy, weekly for two years prior to August, 1901; that the mine produced a great deal more zinc ore than lead and for this reason he never commenced loading lead ore until the middle of the week and loaded it on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays, and that Templeton would come over to his office on Saturday nights and give him a check for the ore loaded that week; that he did not know when the cars were' billed out; but they did not leave the track before the check was given.
He further testified that, as was naturally the custom in his dealings with Templeton, as soon as the ore was loaded the railroad company took the cars away and he did not have a setttlement with Templeton until Saturday night and sometimes not until Monday morning.
We think from the evidence of the witnesses it rea
The evidence, on the part of the interpleader, which is uncontradicted, shows that the bank took the bills of lading and draft in good faith in the ordinary course of business; that it credited the proceeds of the draft to the account of Molloy, who in a few days thereafter, and before the bank learned of the claim of plaintiff to the ore, checked about all of his funds out of the bank. The bills of lading were not indorsed by Templeton.
A bill of lading represents the goods for which it is given and its. delivery passes title as effectually as an actual delivery of the goods, even though the bills are not indorsed. Scharff v. Meyer, 133 Mo. 428; The Davenport National Bank v. Homeyer, 45 Mo. 145; Bank v. Railroad, 62 Mo. App. 531; Alabama National Bank v. Railroad, 42 Mo. App. 284; Means v. Bank of Randall, 146 U. S. 620. But if the goods were stolen from the owner, or their possession obtained tortiously, the owner would not lose his title, if the thief or tortfeasor should obtain a bill of lading for the goods from a common carrier and afterwards for value indorse and deliver the bill to an innocent party. There is no evidence tending to show that Molloy or Templeton stole the ore or that possession of it was gotten by any tortious proceeding, or even that Molloy got it with the intent never to pay for it. But on the contrary we think the -evidence shows that Molloy took possession of the goods under his contract of purchase, not strictly according to its terms, but in a manner and by warrant of a custom of dealing that had been theretofore practiced between his agent and the agent of plaintiff.
We do not think that the evidence makes it plain that Glenn notified either Templeton or Don Molloy that the usual course of dealing should be departed from in respect to these two cars, or insisted that the ore should be paid for before Molloy would be permitted to bill the cars and send them forward. His testimony is vague and indefinite in this particular, while he makes it clear that in fact when a car contracted for by Molloy was loaded and sealed he had the privilege of billing it and having it sent forward before paying for it. In
We think the learned chancellor found for the right party and affirm the judgment.