11 F. 19 | D. Or. | 1882
On September 27, 1880, the plaintiff was a foreign corporation doing a banking business at Portland, Oregon, and the defendants George Marshall and J. M. Ten Bosch, as George Marshall & Co., were, engaged in the business of buying and selling wheat at the same place. They usually purchased wheat from the dealers and producers in the interior of the state, and shipped it in sack by boat and rail to Portland, where they stored it in the warehouses on the river front until disposed of for shipment abroad. When so disposed of, the vessels carrying the grain were usually loaded directly from the warehouse.
On that day, the defendants being desirous of procuring money from time to time to be used in their business during the wheat season, and the plaintiff being also desirous of furnishing the same, the
“ In consideration of advances made and to he made to us from time to time, we hereby agree to repay the same, with interest thereon at the rate of ten per cent, per annum; and we further agree that all moneys and securities for moneys, warehouse, shipping, or other receipts or other securities, which may from time to time be handed in to you by us, whether indorsed over or simply delivered, shall, during the whole time they are in your possession, stand to you as security for any balance that may then be due from us to the said Bank of British Columbia as for said advances or otherwise; we hereby giving to you, for said bank, a lien not alone upon the moneys or other securities now in your hands, but also upon all such to be hereafter and hereunder delivered to you.
“We hereby irrevocably authorize and empower you, for the said bank, to sell and dispose of all such personal property, or any part thereof, at public or private sale, after the expiration of ten days’ notice to us, and from the proceeds arising therefrom to pay tlio principal and interest, and all charges that shall ho then due, and the costs of sale, and the balance, if any, to pay over to us or our representatives on demand.”
Then follows a clause stating that “by the schedule hereto annexed we [the defendants] enumerate the securities referred to herein.”
The proposition contained in the letter was accepted by the plaintiff. The schedule' referred to is written below the letter upon the same sheet, and simply consists of a list of various lots of wheat and flour, the warehouse receipts for which were issued and delivered by the warehouseman to the manager of the plaintiff by direction of the defendants, and of certain promissory notes made or indorsed by them to the plaintiff. The first entry in these schedules is dated September 28, 1880, and reads, “5,272 sks. wheat; No. B[eceipt] 99; Greenwich” [dock]; and the second is dated October 1, 1880, and reads, “1,630 sks. wheat; No. E. 105; Pacific.” The last one is dated February 2,1881. Between these dates the defendants caused to he issued and delivered to the plaintiff’s manager warehouse receipts from Portland warehousemen for 90,484 sacks of wheat, 13,096 half sacks of flour, and also the promissory note of the defendant Marshall for $1,000, and that of--Lent for $275, from which the bank realized the sum of $192,745.30. During the same period the plaintiff advanced to the defendants sums of money which, with the interest charged there, amount to $204,943.48. And
The defendants, by their answer, allege that this wheat was “deposited” with and “pledged” to the plaintiff as security for the advances aforesaid, and it carelessly and negligently caused said wheat to be stored upon the lower tier of certain Portland wharves, known as the Pacific, Jones’, and Smith’s wharves, at a place where the Wallamet river was accustomed to overflow; that about the middle of January, 1881, it did negligently permit 27,690 sacks of said wheat, of the value of $47,501.76, to be damaged by a rise in the water of said Wallamet river, whereby the value thereof was diminished by $20,046.75; and pleaded the same as a counter-claim against the demand of the plaintiff, and pray judgment against the bank for the balance of $8,748.57.
The answer- also contains- allegations to the effect that certain of said securities were sold by the plaintiff without notice to the defendants, and that a portion of the wheat represented by said securities was sold for less than its fair market value, whereby the latter were damaged in the additional sum of $814.20. But on the trial these allegations were abandoned.
The plaintiff replied and denies that the defendants ever deposited “with or pledged” to the plaintiff the property mentioned in the schedules aforesaid; denies that it stored the wheat on said wharves carelessly or at all, or so neglected to care for it while there, or that the defendants suffered any damage by the negligence of the plaintiff concerning said wheat, and alleges that the warehouse receipts for said wheat were issued and delivered to the plaintiff’s manager, W. W„ Francis, in his own name, who thereupon indorsed them to the plaintiff, who thereby acquired, under and by virtue of the stipulations contained in the letters aforesaid, “a lien as by mortgage or hypothecation upon the wheat represented” by them; that the defendants selected the wharves upon which said wheat was stored and stored the same thereon, and had the same in their “actual possession” all the time it was' so stored, and cared for it as they could or thought best, to prevent it from being injured by a rise in the river, and that the plaintiff was under no obligation to take any care thereof; that in January, 1881, the Wallamet river “suddenly and unexpectedly rose to a great and unusual height, ” by means of which said sacks of wheat were damaged as alleged without the negligence or fault of any one.
It is a matter of common knowledge and general notoriety in this country, and was so assumed by counsel in their arguments and by the court in its charge to the jury, that the Columbia river does not rise in the winter season, but is generally then at a lower stage than its southern tributary, the Wallamet, and that the sudden overflow of the latter on the Pacific docks on the evening of January 14th was largely due to the unprecedented rise in the Columbia, which, by that time, had reached the mouth.of the Wallamet and backed up the water therein.
Receipts were issued to Mr. Francis by the direction of the warehouseman of the Pacific docks for the 1,500 sacks of wheat removed to the Greenwich dock, and the wheat was afterwards sold by the plaintiff on due notice to the defendants, and the net proceeds applied on their account. The sacks of damaged wheat were after-wards removed from the Pacific docks, and the contents poured out and dried by Marshall with the consent of the plaintiff, and then sold by the latter, upon due notice to the defendants, and the net proceeds applied in the same way. The receipts given by the Pacific docks to the plaintiff’s manager were to this effect: “Received of W. W. Francis, manager, sacks of wheat for account of W. W. Francis, manager,” upon the conditions, among others, that storage is paid each month, that damage by flood is at owner’s “risk, ” and that the receipt is returned before delivery made. Mr. Francis died before the trial came'off, and his testimony was not heard, and the defendant Ten Bosch had removed to Liverpool without leaving his deposition, so that the testimony of, Marshall was the only evidence, outside of the writings, as to the conversations or intercourse between the plaintiff and the defendants on the subject of the action; nor was there any evidence in the case tending to show that the defendants, prior to this action, ever claimed or asserted that it was the duty of the plaintiff to care for the wheat.
On the argument of the case it was contended for the plaintiff that the issue and delivery of the warehouse receipts, under the letter of the defendants, constituted a mortgage of the property therein described to the plaintiff, by which the right of property in the grain was vested in it, while the possession, with the corresponding duty of caring for it in case of a flood or other danger, remained with the defendants. On the contrary, the defendants insisted that the plaintiff thereby became the pledgee of the property, with the control of the possession thereof, and was, therefore, bound to the use of reasonable care and diligence to prevent it from being injured; and
The error excepted to is so much of the charge as “was given in relation to the legal effect of the contract and the possession of the wheat. ”
On the argument of the motion no question was made by counsel for the defendants as to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict and the finding; but the latter was treated as something immaterial. It was insisted, however, that the court not only erred in construing the contract, but also in assuming that the testimony of
If there is any error in the charge, it must be in the conclusion to which the court came concerning the legal effect of the contract and the acts of the parties thereunder, to which the defendants duly excepted. Whether a transaction amounts technically to a mortgage or a pledge is sometimes a nice question; but the ultimate object of the inquiry is not so much to name the transaction as to ascertain what was the intention and understanding of the parties to it; and therefore such intent, when ascertained, ought to control. In the ease of a pure pledge the creditor takes the possession, actual or constructive, of the goods, while in that of a mortgage there is a transfer of the title to him, but not the possession. 2 Kent, 577, note 1; Story, Bail, §§ 286-7, 297. In all cases, then, where personal property is given as a security for a debt or engagement, accompanied by a change of possession, either actual or constructive, the transaction better comports with the character of a pledge than a mortgage; and where the transaction imports nothing more than giving a security without a sale or change of title of the property, the law favors the conclusion that it was intended as a pledge and not a mortgage. Schouler, Bail, 163. But the rights and obligations of the parties to a pledge may be modified indefinitely by special contract between them, as that the pledge shall be kept, until the default of the pledgor, at some particular place, or by some particular person. Id. 205; St. Losky v. Davidson, 6 Cal. 647.
The issue and delivery of the receipt was only a mode of furnishing the plaintiff with the evidence of the deposit of the pledge at the place agreed upon, and the right to the possession of the same and to dispose of it according to the terms of the bailment. But from the nature of things it was a pledge qualified by the situation and subject of the contract and the conduct of the parties under it, so that the custody of the property, instead of being actually or absolutely in the plaintiff, remained in the warehouseman, subject to its control for the purposes of the contract, and while there at the risk of the “owners” — the defendants — in case of flood.
The contract of the warehouseman with the plaintiff, as appears by his receipt, provided that the wheat while there should be at the risk of the “owners” as to “flood,” and this receipt was issued with this stipulation, and delivered to the plaintiff at the instance and by the direction of the defendants.
The defendants then claimed and still claim that they were the owners of this wheat, and there is no doubt in my mind but that they were. This being so, and nothing appearing to the contrary, they must have been understood, upon delivering the receipts to the plaintiff, as taking the risk of floods while the wheat w7as owned by them and stored in that warehouse, even if there was no other fact in the case tending to prove that such was the understanding.
But admitting that the court erred in its charge to the jury in this respect, and that it should have charged the jury, as contended by the defendants, that the plaintiff was an unqualified pledgee of the wheat, and as such bound to use ordinary care and diligence to prevent it from being injured by the flood, still the motion for a new trial ought not to prevail, because it appears from the special find
There is no doubt but that the court had authority to submit this question to the jury for its determination. Section 212 of the Or. Civil Code provides that the court “in all cases may instruct them, [the jury,] if they render a general verdict, to find upon-particular questions of fact.” And this special finding shall control any general one with which it is inconsistent. Id. § 213.
The submission of particular questions of fact to the jury is a matter wholly within the discretion of the court. Am. Co. v. Bradford, 27 Cal. 365; Taylor v. Ketchum, 5 Rob. 514; S. C. 35 How. 296.
This finding is, therefore, legally a part of the case, and must have such effect as it is entitled to in any subsequent proceeding therein. The question was one upon which the parties gave evidence and submitted argument to the jury. Upon the defendant’s theory of the transaction — that it was simply a pledge, and therefore the plaintiff was bound to use ordinary care and diligence to save the grain from injury — the question was a material one, because they could not maintain their counter-claim for the injury to the wheat, even if the plaintiff was held to be the pledgee thereof, unless they also proved that such injury was the result of its negligence.
Suppose the question had not been submitted, and that the court should now be satisfied that the charge to the jury was erroneous, and that they should have been instructed that it was the duty of the plaintiff to care for the wheat; and suppose the court should also be of the opinion that according to the weight of the evidence given on the trial the plaintiff was not guilty of negligence, — the motion for a new trial would be denied. For the counter-claim of the defendants cannot be maintained upon any view of the law as to whose duty it was to take care of the wheat, unless the plaintiff was guilty of negligence. A new trial is never granted for an error occurring in the progress of the case when it is apparent to the court that upon a retrial the verdict must be the same. Thomp. Charg. Jury, 162.
But this is, if anything, a stronger case against the motion. For the jury, upon the question being submitted to them upon the whole evidence in the ease, have found that there was no negligence. Nor
The motion must be denied and the plaintiff have judgment upon the verdict.