273 F. 660 | 3rd Cir. | 1921
The case has not advanced beyond pleadings. The main facts as pleaded are briefly these:
The Gorgas-Pierie Manufacturing Company bought of Nanyo Boyeki Kaisha, a Limited Company of Japan, a specified quantity of copra at a named price “for shipment from the Orient by steamer during September or October, 1920,” payment by draft on a bank issuing a “confirmed irrevocable letter of credit” in fayor of the seller. Thereupon the Gorgas-Pierie Company procured from the Union National Bank of Philadelphia, and forwarded with the order, a letter of credit, dated August 15, 1920, addressed to the Nanyo Company in Japan. Its relevant parts are the following:
*662 “Yon are hereby authorized to value at sight on ourselves for account of Messrs. Gorgas-Pierie Mfg. Co., Philadelphia, Penna., for any sum or sums not exceeding in all forty-seven thousand two hundred and fifty dollars ($47,250.00). * * * Drafts to be accompanied by Invoice, Consular Invoice, and full set of Bills of Lading to be dated during September or October, 1920, in an Oriental port, for shipment to Philadelphia. * * *
“This Credit becomes void if not used on or before December 31, 1920.”
On authority of this letter of credit the Nanyo Company drew a draft for $42,643.13 in favor of the Bank of Taiwan, Limited, which, with the letter of credit and specified documents attached, that bank purchased for a valuable consideration without knowledge of defects in the documents and presented the same to the Union National Bank for payment. The Union National Bank refused payment at the direction of the Gorgas-Pierie Company on the assertion by the latter that shipment had not been made during September or October, 1920, as required by its contract with the Nanyo Company; that the bills of lading were falsely dated October 30, 1920; that as a matter of fact the vessel purporting to have issued them was not in port on that date; and that the goods were not shipped until November 4, 1920.
After the draft had been presented and payment refused the GorgasPierie Manufacturing Company filed a bill in equity in the District Court against the Union National Bank of Philadelphia, the Bank of Taiwan, Limited, and Nanyo Boyeki Kaisha, Limited, charging the facts recited and praying for an injunction, preliminary and perpetual, restraining the Bank of Taiwan from demanding and the Union National Bank from paying the amount of the draft in question.
The Union National Bank was brought in by service; the Bank of Taiwan appeared gratis. The Nanyo Company was not served with process; neither did-it appear.
The Union National Bank filed an answer in the nature of a cross-bill praying for an order that the Gorgas-Pierie Company and the Bank of Taiwan interplead. The Gorgas-Pierie Company, by its answer assented. The Bank of Taiwan, answering both the cross-bill and original bill, carefully preserved its legal status as the bona fide holder of a draft drawn on authority of a letter of credit issued by a bank and raised questions of law as to the sufficiency of the bills. There followed several arguments and opinions culminating in an order that the Gorgas-Pierie Company and the Bank of Taiwan interplead.
The theory on which the court directed the Bank of Taiwan to interp'ead with the Gorgas-Pierie Company instead of with the Union National Bank appears in the following excerpt from the opinion:
“Accepting the principle, which we do accept, that in cases of drafts drawn in accordance with a letter of credit, the obligation of the issuer of the letter of credit is measured by its terms and not by that of another contract, in pursuance of which the letter of credit issued, nevertheless, the two contracts are so far coupled, with the knowledge of everyone concerned in such transactions, as that under circumstances such as exist in this case, the issuer of the letter of credit possesses the rights of a stakeholder.” .v
From the order of interpleader based on the reason given the Bank of Taiwan brought this appeal, charging errors to the trial court for not disposing of questions of law on the pleadings as well as for en
As there are three parties to this suit we have first to determine whether this is a three-sided contest; or, — as the order of interpleader would seem to denote, — whether it is a two-sided contest; and, if so, then to ascertain between which two of the three parties the issue lies.
On the other hand, if the two banks were ordered to interplead, the Bank of Taiwan would plead as though in a suit brought by itself against the Union National Bank on the obligation of the latter alone, and the Union National Bank, being more than a stakeholder, would make such defense on its obligation as it had of its own and such as could be validly supplied it by the Gorgas-Pierie Company, its customer. As to the admissibility of such defense, we, of course, express no opinion.
We are constrained to think that in his earnest desire to level this controversy the learned trial judge required the wrong parties to interplead. We therefore direct that the order of interpleader be reversed.