218 F. 769 | 1st Cir. | 1915
The Massachusetts Hide Corporation, and its assets, were put into the hands of Jeremiah Smith, Jr., as receiver, by a decree of the Circuit Court for the* District of Massachusetts, on September 13, 1910. Whatever the authority for or purpose of the entry of that decree, .so far as the present proceedings are concerned, the appointment and the results thereof are to be treated as insolvency liquidation, and the rights of the parties are to be governed by the equitable principles which adhere to general proceedings in insolvency and bankruptcy, and all titles and liens-with reference to the property involved are to be adjusted on that basis. The Massachusetts Hide Corporation had been, and was at the time of the appointment of the receiver, engaged in importing hides, and selling them, in the usual course of business of an importer. It procured its credit for the purchase of hides in foreign parts partly from Brown Bros. & Co., who are the appellants interested in this proceeding. The documentary obligations incurred by the corporation to Brown Bros. & Co., through which these letters of credit were obtained, stipulated for the repayment of advances, with interest at the rate of 5 per cent, per an-num, “or at the current tate if it be above that,” with a commission of one-half of 1 per cent., increasing by graduated steps to 1J4 per cent.
Effacing for all the practical purposes of these transactions Brown, Shipley & Co., of London, who are the foreign branch, or house, of Brown Bros. & Co., who are to be regarded as identical therewith, each of the obligations incurred by the Massachusetts Hide Corporation as
‘And hereby recognize and admit the ownership of Brown, Shipley & Co. in, and their right and that of Brown Bros. & Co., to the possession and disposal of, all goods and the proceeds thereof, for which Brown, Shipley & Co. may enter into any engagements in virtue of this credit, as also to the possession of all bills of lading for and policies of insurance on such goods, until such time as any indebtedness or liability existing as against in favor of Brown, Shipley & Co., or Brown Bros. & Co., under the said credit or otherwise, shall have been fully paid up and discharged. And in the event of either of them hereafter intrusting said goods to for the purpose of sale or otherwise, hereby consent that their right to repossess themselves of the same or any proceeds thereof may be exercised at their discretion. Any proceeds of said goods coming into their hands are to be applied against the expenses of Brown, Shipley & Co., under this credit, or against any other indebtedness of to them or to Brown Bros. & Co., including all expenses incurred by either of them, and commission of sale and guaranty.
“This obligation is to continue in force, and to be applicable to all transactions, notwithstanding any change in the individuals composing the respective firms, parties to or concerned in this contract, or either of them, or in that of the user of this credit, whether such change shall arise from the accession of one or moro new parties, or from the death or secession of any partner or partners.”
The various credits received, and the obligations accompanying the same, were numerous, and succeeded or overlapped each other. The transactions permitted sales by the Massachusetts Hide Corporation of various importations from time to time, and the pledging of the goods imported to commission merchants or others; so that, after such sales or pledges, the equities which belonged to Brown Bros. & Co. were represented by the buyer’s obligations in the hands of the Massachusetts Hide Corporation, and by the balances of values in excess of what may have been advanced by purchasers or the commission merchants.
In connection with the commencement of this litigation, all the remaining assets of the Massachusetts Hide Corporation which had been obtained by importations financed in the manner we have pointed out, and all the proceeds, or remnants thereof in excess of the claims of purchasers or commission merchants, arising in the manner we have pointed out, had been gathered together and liquidated, and the results thereof deposited by substitution in the hands of Brown Bros. & Co. as stakeholders, to stand in lieu of the property from which those amounts were gathered together, and this litigation is over the sums thus secured.
“It was the understanding and intention of all parties to these agreements that whenever the absolute title to a particular lot 'of rods so delivered upon conditions should be necessary to the wire company for the profitable conduct of its business, it should then be possible to it to obtain such title; to obtain it, if need be, contrary to the will of the applicants by a sufficient tender. And as it was the expectation of all parties that importation and conditional sales and deliveries would succeed each other to an indefinite point in the future, and that for these an overlapping succession of acceptances would come into existence, extending to a constantly receding date, it is not within the reasonable interpretation of the contract to say that it contemplated the burdening of each lot of rods with this accumulating indebtedness; nor to say that the applicants required from the wire company the payment of acceptances before maturity as a condition precedent to obtaining title to rods which it had paid for. It is rather to be interpreted as permitting it to obtain such, absolute title by paying for the rods, and by paying in addition such other indebtedness from it to them as should then be due.”
The above is a very plausible view,'and might well have been acceded to under many circumstances. The questions, however, are strictly commercial, involving international transactions and complex conditions, as to which local views are very ineffectual. At any rate, the language of the contracts here is so positive and clear that, as we view it, it cannot be overcome by general considerations such as were urged by the Supreme Court of Connecticut, as eminent as that court may be. In view of the very complex conditions and of the many contingencies to which the business was subject, it seems to us proper to hold that the parties had the right to protect themselves by whatever provisions for emergencies they deemed proper to resort to. Therefore we are compelled to support Brown Bros. & Co. in maintaining the rights to which the language adopted by them apparently gives them a clear title. If this involves any embarrassment of the kind referred to by the Supreme Court of Connecticut, it is one of the parties’ own selection, plainly and deliberately entered into. The transactions were evidently done on so close a margin, and the Massachusetts Hide Corporation was given so free a hand in dealing with the business in accordance with the ordinary emergencies of the situation, that Brown Bros. & Co. are entitled to be fully supported in whatever provisions they stipulated for. Commercial transactions of this character need broad support and are entitled to receive it. This solves the proposition that the liens claimed by Brown Bros. & Co. are to be supported in whatever may be the conditions of maturity of various obligations in which they are or may be interested.
This leaves us to consider further only certain conditions with reference to which Brown Bros. & Co. claim support from the doctrines of subrogation, and for the reasons we have stated the effect is that, under these doctrines as applied to insolvency or bankrupt administration of
On this branch of the case the question relates to the rights of parties who have been placed in the relation of suretyship, or its equivalent, by implication, to be subrogated by the application of property to which no one has any specific right to the contrary. This right of sub-rogation is sometimes self-efficient, and may operate without the assistance of any conscious action. The broad principles of the doctrines of subrogation were sufficiently explained for this case by this court in November, 1911, in Merchants’ & Miners’ Transp. Co. v. Robinson-Baxter Towing Co., 191 Fed. 769, 772, 113 C. C. A. 427, and sequence 194 Fed. 361, 114 C. C. A. 321; 225 U. S. 704, 32 Sup. Ct. 837, 56 L. Ed. 1265. The case there cited of Wager v. Providence Insurance Co., 150 U. S. 99, 14 Sup. Ct. 55, 37 L. Ed. 1013, demonstrates that these doctrines may rest less on the conscious action of the parties concerned than on the facts as they exist, provided especially that the. parties concerned are not innocent sufferers having antagonistic equities.
“I do find, however, that the balances paid over by the several consignees are identified as coming solely from two possible alternative sources and no others, and the identical moneys represented, in whole or in part, either
“(a) Proceeds of leather imported under letters of credit issued by Brown Bros. & Co.; or
“(b) Proceeds of other leather on which the consignees had a lien for the same debt, and in which no cují except the corporation, or the receiver representing the rights of the corporation, had any title or interest, either at the date of the receivership or at the date of final liquidation of the consignees’ claims for advances,” etc.
The findings of the master in these respects apparently are not disputed. Consequently, on those facts he ruled that Brown Bros. & Co. are entitled to these balances, with a single exception of a specific amount of $759.21 named as disallowed by the master, which is not disputed. As there were no intervening equities, and as the right of Brown Bros. & Co. to be subrogated does not depend on these detailed facts not known, and the debts for which all the goods were pledged
The decree of the District Court is reversed, and the case is remanded to that court to render a judgment in accordance with our opinion passed down the 7th day of January, 1915, and the appellants recover their costs of appeal. .