198 Mo. App. 619 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1918
On the 17th and 18th days of July, 1916, J. O. Walters of Pickton, Texas, shipped to Kansas City, Missouri, three carloads of peaches on bills of lading to shipper’s order with instructions to notify Ward Brothers. He drew two drafts on Ward Brothers at Kansas -City, one for $322.10 to which he attached the bill of lading issued on one car, and the other for $539.10, to which he attached the bills of lading issued upon .the other two cars. These drafts were not made payable to Walter’s order but were payable to the First State Bank of Pickton, Texas.
On the 18th and 19th days of July, 1916, Ward Brothers' telegraphed the hank guaranteeing 75 cents per bushel on one car shipped by Walters and 85 cents per bushel on the other two. After receiving these telegrams, the Bank received from Walters the said drafts, aggregating $861.20, with the hills of lading thereto, attached, and deposited to Walters’ credit on his checking account the amount of said drafts, less $2.15 exchange. The Bank then sent the drafts to its proper correspondents to be sent to Kansas City for payment by Ward Brothers.
One of said cars arrived in Kansas City on July 20th and the other two on the 21st, but, as the bills of lading with drafts attached had not come, Ward Brothers requested Walters to have the railroad telegraph a release of the cars without payment of said drafts. Walters thereupon signed an order directed to the station agent at Pickton to release said cars without taking up the hills of lading, thus allowing the shipments to he delivered to Ward Brothers without payment of the drafts. The agent before wiring the release took the order, thus signed by Walters, to the Bank and the cashier wrote the Bank’s name above that of Walters with the word “By” in front of his name. Thereupon, the agent sent to Ward Brothers the desired release and Ward Brothers obtained possession of the cars without a surrender of the hills of lading or payment of the drafts. Ward Brothers then-sold the peaphes, received the proceeds thereof and had said proceeds in their possession.
On the return day of the writ, Ward Brothers, the gárnishees,. answered saying Walters had shipped them the three cars of fruit and that the amount due on said cars was $520.62; that garnishees owed said amount, except $123.75, which Walters owed them, leaving a net amount of $396.87 owing by the garnishees to the shipper. The answer then stated that garnishees had been informed that the First State Bank of Pickton, Texas, claimed said amount and that garnishees were unable to state whether said sum of $396.87 was owing by them to defendant Walters or should go to the plaintiff, and garnishees asked the court to direct them to whom to pay said sum, and to allow garnishees a reasonable amount for answer fee. No denial of this answer was filed-by the plaintiffs or anyone else.
On the 20th of September, 1916, the Bank filed its interplea claiming that after the shipment, but before the oars were delivered to Ward Brothers and prior , to the garnishment, the fruit contained in said cars was sold and delivered to the Bank, for which it had paid full value, and it thereupon became the owner thereof; and that the money garnished in the hands of Ward Brothers was not the property of Walters nor did he. have any interest therein.
Plaintiffs’ answer to the interplea was a general denial.
A trial of the issues made on the interplea' was had before a jury, and at the close of all the evidence the interpleader Bank asked, and the court gave, a peremptory instruction to return a verdict in the interpleader’s favor. This was done, and thereupon the court rendered judgment directing the garnishees to pay the sum of
The original proceeding in this case is the attachment suit, and the interplea hy the Bank is another and independent action engrafted thereon, the purpose of which was to recover, as in replevin, the property attached. Hence, on the trial of the interplea, the inter-pleader assumed the position of plaintiff and had the burden of proof. [Torreyson v. Turnbaugh, 105 Mo. App. 439; Keet-Roundtree Dry Goods Co. v. Hodges, 175 Mo. App. 484.] This was recognized in the trial as the interpleader was accorded the opening and closing. Plaintiffs, therefore, complain of the action of the court in grariting- a peremptory instruction to find for inter-' pleader urging that the latter had the burden of proof and the testimony in support of its case, was oral and not conclusive upon plaintiffs; in which situation the credibilty of the witnesses was for the jury. It is well settled that in such circumstances the court-is without power to direct a verdict. [Fehrenbach Wine & Liquor Co. v. Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Ry. Co., 180 Mo. App. 1, 10; Warren v. New York Life Ins. Co., 182 S. W. 96.] So that if the circumstances of the case are such as to bring it within the rule, it calls for a reversal and remanding of the cause upon this point alone.
Considering whether the case comes within the above rule, it will be observed that the question at issue in the trial of the interplea was: Who was the owner of the peaches (and consequently entitled to their proceeds) at the time of their delivery to Ward Brothers? The theory of the Interpleader Bank is that when Walters delivered the drafts and the bills of lading to the Bank and received credit for the' amount thereof as a deposit in his account, this was a sale of the peaches to the Bank and, therefore, at the time the peaches were received by Ward Brothers, the Bank, and not Walters, owned them and was entitled to their proceeds; hence the proceeds were not subject to
It is disclosed by the evidence of Interpleader’s cashier, its witness, that when the drafts were returned, the Bank charged the amount thereof hack to Walters’ account and that at that time there was enough and more than enough funds on deposit to Walters’ credit to reimburse the Bank, hut that after ,tne drafts had thus been taken out of Walters’ deposit' account he learned of it and protested against it, but agreed to let matters stand thus “temporarily” on condition that the Bank let him go ahead checking on his account the same as if the amount of the drafts was on deposit to his credit. This the Bank permitted until some time in November, 1916, when it replaced the amount of said drafts to Walters’ credit in his deposit account; that during the larger portion of the time between the charging hack of the drafts and the recrediting of said account with the amount thereof Walters’ account had» more than sufficient funds to take care of said drafts. This charging hack of the drafts to Walters’ account "at a time when there were plenty of funds therein to cover them is a circumstance not in the case of Hass v. Kings County Fruit Co., 183 S. W. 676, and Jefferson Bank v. Merchants Refrigerating Co., 236 Mo. 407, 415, upon which interpleader relies. And it is for this reason that plaintiffs say those cases are not in point.
But interpleader insists that Walters checked out the exact amount of the drafts on the day the Bank, took them, and that when the drafts were returned unpaid and were by the Bank taken out of Walters’ deposit account, Waltérs did not agree to it, but protested, and the Bank, acceding to. Walters’ protests, made an agreement to let matters stand temporarily
What has been said in the foregoing is on the theory that the original transaction between the Bank and Walters was over-the drafts with the bills of lading merely as security therefor. But if the transaction between them was a sale of the peaches to the Bank, then doubtless the Bank could not go back upon. its purchase' and take its money back without Walters’ consent.
Now, it is undoubtedly true that by the delivery to the bank of the bills of lading to shipper’s order, the legal title to the peaches was put in the bank; but this may have been done, not to effect a sale of the peaches to the bank but merely to afford it security, just- as the legal title to property is put in another by way of mortgager, so that whether the transaction was a sale of the peaches to the bank or was merely a transfer of the legal title as security, would depend upon the intention of the parties to be determined in the light of all the circumstances and their conduct in the premises. Now, the evidence is in such shape that different inferences might be drawn from the transaction. In one vieAr of the evidence it might be taken to mean that Walters contracted for a sale of the peaches to Ward Brothers but before delivery he sold the peaches to the Bank and that at the time-they
We are, therefore, of the opinion that the ease should have been submitted to the jury, under proper in
The reversal and remanding of the case on the feature considered, would still leave the question of garnishees’ appeal undisposed of and as this question will arise upon a trial anew, it should be disposed of now.
It will be remembered that the answer of the garnishees says the peaches brought, less expenses and commissions, $520.62, but that Walters owed them $123.75 which they have deducted from $520.62, leaving $396.87 as the amount they owe. The judgment of the court "was to pay over the full $520.62. It was stipulated between the garnishees and the interpleader that the $123.75 was a debt owed by Walters to garnishees over a matter entirely disconnected from the shipments involved. Hence, if before- the peaches came into the interpleader’s hands they were owned by the Bank and not by Walters, the garnishees, if they had notice of the Bank’s' interest therein, could not . apply a part of the proceeds to pay Walters’ debt to them. The attachment in this ease being against a non-resident .and- jurisdiction being obtained only by virtue of the property attached— i. e., the money garnished, the proceeding is one in rem. [7 R. C. L. 777.] Being a proceeding in rem it is good against the world as to that property, and if any out
The garnishees have asked the court to determine to whom the court shall pay the debt it owes. True, they say they owe only $396.87, but if interpleader is entitled to recover at all, garnishees do not owe Walters anything, but owe the whole $520.62 to the interpleader. It would seem that having asked the court to direct, “them to whom to pay the amount due, and the case being one in rem, and the garnishees not asking to participate in the litigation between plaintiffs and the interpleader to determine the ownership of the proceeds, the garnishees must abide the result of-that litigation and if the interpleader wins they' will have’ to pay the whole $520.62 while if plaintiffs win, the garnishees will have to pay only the $396.87.
The .judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded.