Reversing.
The appellee Jessamine Canning Company was and is a corporation engaged in the business of canning tomatoes at its plant in Nicholasville, Kentucky. One of the buildings composing its plant is a more or less large structure in one end of which it operated its canning machinery and the other end was used for stacking and storing its canned product. It bought the cans, or some of them — into which its product was placed and sealed ready for the market — from the appellant, Continental Canning Company, which was also a corporation. At the time of the filing of this action in the Jessamine circuit court by the latter company against appellee it (appellee) *Page 366 owed plaintiff, for empty cans purchased of it, the sum of $1,593.21, plus interest, subject, however, to a credit of $223.66 paid on February 14, 1939, the action being filed on May 23, 1939.
At the same time plaintiff procured an attachment against defendant Jessamine Canning Company, which was levied by the sheriff of the county on a number of cases of canned tomatoes stored in its private building, as above described. After the filing of the action — but before any final relief was granted thereunder — the other two appellees, Citizens Union National Bank of Louisville, Kentucky, and Farmers Bank of Nicholasville, Kentucky, intervened in the cause and alleged prior liens in their favor on the property attached by plaintiff, and which they averred were evidenced by what they claimed were "warehouse receipts" which had been issued by an alleged warehouseman (as hereinafter pointed out) and which were pledged to each of them to secure their respective debts due them from defendant and representing loans each of them made to it. Plaintiff controverted the alleged superior or other liens of the interpleaders, followed by the filing of a stipulation of the parties as to certain facts, and by the introduction of some proof, after which the cause was submitted and the court rendered judgment dismissing plaintiff's attachment, though giving it judgment against the Canning Company for the amount of its debt, and sustained the alleged superior liens of the interpleaders — to reverse which plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.
The proof introduced, plus the agreed stipulation, indisputably shows these facts: On July 19, 1938, the defendant Canning Company had a large quantity of can goods on hand which was stacked and stored as hereinbefore indicated. It needed a considerable amount of additional funds to continue the operation of its business and to secure the persons from whom it might obtain loans its directors met and passed a resolution whereby it was agreed to place its stacked or stored can goods in the custody of its bookkeeper, one F.D. Smith, Jr., as "warehouseman." It then ran a wire partition through its building, cutting off the stored and stacked manufactured product from the other part of the building where its machinery was installed and operated, and agreed that Smith, as its warehouseman, should issue *Page 367 negotiable warehouse receipts, which he did, and which were taken and pledged to the interpleaders to secure the loans which they subsequently made to the Canning Company. Smith (the alleged warehouseman) received no additional salary for any such alleged imposed duties upon him, and he continued to remain as the bookkeeper employe of the Canning Company, though he went through the form of executing a bond before the county judge and had it recorded in the county court clerk's office, although no statute relating to warehousemen who may issue such negotiable receipts prescribes for the execution of such a bond except by those operating grain warehouses and who are required, under the provisions of Section 4782 of Baldwin's 1936 Revision of Carroll's Kentucky Statutes, to first obtain a license from the county court clerk of the county to operate agrain warehouse. The following section (4783) requires the person to whom such a license is issued to execute the bond referred to. But we have been cited to no section of any statute, nor have we been able to find any, requiring such bond to be executed by a warehouseman storing other articles of goods or products.
Smith carried a key to the alleged warehouse, as did also the night watchman, and he appears to have delivered the key to any and all persons who claimed to have business in the warehouse. The stored articles (cases of canned tomatoes) were in stacks with no mark on any individual case, but with some sort of designation on each stack — the number of cases in a stack not being shown. There were other provisions in the resolution whereby defendant attempted to exercise the amalgamated authority of manufacturing canned tomatoes and that of conducting a warehouse business among which was a right to sell its stored product if the market began to decline and collect the proceeds and pay whichever interpleader held the receipt for the sold goods. There were other provisions in the resolution relating to matters not pertinent to the questions here involved — or if so they do not require being mentioned, considered or determined in view of the conclusion we have reached.
The case appears to be argued and presented by counsel for both sides without giving due weight to chapter 39 of the Acts of the First Extraordinary Session of our Legislature in 1938, and which is printed *Page 368 on page 1138 of the Session Acts for that year, and appear in Baldwin's 1939 Service Supplement to the Statutes as sections 4767b-1 to and including section 4767b-61. The immediately prior section (4767b-60) repeals "all acts or parts of acts inconsistent with this act"; whilst the section immediately preceding it (4767b-59) excluded the provisions of the act from warehouse receipts made, issued and delivered before the taking effect of the act, which latter date was July 9, 1938, — ten days before the alleged creation of the warehouse, and issuing the alleged receipts pledged to and held by the interpleaders in this case. Section 4767b-58 of the 1938 Act referred to — which is section 58 of the Session Acts supra — defines terms, a part of which says: " 'Warehouseman' means a person lawfully engaged in the business of storing goods for profit." The entire act, as well as all of the terms of chapter 133 relating to warehouses and warehousemen as appearing in the 1936 Revision of Carroll's Kentucky Statutes referred to, would seem to embrace and refer to only receipts issued by persons who were engaged in the business of storing goods — not for themselves only and in their own storage room as a part of their plant — but for others as well, although by special contract no charge is made by the warehouseman for the service.
Before the enactment of the 1938 act, this court in the cases of Mechanics' Trust Co. v. Dandridge, 37 S.W. 288, 18 Ky. Law Rep. 625; Bell Coggeshall Company v. Kentucky Glass Works Company, 48 S.W. 440, 20 Ky. Law. Rep. 1089; and Id.,
To uphold and give legal effect to the rights claimed by the interpleaders in this case would destroy all safeguards of statutory law enacted to provide for constructive notice of liens and incumbrances upon property by persons innocently contracting with reference thereto. The fact of the property being stored in a regular warehouse which is run and operated by a warehouseman engaged in the business for profit (as prescribed in the 1938 act) is notice to one dealing in any manner with the stored property that warehouse receipts might be outstanding against it. He is thereby warned of the necessity of informing himself with reference to the situation. But not so in the circumstances and facts of this case, the essence of which is — that the owner of any commodity of value which may be the subject of traffic in commercial transactions, may place it in his own building designated by him as a warehouse and put one of his employes in charge thereof as a warehouseman with power and authority under the law to issue warehouse receipts (with negotiable qualities) whereby they may be circulated and the holder thereof acquire superior *Page 370
rights to the property for which they were issued, although no property of any kind belonging to others may be stored in the alleged warehouse. Such a transaction was fully described and condemned by the Federal Court in the case of In re Rodgers, 7 Cir.,
Similar observation was made by this court in the second Kentucky Glass Works Company case supra [
If we should approve the judgment herein and adjudge the two interpleaders superior liens over plaintiff's attachment, as was done by the trial court, then all that any merchant or owner of any kind or sort of product need do in order to create a superior lien upon goods owned by him would be to conclude to annex to his business the additional one of warehouseman, to then make declaration that everything included in the building in which he operates shall be considered as stored in his warehouse, and to then issue receipts therefor containing negotiable language and thereby confer superior rights upon those to whom the receipts might be transferred. Surely no legislature, nor any court would *Page 371 approve the acquisition of any such secret liens, whereby the door to the commission of fraud would be thrown wide open and our carefully prepared registration statutes become totally nullified.
Having reached that conclusion it follows that the judgment was and is erroneous, and for which reason it is reversed, with directions to set it aside and for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
