3 F. 19 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Minnesota | 1880
It is evident that the case turns upon a question of law which arises upon the admitted facts, which are as follows: Harris was a warehouseman, and also a dealer in wheat, his placo of business being at Litchfield, Minnesota. He received grain for storage and issued warehouse receipts for the same, which receipts, under the statute of the state, were negotiable, and were evidence of title to the wheat named therein. Rev. St. of Minn., 1879, p. 1013. The plaintiffs hold such receipts for about 12,000 bushels of wheat. The plaintiffs in the attachment suits hold other certificates, calling for several thousand bushels in addition. Harris, the warehouseman who issued the receipts, either never received in store all the wheat represented as received, or, after receiving it, he sold or disposed of a portion of it.
Just prior to the commencement of this suit ho absconded, leaving in his warehouse only about 3,000 bushels of wheat to meet the outstanding receipts, or only about one-fifth the