115 Wash. 492 | Wash. | 1921
The plaintiff, Hastings, as receiver of Eoss & Skinner, an insolvent partnership, sought recovery in the superior court for Spokane county from the defendant trust company the value of several automobiles which he -alleged it wrongfully obtained the possession of and sold and converted the proceeds thereof to its own use; the automobiles being at the time a portion of the trust property of the receivership in his hands for the benefit of the creditors of Eoss & Skinner. Trial upon the merits before the court sitting with a jury resulted in verdict and judgment awarding to the plaintiff recovery against the defendant in the sum of $1,050, the value of one of the automobiles in question. From this disposition of the cause in the superior court, the defendant has appealed to this court.
There is, we think, no substantial ground for controversy over the facts determinative of the rights of the parties to this cause. They may be summarized as follows: On May 21, 1918, Eoss & Skinner were indebted to appellant trust company for sums then and theretofore loaned by it to them, aggregating several
“Commercial Warehouse Receipt “Spokane, Wash., May 21, 1918.
‘ ‘ This is to certify that we have received and hold on storage (1) one Elgin Auto No. 175386 and will deliver the same to Ross & Skinner or order, at our warehouse, as and when directed, upon the surrender of this receipt, properly endorsed, and on payment of charges and advances.
“McAllister Warehouse Co.
“By J. H. McAllister.”
We have italicized the words of this receipt which call for particular notice. Looking to partially securing the indebtedness then owing by Ross & Skinner to appellant, they delivered this warehouse receipt to appellant, but without any indorsement or other written evidence of their assignment of it to appellant. Thereafter, on June 17, 1918, respondent was, by the superior court for Spokane county, duly appointed receiver of Ross & Skinner because of their insolvency, for the purpose of winding up their business and subjecting their property to the payment of their creditors. At that time the automobile in question remained on storage in the McAllister warehouse—the warehouse receipt therefor being still in the possession of appellant—and more than $1,050 of the indebtedness owing by Ross & Skinner to appellant remained unpaid. Thereafter, in September, 1918, these conditions as to the possession of the automobile remaining unchanged and the indebtedness owing by Ross & Skinner to appel
The principal claims of error here made in behalf of appellant, the correct disposition of which we think will become decisive of this whole case, are in substance; that the trial court erred in refusing to withdraw from the consideration of the jury and decide, as a matter of law, that there was, by virtue of the delivery of the warehouse receipt by Ross & Skinner to appellant, a constructive or symbolic delivery of the automobile to appellant, such as would in law support a pledge of the automobile as security for the indebtedness owing by Ross & Skinner to appellant; and that the trial court erred in giving to the jury instructions which, it is claimed and may be conceded, told the jury in substance that the mere delivery of the warehouse receipt by Ross & Skinner to appellant did not in law constitute a delivery of the possession of the automobile to appellant; thus in effect deciding, as a matter of law, that there was no such delivery of the possession of the automobile as would support a pledge as security for the indebtedness owing by Ross & Skinner to appellant, and resulting in leaving to the jury only the question of the value of the automobile as respondent’s measure of recovery from appellant.
Now it may be that the mere delivery of the ware
Counsel for appellant invoke at the outset what they conceive to be the general rulé that a receiver, assignee, or other trustee of an insolvent concern, appointed for the purpose of winding up its affairs and subjecting its property to the payment of its creditors, stands in the shoes of such concern and possesses no rights with respect to the trust property superior to those which would be possessed by such concern were it a going concern acting for itself. This may be conceded to be a general rule of law applicable to many controversies which may arise in the settlement of such a trust, but it is, we think, not a controlling rule of law which can be successfully invoked as against the rights of creditors of an insolvent concern represented by such a receiver or trustee, when it comes to deciding the question of whether or not a mortgage, pledge or other lien against the property of the insolvent in favor of one of its creditors has been perfected in the manner required by law before insolvency and the passing of the property and affairs of the insolvent into the hands of such a receiver or trustee.
Our decision in Keyes v. Sabin, 101 Wash. 618, 172 Pac. 835, is, we think, a holding in substance, that a lien in favor of a creditor of an insolvent, in order to become effective as against the creditors of such con
“It is argued that the assignee takes only such title as the assignor had, and as the mortgage was good as between the mortgagors and the mortgagee, it is good as between the assignee and the mortgagee. But we cannot think the relation here assumed correctly represents the assignee’s position. It is true, unquestionably, that if there was a valid and subsisting lien on the property assigned, good as against all the world, or if the title to any of the property was defective in the assignors, the assignee would take the property subject to such lien or defect. But it does not follow that he takes the property subject to all inchoate or imperfect liens, invalid as to certain persons although valid as between the parties thereto. The assignee holds the property in trust for certain designated persons; in this instance, the creditors of the assignors. In his individual right he acquired nothing by the assignment. He is but the mediary through whom the title to the assigned property was conveyed to creditors. If, therefore, these creditors, the actual beneficiaries of the assignment, could have acquired a valid title against any inchoate or imperfect lien upon the property by an assignment made directly to them, they can acquire such a right by an*498 assignment made to another for their benefit. It cannot be doubted, we think, that, if the assignment had been made directly to the creditors, and the mortgage the appellant seeks to assert is invalid as against them, they could assert its invalidity in any suit against them brought to enforce the mortgage. If they could do this in their individual capacities, there is no reason why they cannot do it through their representative. ’ ’
It is true that mention is made in that decision, following the above quoted language, of the fact that the assignee took full legal title to the property by the assignment for the benefit of creditors, as furnishing a possible distinction between that decision and certain of our former decisions which seemed somewhat out of harmony with the views expressed in the above quoted portion of that decision. Further reflection, however, leads us to conclude that the above quoted portion of that decision states a correct view of the law applicable to our present inquiry. It seems to us to be of little or no consequence whether we regard the technical legal title to the property as passing to an assignee by formal voluntary assignment for the benefit of creditors of the assignor, or control and dominion over the property passing to a receiver or other trustee for the benefit of creditors of its owner by virtue of an order of a court of competent jurisdiction. The owner is as completely divested of control and dominion over the property in the one case as in the other, and the creditors as beneficiaries acquire the same rights, no more, no less, to have the trust property administered to the end that they be paid from the proceeds thereof in the one case as in the other. A critical reading of our decision in Keyes v. Sabin, supra, will, we think, disclose that it was, in its last analysis, rested upon the invalidity of the chattel
It is elementary law that the delivery of pledged property by the pledgor to the pledgee is absolutely necessary to the life of the contemplated pledge. It is well said in Security Warehousing Co. v. Hand, 143 Fed. 32 (41):
“Delivery of possession is the very life of a pledge. 'No mere agreements respecting possession can create it. The contract of pledge cannot exist outside of the fact of change of possession.” 21 R. O. L. 643.
It is of course not necessary, under all circumstances, that the delivery be an actual physical movement of the property from the hands or control of the pledgor to the pledgee; but it must in any event be of such nature that the control and dominion over the property passes from the pledgor into the absolute
Indeed, in our present inquiry we can ignore the question of transfer of title by the mere delivery of an unindorsed warehouse receipt such as the one here in question. A mere delivery of such a receipt might be held to transfer the title to the property for which it was issued, accompanied by an agreement to that effect, and still not have the effect of transferring the possession of the property. Possession of this automobile is of the very essence of this controversy, and when we decide who had possession of it as between appellant and respondent we will have decided this case.
Becurring to the language of the warehouse receipt, we read that the warehouse company “will deliver the same to Boss & Skinner or order, at our warehouse, as
It may be, because of the negotiable character of this warehouse receipt, in the light of the provisions of our statute relating to warehouse receipts, that, had appellant, even after the appointment of respondent as receiver, procured the indorsement upon it of Ross & Skinner and then presented it to the warehouse company and demanded possession of the automobile, offering to surrender the receipt so indorsed, the ware
Our statute relating to bills of lading and warehouse receipts (Bern. Code, § 3369) furnishes abundant ground for arguing that a warehouse receipt in the form of the one here in question can be transferred only by indorsement. Counsel for appellant, however, cite authority supporting the view that similar statutes relative to the transfer of warehouse receipts do not prevent valid transfers thereof by methods recognized as effectual in the absence of statute. If we were here confronted with the sole question of the transfer of the title to this automobile as between Boss & Skinner and appellant, it would probably be necessary to enter upon an inquiry as to whether or not transfer by indorsement of such a warehouse receipt is, because of the statute, an exclusive method of transferring such a receipt and the title to the property therein described. But, as We have seen, we have here a question of the transfer of the possession of this automobile; and we think the very terms of the warehouse receipt answer in the negative the question of whether or not the mere delivery of such an unindorsed warehouse
The judgment is affirmed.
Holcomb, Bridges, and Mackintosh, JJ., concur.