98 A. 353 | Conn. | 1916
The Aetna Indemnity Company is in the hands of a receiver appointed by the Superior Court. The Peoples Bank of Buffalo presented to the receiver a claim against the Indemnity Company which he disallowed. This is an application by the bank to the court, asking that the claim be allowed.
The claim is based upon the alleged breach of its bond of indemnity given by the company to the bank to indemnity it against any loss that might accrue to it through the negligence or dishonesty of the American Warehousing Company of Buffalo, according to three warehouse receipts issued by it and held by the bank as collateral security for moneys advanced by the bank *60
to the Leslie Lumber Company of Buffalo. These warehouse receipts had been issued on June 9th, 1909, pursuant to an arrangement between the Lumber Company and the Warehousing Company, whereby the latter was to issue the receipts for lumber owned by and stored upon the premises of the Lumber Company. The Lumber Company executed a lease of its premises to the Warehousing Company and the latter appointed one of the former's employees its custodian. The receipts were each for a definite number of feet of lumber, amounting in all to 1,750,000 feet, which the Warehousing Company acknowledged to have received from the Lumber Company and agreed to deliver to the Peoples Bank of Buffalo upon payment of storage and other charges. At the time the Lumber Company delivered these receipts to the bank as collateral security for its obligations, the latter was shown the agreement and lease between the Lumber Company and the Warehousing Company. The purpose of the arrangement between the companies was to enable the Lumber Company to obtain warehouse receipts upon its own lumber stored upon its own premises to be used by it as collateral at its bank. This is what is called "field storage warehousing" and, when properly conducted, is legitimate. Bank of Buffalo v. Aetna Indemnity Co.,
The Warehousing Company did not take actual possession of the lumber covered by the warehouse receipts, and did not segregate the same or mark it, or in any way designate the particular lumber subject to its several receipts prior to October 25th, 1910, but the same continued to be mingled with the other lumber of the Lumber Company in its yards. The Lumber Company, with the knowledge of the Warehousing Company, purchased and piled lumber in its yard and sold it from time to time, sales being made indiscriminately *61 from all piles in the yard, so that on October 25th, 1910, there was only 200,000 feet of lumber in the yard which was there when the warehouse receipts were issued.
On October 25th, 1910, the Lumber Company being insolvent and its president having disappeared, its obligations to the bank for which the warehouse receipts were collateral not having been paid, the bank took possession of all the lumber then in the Lumber Company's yard. On the 31st of October, 1910, a receiver of the Lumber Company was appointed by the United States District Court for the Western District of New York. Pursuant to an agreement between him and the Warehouse Company, the Indemnity Company and the bank, and without prejudice to any, the lumber in the possession of the bank was sold for $18,571. The receiver afterward brought an action to set aside any liens thereon, and to recover the amount for which the lumber sold. With the approval of the United States Court this suit was compromised, without prejudice, by the parties who had consented to the sale, the bank receiving as its share $4,571.58. The 1,750,000 feet of lumber called for by the warehouse receipts was worth on October 29th, 1910, $19,731. The court allowed the claimant bank this amount, with interest, less the $4,571.58 received by it from the proceeds of the sale of the lumber of the Leslie Company.
The receiver of the Aetna Indemnity Company claims that the bank had a valid lien upon the lumber covered by the warehouse receipts, which it threw away by the compromise, and that the court was wrong in allowing any part of its claim. The Peoples Bank of Buffalo contends that it was entitled to have its claim for the full value of the lumber covered by the warehouse receipts allowed, and that the court was wrong in deducting therefrom the amount which it received from the proceeds of the sale under the compromise. *62
If the statement contained in the warehouse receipts which the bank received from the Lumber Company had been true, there would have existed a valid pledge of the lumber to the bank and by the delivery of the receipts the bank would have been placed in constructive possession of the lumber. The law requires that the pledgee shall have possession of the pledged property, and a pledge good against third persons cannot exist without such possession. Security WarehousingCo. v. Hand,
It is to protect creditors from the danger of such a taking as this, on the eve of the pledgor's bankruptcy or insolvency, that the law requires that in field storage warehousing, pledged goods shall be placed in the actual possession of the warehouseman on the premises of the pledgor, or shall be so segregated and tagged or marked as to give notice to third parties of the bailment. By the Warehousing Act of the State of New York, which took effect on July 25th, 1907 (New York Laws, 1907, Vol. 2, Chap. 732), re-enacted as Article 9 of the General Business Law of the State of New York (being *64 Chapter 25 of the Laws of 1909, Vol. 2), it is provided (Chapter 25, § 108, p. 1201) that warehousemen shall keep unfungible goods so far separate from the goods of other depositors, and from other goods of the same depositor for which a separate receipt has been issued, as to permit the identification of the goods. And § 134 (p. 1208) of the same chapter, makes it a crime in a warehouseman to issue a receipt knowing that the goods for which the receipt is issued have not been actually received or are not under his actual control at the time of issuing it. Section 108 is applicable to cases of ordinary warehousing as well as to field storage warehousing, but the provision calling for the segregation of the warehoused property applies with greater reason in the latter case, where the goods are warehoused upon the premises of the bailor, than in the former, where they are ordinarily upon premises of the bailee or those controlled by him. The importance placed by the law upon possession by the warehouseman of the pledged goods at the time the receipt is given, is shown by the fact that it is made a crime to issue the receipt unless the warehouseman has possession.
The warehouse receipts here in question gave the bank no lien upon the lumber therein mentioned, because the Warehousing Company neglected to take possession of it; and they of course gave the bank no right to take possession under them of other lumber than that described in them after the Lumber Company had become insolvent and a receiver was about to be appointed. The delivery to it at that time of other lumber as a security for its previous advancements to the Lumber Company would have been void as a preference. The receiver of the Lumber Company, appointed within a week after the bank obtained possession of the lumber, represented not only the corporation but its creditors. High on Receivers (4th Ed.) § 314; Curtis v. Lewis, *65
The Buffalo Bank's claim against the receiver of the Aetna Indemnity Company, recently decided by us,Bank of Buffalo v. Aetna Indemnity Co.,
In this case the bank lost its lien through the Warehousing Company's neglect to take possession of the lumber described in the receipts at the time of issuing them, or through its dishonesty in stating in the receipts that it had received the lumber. As stated by the trial court, it makes no difference in this case whether it was through its negligence or through its dishonesty that the lumber was lost to the bank. The bonds upon which the bank's claim is based contain a promise to indemnify the bank for its loss either through the negligence or the dishonesty of the warehouseman. *66 The bank had knowledge of the agreement and lease between the Lumber Company and the Warehousing Company providing for field storage warehousing of the former's lumber, and might properly rely, and did rely, upon them and the statements contained in the receipts, that the Warehousing Company had received possession of the 1,750,000 feet of lumber covered by the receipts, and in reliance upon them it advanced the Lumber Company more than $25,000. Except to the extend of $1,100, this has never been paid to it by the maker or indorser of the note which represents the bank's advancements.
The Peoples Bank of Buffalo was entitled to have its claim against the receiver of the Indemnity Company's estate allowed to the amount of its loss through the Warehouse Company's negligence or dishonesty. The receiver conceded that if the bank was entitled to a judgment it was entitled to the amount for which the judgment was given, namely, $15,386.33, the value of the lumber described in the receipts at the date of the Lumber Company receivership, with interest, less the amount ($4,571.58) received by the bank on the compromise of the action which was brought against it by the receiver.
The bank appeals from the court's action in deducting from its claim for the full value of the lumber the sum received by it in compromise of the receiver's action. It attempts to sustain its position by an appeal to the rule, followed by courts of equity in some jurisdictions in administering the estates of insolvents, that a creditor of the insolvent is not bound to deduct from his claim against the debtor moneys received from collaterals or from independent claims, but may prove his full claim without deduction and receive dividends thereon until the full amount of his original claim is paid. This is not now the rule in this State. In re *67 Wadell-Entz Co.,
There is no error upon either appeal.
No costs in this court will be taxed in favor of either party.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.