218 Mass. 518 | Mass. | 1914
These two actions grow out of a purchase of rags made by Rosenberg Brothers (the plaintiffs in the first action) from one Ripley, who was the manager of the warehouse of the defendant warehouse company. At the date of the sale .in question Ripley had no rags in the warehouse. In spite of that he made out and delivered to Rosenberg Brothers what purported to be a non-negotiable warehouse receipt of the defendant warehouse company for seventy bales. This receipt was in the usual form, signed by him as general manager, but no marks were given on it for the bales. This was on January 28, 1913. On the first of the following March Ripley caused the marks on seventy bales belonging to M. Rubin and Company (the plaintiffs in the second action), then in store in the defendant’s warehouse, to be changed from (d) to (r) > and delivered these rags to Rosenberg Brothers. Just before March 1 Ripley had bought of Rubin and Company seventy bales of rags. But by the terms of this purchase the rags were to be retained by Rubin and Company
The first action is brought by Rosenberg Brothers to recover from the warehouse company for the fifty bales for which Ripley did not get a delivery order from Rubin and Company.
There was another somewhat similar transaction which was covered by the action brought by Rosenberg Brothers against the warehouse company. But the second cause of action confessedly fails if the first fails, and it is not necessary to state it. The declaration contained eight counts. The first four related to the transaction which we have stated, and the second four related to the second cause of action which it is unnecessary to state.
In the first three the plaintiffs counted upon the fact that the warehouse receipt for the seventy bales, received by Rosenberg Brothers on January 28, was delivered to it by the defendant warehouse company, and upon § 21 of the warehouse receipts act, which provides that “a warehouseman shall be liable to the holder of a receipt for damages caused by the non-existence of the goods.” In the fourth the plaintiffs counted upon the negligence of the warehouse company in the way it allowed Ripley, its manager, to carry on its business. j
Before the warehouse receipts act (St. 1907, c. 582), it was the settled law of this Commonwealth that a principal is not liable where his agent (with authority to issue receipts on the delivery of goods) issues a receipt for goods which had not been delivered. Sears v. Wingate, 3 Allen, 103. But on this point there is a great conflict between the States. The decisions are collected in Williston on Sales, § 419. The ground on which the plaintiffs in the first action contend that they are entitled to recover is that the rule of Sears v. Wingate was changed by § 21 of the warehouse receipts act.
Manifestly it was for these reasons that § 21 of the warehouse receipts act was limited to providing that a warehouseman should be liable for the non-existence of the goods, and did not undertake to state the facts which did or did not make one a holder of a receipt. Sears v. Wingate, ubi supra, is still law in this Commonwealth and is decisive against the plaintiffs’ allegation in each of the first three counts that they are the holders or the “bearer” of a warehouse receipt issued to them by the defendant warehouse company. For this reason they have failed to make out the case stated in the first three counts of the first action.
It is enough to say of the fourth count that the judge
The only defense which is made to the second action is one arising out of a subsequent transaction between the plaintiffs in that action and the warehouse company. The defendants in the second action now admit that but for that subsequent transaction Rubin and Company would have had a right to recover from Rosenberg Brothers for the conversion of fifty bales of rags belonging to Rubin and Company and delivered by Ripley to Rosenberg Brothers. The subsequent transaction was as follows: On March 27, 1913, the warehouse company handed to Rubin and Company $1,874.84, under an arrangement which is set forth in Exhibit X, a copy of which is printed below.
It is plain that this defense would not have been made out if the warehouse company, recognizing Rubin and Company’s claim against it, had agreed that the warehouse company might proceed in Rubin and Company’s name to prosecute their (Rubin and Company’s) claim against Rosenberg Brothers and if successful to hand the proceeds to them (Rubin and Company) and if unsuccessful to pay Rubin and Company’s claim against it (the warehouse company) out of its own pocket. The only difference between the arrangement made and that suggested above is that the warehouse company put Rubin and Company in funds in the first instance by way of a loan. We are of opinion that this subsequent arrangement is in law what it purports to be, and that the defense is not made out.
By the terms of the report, as we interpret it, judgment must be entered in the first action for the defendant, and in the second action for the plaintiffs, in the sum of $1,696.27, with interest from January 6, 1914, which is the date of the finding.
So ordered.
St. 1907, c. 582, § 21, so far as material is in these terms:
“A warehouseman shall be liable to the holder of a receipt for damages caused by the non-existence of the goods, or by the failure of the goods to correspond with the description thereof in the receipt at the time of its issue.”
Fox, 3., before whom the cases were tried without a jury. He found for the defendant in the first case and in the second case found for the plaintiff in the sum of $1,696.27, and reported the cases for determination by this court.
“Exhibit X.
“Boston, March 27, 1913.
"Borrowed and received from the National Dock & Storage Warehouse Company the sum of $1,874.84, being a loan without interest pending the ascertainment of whether Rosenberg Bros, of Chelsea or any other person, are or is liable to M. Rubin & Company for the conversion or loss of fifty bales of rags; and in the event that M. Rubin & Company recover from Rosenberg or any other person for the loss or conversion of said fifty bales of rags and receives funds by virtue of said recovery, we agree to refund this loan to the National Dock & Storage Warehouse Company at the same time as and in the same proportion that said recovery shall be made. This receipt involves no personal liability but simply a liability to repay from any funds recovered of Rosenberg Bros.
Witness M. Rubin & Co.
A. A. Ginsberg. By Joseph Rubin.”