85 P. 69 | Or. | 1906
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion.
Upon this state of facts, the question for decision is whether the transaction between the plaintiff and his assignors and the defendant constituted a bailment or a sale. If the former, the title remained with the bailors and the loss must fall upon them, but if the latter, the title passed to the defendant at the time of the delivery, and thereafter the grain was held at its risk. It is often difficult to determine whether a particular transaction is a sale or a bailment, and especially so when it involves grain delivered to a person and by him mixed and mingled in a common mass with grain belonging to himself or other parties. If á specific amount of grain is delivered by the owner to be returned, either in its original or in an altered form, when called for, there is of course a plain case of bailment, but, when the grain of different owners is mixed and mingled in a common mass by their consent, a different and more difficult question arises. The original idea of a bailment contemplated the return of the identical article delivered as soon as the purpose of the bailment was accomplished: 2 Kent, Lect. 40; Story, Bailment, §§ 1, 2. But the business of storing, transporting and handling-grain has grown to such proportions in recent years as necessarily to have wrought a change or modification in the doctrine requiring the subject of bailment to be returned to the bailor. The delivery to public warehouses or elevators of thousands of bushels of grain for storage and safe-keeping by hundreds of
The only separation now called for by law is to keep grain of the same class in bins by itself so the owner may have returned to him grain of the kind and quality delivered, and therefore upon the deposit of grain with a warehouseman to be mixed with the grain of other persons, the depositor becomes the owner of his pro rata share of the entire mass, and the transaction is a bailment, and not a sale: Brown v. Northcutt, 14 Or. 529 (13 Pac. 485); McBee v. Caesar, 15 Or. 62 (13 Pac. 652); Hamilton v. Blair, 23 Or. 64 (31 Pac. 197). But the warehouseman is not authorized to use, sell or dispose of the grain stored with him, or any part thereof, without the consent of the owners. He may, from time to time, take from the common mass, upon the order or at the request of an owner, grain in amount equal to that stored for or by such owner, but he is required always to retain of the grain so stored sufficient to supply the other storers, and cannot use or dispose of any part thereof for his own benefit. He is a mere custodian of the grain, with no right to use it in any way, and herein lies the essential difference between a bailment and a sale. In the one case the title to the property remains in the depositor and the bailee is but a mere custodian, while in the other he may use and treat the grain as his own, the depositor relying upon his personal credit for the value thereof either in kind or in money.- Where one delivers grain to another under an agreement that the identical grain or grain of similar kind and quality from the common mass into which it was placed shall be returned, there is a bailment, and the right of property remains in the bailor, but when, either front the express agreement of the parties or from the general course of business, the party receiving the grain has a right to use it in his business and as a part of his consumable stock and is not obliged to return the identical grain nor grain of similar grade and quality from the common mass, but may discharge his obligation to the storer by paying the market price
To determine who shall bear the risk and enjoy dominion over grain which has been by common consent mixed and mingled with that belonging to other parties, we must therefore have recourse to the nature of the transaction; for the rights and liabilities go according to the legal title. "If the nature of the bargain be such,” says Mr. Schouler, "as to make the several proprietors owners in common of the mass, any loss should be borne by them in proportion to their several interests; and such an ownership, we have said, is usually presumed. But if one throws his goods into the common mass, on the understanding that the party receiving them may take from the mass at pleasure and appropriate to himself on the condition that he shall restore other goods of the same sort in their stead — and so, too, in stipulations for pecuniary compensation- — the dominion over the property passes to the receiver; and on this principle are some of our grain cases decided; the party owning the elevator or warehouse being treated as a purchaser, and not as a depositary” ; 2 Schouler, Pers. Prop. § 46. This is the doctrine applied by this court in State v. Stockman, 30 Or. 36 (46 Pac. 851), and finds support in the authorities generally: 3 Am. Law Reg. (N. S.) 321; 6 Am. Law Reg. 455; Richardson v. Olmstead, 74 Ill. 213; Lyon v. Lenon, 106 Ind. 567 (7 N. E. 311); Barnes v. McCrea, 75 Iowa, 267 (39 N. W. 392, 9 Am. St. Rep. 473); Weiland v. Sunwall, 63 Minn. 320 (65 N W. 628); O’Neal v. Stone, 79 Mo. App. 279; Andrews v. Richmond, 34 Hun, 20; Chase v. Washburn, 1 Ohio St. 244 (59 Am. Dec. 623) ; Rahilly v. Wilson, 3 Dillon, 420 (Fed. Cas. No. 11,532); Insurance Co. v. Randall, L. R. 3 P. C. 101.
In Chase v. Washburn, 1 Ohio St. 244 (59 Am. Dec. 623), which is probably the earliest leading case on the subject, the warehouse receipts were in the following form:
“Milan, Ohio, Nov. 5, 1847.
Received in store from J. C. Washburn (by son) the following articles, to wit:
Thirty bushels of wheat. H. Chase & Co.”
In O’Neal v. Stone, 79 Mo. App. 279, Stone owned and operated a flouring mill having in connection therewith an elevator. All wheat purchased to be ground and such as was received by him on deposit was mixed and commingled in the elevator, and the general bulk was drawn upon to supply the mill when in operation. The elevator and contents were destroyed by fire, after which Stone denied all liability under any of the receipts issued by him and outstanding. The wheat receipt stated that the party to whom it was issued had deposited with Stone a certain quantity of wheat of a certain grade and quality, for which he agreed to pay a certain rate per bushel for storage, and to assume all damage by fire, etc. The wheat was to be delivered to the party at the warehouse on demand, less a certain amount for shrinkage, and should Stone at the time of such demand not have the amount of wheat called for of equal grade and amount as that received, then he was to have the privilege of substituting an amount equal in value of a grade next above or below that received, and he was also to have the privilege of buying the wheat at the market price at the time of the demand. The court held the transaction to be a sale and not a bailment
In Rahilly v. Wilson, 3 Dillon (Fed. Cas. No. 11,532), a warehouseman issued a receipt in the following form:
“Received in store of P. H. Rahilly,-bushels of No.wheat. Geo. Atkinson & Co.”
The litigation was between depositors of wheat receiving such 'receipts and the trustee in bankruptcy of the insolvent firm, and the court, Dillon, C. J., held that “where grain is stored in an elevator warehouse with the understanding, implied from the known and invariable course of business, that it may be sold by the warehouseman, and that when the depositor shall be ready to surrender the receipt of the warehouseman therefor, the latter will give the highest market price or the same amount of grain of like quality, but not the identical grain deposited, nor grain from any specific mass, the transaction is a sale, and not a bailment.”
In Andrews v. Richmond, 34 Hun, 20, the plaintiff delivered to the defendants, who were millers, wheat and took back a receipt as follows:
“Canandaigua, November 14, 1878.
Received of Harris Andrews 490 bushels of wheat in store.*19 Tbe same is subject to him or option to take price on or before the first of May next.' Richmond & Smith.”
The wheat was placed by Richmond & Smith in a bin containing some two or three hundred bushels of the same kind and quality of which they were the owners and from which they were drawing every day for the purpose of grinding, and when they received the wheat from the plaintiff they informed him that they intended to mix it with their own and manufacture it into flour. The mill was burned without the fault of the defendants. During all the time and up to the time of the fire there was more wheat ón storage in the bins than, was delivered by the plaintiff. After the fire plaintiff informed the defendants that lie had elected to sell the wheat to them at the then market price. In an action brought to recover such price, it was held that if the receipt alone was considered, the contract was one of bailment, but if it was agreed verbally, at the time the wheat was delivered, that it might be mixed by the defendants with their own wheat and be ground into flour at their pleasure, the transaction was, in law, a sale, and the title passed to defendants, who became liable to the plaintiff to pay him the market price of the wheat delivered or to return other wheat of the same grade and quality, as plaintiff might elect, and that plaintiff was entitled to recover. In the course of the opinion it is said: “The mere consent of the plaintiff that his wheat might be mixed with the wheat of the defendants of the same kind and quality was not inconsistent with a bailment simpliciter. Owners of-the same kind of property and of equal value, like cereal grains or wines, may consent that they be mixed together in mass,- and each, in law, will -retain title to his aliquot part, and may maintain replevin for his share as against a wrongdoer who acquires possession of the same. By force of this rule the owner of grain in store may sell a certain quantity of the same, less than the whole, and pass title thereto, without separating the part so sold from the whole.” But “an agreement that the particular article which the owner places in the hands of another may be by him consumed or sold in the course of trade is utterly inconsistent with the principles on which the law of bailment is
A very interesting and apt ease, illustrative of the principles which should govern in the decision of the case at bar, is that of the Insurance Co. v. Randall, L. R. 3 P. C. 101. It was an action on a policy of insurance which stipulated that “goods held in trust or on commission must be insured as such, otherwise the policy will not extend to cover them.” The plaintiffs were millers in South Australia. According to their custom and course of business, wheat was received by them from farmers to whom such course of business and dealing was known, and, on receipt, shot out of bags, in the presence of the farmer who brought it, into large hutches, where it became mixed with other wheat which had been received in like manner and thus became the common stock of the mill, which, according to the custom of business known to the farmer, was either sold by the plaintiffs or ground in their mill and disposed of for their benefit. On the delivery of the wheat to the plaintiffs they gave the farmers receipts in this form: “Eeceived,” etc., “in store.” The farmer could at any time demand an equal quantity of grain of like quality and grade as that delivered by him to the plaintiffs, or the market price of an equal quantity, fixing the price as of the day on which he made his demand, and the plaintiffs had the option of delivering wheat of like quantity or paying the market price. The mill and its contents were -destroyed by fire, and a claim was made by the plaintiffs to the insurance company for the loss, but the amount being in dispute, an action was brought by them to recover the value of the stock consumed. The plaintiffs declared on the policy, and the defendant pleaded that the wheat taken in storage by the plaintiffs from the farmers was held by them upon trust and therefore not covered by the policy. Issue was joined on the plea and the action tried before the chief justice and a jury. No evidence was adduced
From these decisions and the principles announced in them, it seems incontrovertible that, under the facts as disclosed by the record, the contract and agreement between the plaintiff and his assignors and the defendant, under which the wheat in question was delivered and received, cannot be construed to be a mere bailment, but it was, in law, a sale or exchange, and the liability for loss by fire was with the defendant. The wheat was not received by defendant to be stored for safe-keeping until called for by the owner, nor was it delivered with the understanding that it or other wheat of the same grade and quality from the common mass was to be returned. By consent of all parties it was mixed with and became a part of the consumable stock of the mill, and the defendant- had a right to and did make such use of it as it saw fit, being liable to pay therefor,
We are cited to a number of cases which are supposed to support the defendant’s argument that, although the identical wheat delivered was consumed by defendant, the ease is nevertheless one of bailment, as there was all the time wheat in the mill and warehouse or elsewhere in the state belonging to the defendant, equal in amount to that delivered and of the same grade and quality: Moses v. Teetors, 64 Kan. 149 (67 Pac. 526, 57 L. R. A. 267); National Bank v. Langan, 28 Ill. App. 401; McGrew v. Thayer, 24 Ind. App. 578 (57 N. E. 262); State v. Rieger, 59 Minn. 154 (60 N. W. 1087). State v. Rieger was under a special statute, and the other cases cited were those of warehouse-men who did not have the right to use the grain stored with them as a part of their consumable stocks and for their own use and benefit. We conclude, therefore, that, for the reasons given, the judgment of the lower court was right, and must be affirmed. There is, however, another view of the ease which is worthy of consideration, although pot specially relied upon by plaintiff. It appears from the answer of defendant, as we understand it, that prior to the fire it had used or shipped from the warehouse and mill a part of the wheat which it claims was stored with it, and, at the time, there was a shortage of about
The judgment of the court below will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Rehearing
On Petition for Kehearing.
delivered the opinion.
There is no finding that it was specifically agreed that the defendant should have the option to pay for the wheat in controversy either in money or in kind. The court, however, in its findings sets out in detail the facts constituting the contract between the parties, from which it conclusively appears that neither the wheat delivered by the plaintiff and his assignors nor wheat from the common mass into which it was put was to be returned, but that the wheat was to be mixed with and become a part of the consumable stock of the mill, to be sold and disposed of by the defendant on its own account. Findings 4 and 5, in substance, are that at the time the wheat was delivered and received, it was the custom and usual course of business of the defendant, known to and acted upon by persons dealing with it, for it to mix all wheat delivered with that belonging to it in one common mass; the first refusal of such wheat being reserved by and conceded to the defendant; and thereafter, “at its own convenience and pleasure” and “without any written authority,” to “ship out any of such common mass * * or grind the same into flour and other mill products and the same to sell for the account and benefit of the defendant,” and, generally, in settlement of the claims arising out of such delivery to “pay by
The petition for rehearing is therefore denied.
Rehearing Denied.