136 F.2d 350 | 3rd Cir. | 1943
This is an appeal from a judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff on the pleadings, from which it appears that plaintiff holds certain warehouse receipts originally issued by Kinsey Distilling Company
Prior to the transactions involved in the case at bar, the Kinsey Distilling Company, the issuer of the receipts, filed its petition in bankruptcy in the court below. On July 16, 1941, pursuant to an order of the district court, the sale of the bankrupt’s warehouse and other assets to defendant Kinsey Distilling Corporation was confirmed. On July 30, 1941, the bankruptcy trustees conveyed the warehouse and other assets to defendant, free and clear of all claims and liens in respect thereof and transferring such liens and claims to the fund realized by the sale. On July 25, 1941, plaintiff purchased the warehouse receipts around which the present controversy revolves.
On September 23, 1941, plaintiff filed its complaint, the principal prayer of which was for an order on defendant to deliver the whiskey to plaintiff. The prayer of the complaint also sought a decree that plaintiff was not obligated to pay the defendant the increased storage charges or the dollar per barrel handling charges. Defendant filed its answer denying plaintiff had any cause of action and praying for dismissal of the complaint. The court below denied defendant’s motion to dismiss, and granted plaintiff’s motion for judgment on the pleadings.
The precise question before the court below and now before us is whether defendant is limited to compensation for storage and handling by the terms of the warehouse receipts issued by the former owner of the warehouse, now bankrupt, whose assets, including the warehouse, were sold to defendant at a judicial sale free and clear of all liens against the bankrupt. The occurrences above stated all took place in Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania law governs, and the Pennsylvania cases, to the extent applicable, control.
The learned court below, while recognizing that there was no authority directly in point, was of the opinion that the case of German National Bank v. Meadowcroft, 95 Ill. 124, 35 Am.Rep. 137, lent support to the claim of plaintiff, viz.: that defendant was bound by the terms of the warehouse receipts issued by the bankrupt. It seems to us, however, that the cited case is in-apposite, for the Illinois Court merely held that a purchaser at a private sale of a warehouse in which grain had been deposited was liable in trover for refusing to deliver grain to the holder of a warehouse receipt. Trover, of course, is the proper form of action for such a conversion. But in the instant case, defendant concedes that plaintiff is the owner of the whiskey.
When the court below stated [42 F.Supp, 679, 682], “If defendant is not to be bound by the terms of a contract of storage to which it never agreed, plaintiff cannot be bound by the terms of a contract of storage to which it never agreed.”, we think this was a correct view of the legal relation between the parties, for there is no true contract here involved because there is a total absence of mutual assent between the parties.
Since there is no true contract here involved because of absence of mutual assent between the parties, it is clear that plaintiff must be liable in quasi-contract to prevent unjust enrichment. This rule imposes no hardship upon plaintiff for it is only required to pay fair and reasonable warehouse charges — and these sums, for all we know, may be more or less than those called for in the warehouse receipts which it now holds.
Moreover, in our view, Section 27 of the Pennsylvania Warehousemen’s Receipts Act of March 11, 1909, P.L. 19, 6 P.S.Pa. § 23, which is set out in the margin
The court below lays some emphasis on plaintiff’s offer to remove the stored whiskey
We conclude that the judgment below should be reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
The name of defendant is Kinsey Distilling Corporation. There is no ownership connection between the two companies.
On October 22, 1941, the court below entered an interlocutory order directing plaintiff to pay defendant $1,863.20, representing storage at the rate of 10 cents per barrel for the month of August, 1941, without prejudice to the rights of the parties, and to pay into the registry of the court the sum of $35,000 to be ultimately awarded in accordance with the final disposition of the cause, and the order further directed defendant to surrender to plaintiff its 18,632 barrels of whiskey. Obviously, this was a highly sensible procedure.
For distinctions between implied in fact contracts and implied in law or quasi-contracts, see Restatement of the Law of Restitution, Part I, Introductory Note, pp. 5-9.
The basis of Lord Mansfield’s opinion was doubtless to provide a more convenient remedy than the strict action of debt. In debt, wager of law was a method of trial. The oath of defendant that he did not owe the debt, fortified by the oaths of a number of Ms neighbors and kinsmen, called oath helpers or compurgators, that his oath was true, constituted a defense to the action. See Pollock and Maitland, History of English Law, VoL H, 600, 634. There is a reported instance of its use as late as 1824 (King v. Williams, 2 Barn. & Cr. 538), and it was not formally abolished until 1833. See 73 Statutes at Large (384 Will, IY) c. 42, Sec. 13. In America, the practice never obtained a foothold. See Childress v. Emory, 1823, 8 Wheat. 642, 675, 5 L.Ed. 705. See Woodward, The Law of Quasi-Contracts, p. 2.
See, also, American La France F. E. Co. v. Borough of Shenandoah, 3 Cir., 1940, 115 F.2d 866; Matoil Service & Transport Co. v. Schneider, 3 Cir., 1942, 129 F.2d 392; Woodward, The Law of Quasi-Contracts, p. 6.
“Subject to the provisions of section tMrty, a warehouseman shall have a lien on goods deposited, or on the proceeds thereof in. his hands, for all lawful charges for storage and preservation of the goods; also for all lawful claims for money advanced, interest, insurance, transportation, labor, weighing, coopering, and other charges and expenses in relation to such goods; also for all reasonable charges and expenses for notice and advertisements of sale, and for sale of the goods where default has been made in satisfying the warehouseman’s lien.”