201 P. 687 | Mont. | 1921
prepared the opinion for the court.
This is an appeal by plaintiffs from a judgment in their favor, made and entered by the court sitting without a jury, and also from an order denying plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial. The ground of the appeal is that the judgment is inadequate in amount and that the bondsmen were held not liable as to a part of the judgment.
“Montana Storage Receipt Approved June, 1915.
“Broadwater Elevator Company No. 14.
“Townsend, Montana, Nov. 15, 1915.
“Operated as a Public Warehouse under License Issued by the State Grain Inspection Department of the State of Montana.
“Received in store from Broadwater Farm Co. Four thousand nine hundred twenty-six bushels of 2 H. W. (kind or grade of grain).
“Weighed and graded by Thos. Sheehan.
“Gross lbs.
“Tare.
“Net lbs;
“Gross bus. 4,967.50.
“Dockage, 41.50.
“Net bus. 4,926.00.
“This lot of grain has been stored with grain of the same kind and grade and a similar quantity and grade is deliverable upon the return of this receipt properly indorsed by the person to whose order it was issued and the payment of the proper charges for storage and handling.
“This grain is insured for the benefit of the owner.
“Broadwater Elevator Company,
“By A. W, Finch, Manager.
“Advanced — ■
“60c per bushel.”
Indorsed on back thereof:
“Subject to the following charges and conditions.
“1. [Relates to the limitation of charges.]
“2. [Relates to cleaning of the grain.]
“3. Our account for seed, bags, merchandise or cash that we may have furnished or become responsible for, with interest due thereon until paid.”
The remainder of the indorsements have no relation to the questions presented on this appeal.
The particular questions presented are:
(1) Was the original transaction a sale or a bailment, and incidentally involving the admissibility of certain oral evidence ?
(2) Did the transactions subsequent to the issuance of the storage receipts constitute a sale of the wheat to the elevator company ?
(3) What is the measure of damages?
(4) Are the bondsmen liable?
The respondents admit that, not Laving taken any appeal, they cannot be heard to question the sufficiency of the judgment or to assail it in any manner, but insist that inasmuch as the appellants ask to have the judgment set aside and a new final judgment entered, they have the right to urge what they deem as errors committed by' the trial court in combating the new condition that would be thus thrust upon them, and in support of this position cite: 4 C. J. 695, 696; Landrem v. Jordan, 203 U. S. 56, 51 L. Ed. 88, 27 Sup. Ct. Rep. 17 [see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes]; Philadelphia Casualty Co. v. Fechheimer, 220 Fed. 401, Ann. Cas. 1917D, 64, 135
"Whatever the rule may be, in the present case the entire record has been examined, and necessarily so from the questions above enumerated.
1. At the trial of the action the defendants, over the objec
The provisions of section 7873, Revised Codes, are well known. Where an agreement has been reduced to writing, it is presumed to contain all the terms, and evidence varying or contradicting this writing is not admissible except in cases of mistake or imperfection, or where the validity of the agreement is the fact in dispute. The provisions of this section do not, in .proper eases, exclude evidence of the circumstances under which an agreement was made, or to which it relates. (Sathre v. Rolfe, 31 Mont. 85, 77 Pac. 432; Gardiner v. McDonogh, 147 Cal. 318, 81 Pac. 964.) However, none of these exceptions appear to be present-in this case.
The respondents, in support of their contention, cite Gafford v. Globe Transfer & Storage Co., 71 Wash. 204, 128 Pac. 228; Windell v. Readman Warehouse Co., 30 Wash. 469, 71 Pac. 56; McCurdy v. Wallblom Furniture etc. Co., 94 Minn. 326, 3 Ann. Cas. 468, 102 N. W. 873. An examination of those cases discloses a different state of facts from that appearing in the instant case. In the McCurdy Case the plaintiff had stored certain goods with the defendant company and “was given a warehouse receipt in conventional form, which provided for storage generally, but did not specify where the goods were to be kept.” Subsequently, the bailee, without the knowledge or consent of the bailor, removed the goods to another place, where they were de
' The receipts in the present case were prepared by the defendant company, signed by it, and by it delivered to the plaintiffs. The defendant company thus knew of their contents and provisions; they were accepted at the time by the other parties and retained by them, and no claim is made by plaintiffs that they did not know the contents. Hence they became binding contracts on all of the parties, for it would be= an idle provision of law to require a receipt to be issued which was not binding. The law specifically prohibits a public warehouseman from inserting “in any storage receipt any language limiting or modifying his liabilities or responsibilities as imposed by law.” (Sec. 31, Chap. 93, Laws 1915.) The warehouseman being prohibited by law from inserting such a provision in the receipt, he cannot read it therein by proving a prior parol or contemporaneous- agree
2. It is claimed by respondents that the transactions sub-
The Minnesota supreme court held that, although the warehouse receipt contained a provision giving the warehouseman the option to purchase upon the return of the receipts, he was guilty of a violation of law if he disposed of the wheat prior to the return of the receipt. The statute in that state may not be the same as the statute here, but the court nevertheless gave to the act a strict construction, for the protection of those who parted with the possession of their property and intrusted it to the honesty .of others. (State v. Rieger, 59 Minn. 151, 60 N. W. 1087.) Under these facts we are impelled to the conclusion that there never was any sale of this grain to the defendant elevator company, and that it actually converted the same long prior to the demand made by the bailors. To epitomize — the owners attempted to recover their grain or the money therefor and did not get
At the trial, and before the introduction of any evidence,
In considering the rule of damage under a section identical in language with that just quoted, the supreme court of North Dakota said:. “In Pickert v. Rugg, [1 N. D. 230, 46 N. W. 446], the court took occasion to call attention to the injustice which will necessarily follow in many cases by an application of the rule promulgated by the legislature in the section just quoted, by giving to the injured party, not merely compensation for the injury he has suffered, but a right to recover the highest market value up to the time of the verdict, however fictitious that value may be. In the ease at bar the recovery for the wheat converted bears ■ no just relation to the damage which the plaintiff suffered. It is a misnomer to call it ‘compensation.’ It is largely punishment. But, however averse we may be to the rule, it is the rule which governs; and the plaintiff has an absolute right to recover the highest market price, if it so elects, provided only that it has prosecuted its action with reasonable diligence. Counsel for defendant contends that the court erred in determining that the facts show reasonable diligence in prosecuting the action. In Pickert v. Rugg, supra, it was held, in accordance with the prevailing opinion of the courts, that, where the facts upon the question of diligence are not in dispute, the question as to whether reasonable diligence has been exercised is ordinarily to be determined by the court, as a question of law; further, that the reasonable diligence required of a suitor relates both to the commencement of the action and the subsequent prosecution.” (First Nat. Bank of Fargo v. Red River Valley Nat. Bank of Fargo, 9 N. D. 319, 323, 83 N. W. 221, 223.)
In considering the rule of damages, under a similar statute, the California court said: “With the equitableness of this rule of damage we cannot here be concerned. Nor can any arguments, however potent, touching the hardship of the
If the provisions of section 6086 are binding in actions of conversion, the public warehouseman, notwithstanding the positive mandates of said Chapter 93, by operation of law is given an option to return the grain on demand or to pay the market price at that time, for that would be the measure of his liability. Both sections 6086 and 6087 are general provisions declaratory of principles of law already existing and if complaint is made that a judgment is “unreasonable,” “unconscionable,” or “grossly oppressive,” the appellate court will determine the matter from the evidence, and if there is no evidence the presumption governs. (Ferrat v. Adamson, supra.)
Nor is there any legal obligations resting on the bailor of
The only question for determination by this court on this branch of the case is whether this action was commenced and prosecuted with reasonable diligence. The wheat was deposited in the fall of 1915 and receipts issued. The receipts do not prescribe any time within which the demand for return of the wheat must be had. These demands were not made until the spring and summer of 1916, and a great deal of that summer was spent in attempted settlement. There
It is stated as a general rule that “Ordinarily, the date
The trial court fixed June 1st as the date of conversion as to the Crowley and D’Arcy interests, and it appears that the demand and refusal of the Farms Company interest was August 2, 1916. For the purpose of this decision, these dates will be considered as the dates of the conversion.
4. The purpose of the law in requiring a bond is to protect
Por the reasons herein stated, we recommend that the order appealed from be affirmed; that the cause be remanded to the district court, with instructions to modify the judgment appealed from by entering judgment in favor of the plaintiffs and against all of the defendants for the highest market-price of the wheat prevailing, as appears from the evidence, between the date of the conversion as herein fixed arid the date of the trial of the action, less the storage charges due in each case, less also the money advanced, with eight per cent interest thereon from the time the same was advanced up to the time of the demand and tender.
Per Curiam: For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the order appealed from is affirmed; the cause is remanded to the district court, with instructions to modify the judgment appealed from by entering judgment in favor of the plaintiffs and against all of the defendants for the highest market price of the wheat prevailing, as appears from the evidence, between the date of the conversion- as herein fixed and the date of the trial of the action, less the storage charges due in each ease, less also the money advanced, with eight, per cent interest thereon from the time tbe same was advanced up to the time of the demand and tender. Modified and affirmed.