167 N.W. 223 | N.D. | 1918
The facts in this case are no.t seriously in dispute, but the parties do not agree as to the law. On August 5, 1909, the defendant Farmers Co-operative Elevator Company was engaged in the business of conducting a public elevator and warehouse at Lansford in this state. On that date said defendant as principal and the defendant the Northern Trust Company as surety executed and delivered to the state of North Dakota the public warehouseman’s bond of the defendant Elevator Company in the sum of $5,000 as provided by § 2247, Rev. Codes 1905 (§ 3111, Comp. Laws 1913). On September 2, 1909, the plaintiff, Thomas E. Reilly, left with said Elevator Company for storage 635 bushels and 20 pounds of No. 1 hard wheat and said Elevator Company issued to said Reilly storage ticket No. 8 for said grain, which ticket contained the usual agreements and conditions'provided by the statutes of this state, said company agreeing to store said grain in consideration of the payment of storage charges, insurance, and handling; and to return the said grain, or a like quantity of the same quality, kind, and grade, to plaintiff upon demand and surrender of said storage. ticket and payment of said charges. Plaintiff made no demand for the grain in question, nor did he attempt to sell the same until in December, 1914, and on January 4, 1915, he made his first written demand for the grain or the value thereof, which was refused both by the Elevator Company and the-Northern Trust Company.
In 1914, and prior to any demand being so made by plaintiff, the Elevator Company had become financially involved and insolvent, and all of its property and assets had been lost under foreclosure proceedings. During all of the time from 1909 to 1915 plaintiff was a stock
The bond of the Northern Trust Company was conditioned as provided by the laws of this state and in part was as follows:
“Now, therefore, if the sáid Farmers Co-operative Elevator Company shall faithfully perform its duty as public warehousemen, and comply with all of the laws of the state of North Dakota in relation thereto, then this obligation shall be null and void, but otherwise to be and remain in full force and effect, subject, however, to the following conditions :
First. The liability upon this bond shall commence on the date of the approval of the same by the proper officers, as provided by law, and shall end on the 1st day of August, 1911, a. d.
Appellant contends that the bond in question was intended to and ■did in law become liable for all storage tickets issued by the elevator company while said bond was by its terms in force. In other words, he contends that inasmuch as the plaintiff’s grain was stored in September, 1909, while the bond was in force, that the bond continued good for said grain so long as the grain remained stored in the elevator, regardless of how long that was after the bond, by its terms, expired.
We cannot agree with appellant in his contention. Under the laws of this state (§§ 3107 et seq.) every elevator must secure a license biennially as a condition precedent to doing business, and must also file a bond in such sum as the Commissioners of Railroads shall fix, of not
Appellant says that, according to the conditions of the bond, the surety company agrees to pay for all grain stored in the defendant’s elevator from the 5th day of August, 1909, to the 5th day of August, 1911, providing such grain was not paid for by the principal, the Elevator Company; and he cites Comp. Laws 1913, § 3139, in support thereof.
In the first place § 3139 does not exact such a condition. It simply says that the bond shall be good “for the faithful discharge of the duties' of a public warehouseman.”
The trial court also found that the plaintiff, with the knowledge he possessed of the conditions of the Elevator Company, was guilty of such laches in not sooner presenting his storage ticket as would bar a recovery by him as against the Northern Trust Company. While we do not expressly so hold, as it is unnecessary in view of our holding upon the first proposition, we are of the opinion that there is considerable merit in the conclusion as reached by the trial court. It is also unnecessary for us to pass upon the question raised by respondent Trust Company as to whether or not the complaint stated a cause of action by reason of there being no allegation as to whether this plaintiff held the only outstanding storage ticket which might be a claim upon the bond. Upon this point, see Phillips v. Semingson, 25 N. D. 460, 142 N. W. 47.
The judgment of the County Court is right and the same is therefore affirmed, with costs.