25 Or. 178 | Or. | 1893
Opinion by
The record discloses that a number of objections were made to the indictment, and exceptions taken to the admission of testimony, to the instructions of the court, and to the refusal of the court to give the instructions asked by the defendant. At the outset it is claimed that the act under which the defendant was indicted, tried,
The indictment charges the defendant with operating as owner, a warehouse, and with being a warehouseman, and that as such he issued the warehouse receipt for the sheepskins as set out therein, when in fact, at the time of its issuance, he did not have them actually in store, nor any part thereof, except as alleged. But it does not charge the defendant with operating a warehouse for the storage of sheepskins or other commodity. It is true that one who operates, as owner, a warehouse is a warehouseman. The law defines a warehouse to be a building or place adapted to the reception and storage of goods and merchandise, and a warehouseman to be one
To aid in effecting this object, and to facilitate the transfer of stored goods or commodities, all warehouse receipts are declared to be negotiable. The statute requires warehousemen or wharfingers to issue receipts or vouchers for goods or commodities stored, containing certain requisites specified, none of which include the quality of negotiability, and, after prohibiting them from issuing any false receipts or vouchers, or for goods not actually in store, etc., it declares such receipts so issued by them to be negotiable and transferable by indorsement. In declaring such receipts to be negotiable the statute necessarily meant and referred to the receipt or voucher which the warehouseman or wharfinger had issued to the owner 'of the goods or commodities stored. This receipt is made transferable by indorsement of such
Reversed.