6 F. 569 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri | 1881
The plaintiffs aver that they shipped certain chattels (described) to their factors in St. Louis for sale; that said factors, without plaintiffs’ consent, pledged the same to the defendant, with full knowledge on the part of the defend
The anszver states that the plaintiffs were indebted to their factors for charges and advances on the specific chattels, without stating the amount thereof; that said chattels had been deposited in a warehouse, and a warehouse receipt therefor given to the factors; that said factors pledged to the defendant said chattels and warehouse receipt in order to raise means to pay said charges and advances; and that the defendant, “on the faith of said goods and chattels and warehouse receipt, duly indorsed by the factors, loaned to said factors $10,557.37, which sum is still due and unpaid.” The answer does not aver that said sum loaned was the amount of advances, etc.
The second defence is that the defendant did not know, etc., that, as to said chattels, the plaintiffs were owners or consignors thereof, and that the pledgors were factors merely; but, on the contrary, that said alleged.factors, having the warehouse receipt, and the defendant believing said factors to be the owners, the defendant did, “on the faith of said receipts,” etc., loan said sum of money to said factors, whereupon said chattels were transferred to the defendant, and said warehouse receipt indorsed and delivered.
The demurrer is to the first and second specific defences, as stated. The first is designed to raise the question whether a factor cannot, under the Missouri Statutes, assign a warehouse receipt, and pledge the chattels to raise money for advances and charges to an indefinite amount, even if the pledgee knows the factor’s relation to the property. If not so, the amount of said advances and charges ought to have been stated, so that it would appear whether the pledge was for a larger sum than the factor’s lien. Is it intended to assert that if advances and charges exist, or are about to be created, the factor may pledge generally, even when the pledgee knows the precise relation of the factors to the property ?
A full review of the subject would bo advisable, if time permitted, requiring an analysis of the various decisions and the statutes under which they were made; but such a review would compel a consideration, not of elemental principles alone, but of their modifications through English and American statutes, in the light of judicial interpretation of the respective statutes; such a review looking to the true interpretation, persuasively, of the Missouri Statutes.
In 18 Missouri, 147, 191, the true doctrine of the common law was stated and enforced, to-wit, that a factor could not pledge his principal’s goods. Prior to that time, both in England and in some of the American states, the rigorous and just rule at common law had been modified to a greater or loss extent.
The Missouri Statutes of 1808, 1869, and 1874 are in accord. Thus the act of 1868 authorized the transfer of a warehouse receipt by indorsement thereon, whereby the transferee is to be deemed the owner of the goods, “so far as to give validity to any pledge, lien,, or transfer made,” etc.: provided, that if the words “non-negotiable” wore -written or stamped on said warehouse receipts, etc., the act would not apply. This statute, with the exception in the proviso mentioned, permitted a transfer by indorsement of a warehouse receipt; so far as to give validity to the pledge, lien, and transfer. Prior to that act, as had been decided by the Missouri supreme court in the two cases supra, no such pledge could be made. The act of 1868 authorized the pledge in the manner stated to the extent of the factor’s lien. Section 6, Act of March 18, 1868.
But it is contended that section 10 of said act gives a broader effect to such transfers, for it provides that ware
It is obvious that if the warehouse receipt was to operate as a bill of exchange the primary element of such a bill would be eliminated, viz., a sum certain; and also demand on the warehouseman at maturity would be required, with due notice, as by the law merchant. But the warehouse receipt may not fix a day certain on which delivery is to be made, nor does it contain any other of the essential requisites of a bill of exchange, whereby the law merchant can fasten on the parties to the paper their respective liabilities. The original contract was between consignor and consignee. The latter-received the goods to sell for the benefit of the consignor. Could he, without consent of the consignor, place the same in a warehouse, and then turn over the warehouse receipt to some other person, and thus convert a contract resting in personal confidence and trust for the sale of the property into a' general authority to any and every one to whom the receipt might be pledged, or who thus gets manual or symbolical possession of the property, to sell the same, with or without accounting to the consignor for the proceeds thereof ? To so hold would be subversive, not only of all rights of property, but of all laws of contract between consignor and consignee. Does, then, the clause in the statute as to negotiability imply or require any such overturn of elemental principles ? Was the contract between consignor and consignee assigned, as well
The act of 1868 (Missouri Statutes) denounces penalties against a factor who does not account for or pay over to his principal the amount received on the negotiation, pledge, etc., of goods consigned. Does that imply that a negotiation or pledge may be made by the factor for more than his lien, he alone to be answerable for the surplus, and that the pledgee may not be also held for the surplus? Is not that section intended not to exonerate the indorser or transferee from liability to the consignor, but to add to the consignor’s security those penal provisions? The Missouri act, March 4, 1869, repeats the provisions of the act of 1868, supra, as to negotiability, and in section 2 declares that the indorsee of the receipt shall be deemed the owner of the goods, “so far as to give validity to any pledge, lien,” etc., “as on the faith thereof,” with the same proviso as in the former act. The repeal of certain sections in the former act does not affect the present inquiry further than is needed to interpret the force and effect of the terms, “as on the faith thereof.” Does the insertion of these words enlarge or restrict the rights of the indorsee ? By the prior statute the simple indorsement caused the indorsee of the receipt to be deemed the owner, so far as to give validity, etc.; but it must have appeared to the legislature that such a provision left the door to fraud wide open, and hence in the act of 1869 the relationship of the indorsee seeking the benefit of the transfer was confined to a bona fide indorsee; or, in the language of the act, to a transfer, pledge, etc., made “on the faith” of the warehouse receipt. Such being the condition of the statutes, the act of March 28, 1874, was passed, evidently designed to punish fraudulent factors and warehousemen, restricting their negogiations and pledges of bills of lading and warehouse receipts to cases where the owner or consignor gives written authority therefor; whence the proviso to the act, which is in the following words: “Provided, that nothing herein shall be construed to prevent such consignee or other person lawfully possessed of such bill of
It cannot be disputed, in the light of the decisions supra, 18 Mo. Rep., (which were in full accord with settled principles,) that a factor could not pledge for his debt the goods of the principal. ■ Such being the received doctrine in England and America, an act of the British parliament was needed to modify the rule as to Great Britain, and acts by several states in this country more, or less in accord with the acts of George IV. The first and most important inquiry is as to the force of the statute concerning the negotiability of warehouse receipts, etc.
In the case of Shaw v. R. Co. 101 U. S. 557, the doctrines involved were fully considered; the statutes under consideration by that court being those of Missouri and Pennsylvania, which were, in this respect, declared to be alike. After a very full and clear exposition of the question concerning negotiability as applied to bills of exchange and bills of lading, respectively, the court said: “It cannot be, therefore, that the statute which made them (bills of lading, etc.) negotiable by indorsement and delivery, or negotiable in the same manner as bills of exchange and promissory notes are negotiable, intended to change wholly their character, put them in all
This case is not only very instructive, but authoritative on this court; certainly, in the absence of any interpretation of the Missouri statute by the supreme court of Missouri. The general doctrine as to consignor and consignee, when advances have been made or not made, are fully stated in the opinions of the United States supreme court, 14 Pet. 479, (Brown v. McGraw,) and in 11 How. 209, (Warner v. Martin.)
In 23 Wall. 35, (U. S. v. Villanoga,) the extent of a factor’s interest and control of the property is stated.
Another question arises concerning the right of the consignor to maintain his action against the factor or his as-signee for the value of the goods, or their commission, when advances, charges, etc., exist, without first tendering the amount of said advances. On this point the authorities are not in accord. Some hold that the consignor may sue for the full value of the goods, as in trover, and the defendant may recoup as to advances and charges, -whereby the consignor would recover the surplus to which he is entitled and no more. Other authorities hold that inasmuch as the assignee of the factor holds the property under a lien for advances, etc., the consignor has no right of action until the lien .is first removed, except as in assumpsit for the surplus. It is useless to review these differing authorities in the light of technical rules, which are now to a large extent obsolete. It is clear that the factor has, in Missouri, a right tc pledge the goods consigned to the extent of the advances and. charges thereon,
Prior to the Missouri Statutes, the United States supreme court declared, in Warner v. Martin, supra, that whilst a factor could not pledge for a debt of his own, and if so pledged the consignor could recover in trover against the pledgee without tender either to the pledgee or factor what might be due to either of them, because the pledge was tortious; still a factor who had a lien on the goods could deliver them to a third person as security to the extent of his lien, in which case a tender of the amount of the lien due . the factor must be made before recovery could be had. The opinion of the United States supreme court in that ease throws much light on this controversy; for, if the contention is that under the Missouri Statutes a factor may pledge his principal’s goods on the faith of a warehouse receipt, irrespective of the amount of his advances and charges, — that is, for any amount he can borrow on the faith of a warehouse receipt, — it becomes important to ascertain if such a doctrine, subversive of the ordinary rights of principal and agent, or consignor and consignee, has any sanction either in statute or otherwise.
In Warner v. Martin, supra, a similar view seems to have been urged, and reliance was had on the act of Geo. IV., c. 94, (1825,) the English factor’s act. The United States supreme court, having before it both the English and the New York acts, said: “The third section of that (the New York) act provides for those eases where the ownership hy the factor of goods which he contracts to sell shall be said to exist, to give protection to purchasers against any claim of the factor’s principal. [This , is a contract of sale.] It is when he contracts for any money advanced, or for any negotiable instrument or other obligations in writing given for merchandise upon the faith that the factor is the owner of it. The concluding words of the,section are, ‘given by such other
Without pursuing these inquiries further, it is held that a factor may, under the Missouri Statutes, pledge his consignor’s goods to the extent of advances and charges thereon; the advances to be evidenced as required, and to no greater extent. It may be urged that a practical difficulty will arise in ascertaining the correct amount of advances and charges; but if that be so, the consignor may reply with greater force that his property ought not to be pledged for more than the factor’s lien thereon. The pledgee is not obliged to loan money and receive the pledge as collateral. If he is willing to lend to the factor he can receive as collateral a warehouse receipt to the extent that the factor has a lien on the goods represented; in other words, the factor can pledge what belongs to him, — his lien, — and not his principal’s interests or rights of property. This may be questionable legislation, inasmuch as it enables the pledgee to sell the goods if not redeemed, instead of the agent, in whose personal skill and judgment alone the consignor confided.
If there were advances and charges existing for which the property was pledged, the plaintiffs, to recover in trover or for conversion, should have first tendered the amount thereof. In no event are they entitled to more than the surplus after the lien is discharged.
Here arises the diffieülty under which courts and legislatures have labored with respect to the common-law rule and needed modifications thereof. A consignor selects his con-
The decisions in Wisconsin and elsewhere, looking to different conclusions from those reached by this court, have received careful consideration. There is nothing in the Missouri Statutes to justify a factor’s pledge for more than advances and charges, and the evidence of advances is confined to written authority therefor. A fautor cannot sell or pledge for his individual debt, but he can sell to pay such advances and charges, or pledge therefor, or sell in the usual course of
If a stranger will take a pledge of goods from a factor without inquiry, the consignor is not to suffer. Whether he knows or not that the person from whom he takes the pledge is a mere factor does not change the rule. A consignor’s property cannot be taken from him without his consent. A pledgee is bound, at his peril, to inform himself of the facts. The rule as to sales in the ordinary course of business is one thing, and as to pledges entirely different. This is fully stated in the case of Shaw v. Railroad, Co., supra. The difficulty, as heretofore intimated, arises from the failure of defendant to aver the amount of advances and charges for which the goods were pledged. The answer states that there were advances and charges, and that, for the purpose of raising means to pay the same, the warehouse receipts were pledged, and that defendant loaned “on the faith thereof” §10,555.31. If it be meant that the sum loaned was the amount of charges and advances, the defence is good, in the absence of a tender thereof; but if, on the other hand, it is meant that inasmuch as there was some amount due, however small, the factor could pledge the property for any loan he might obtain thereon, however large, and hold the property against the consignor generally, that special defence would be bad.
The only difference between the two special defences seems to be that in one it is averred that the defendant believed the pledgor to be the owner, and in the other no such averment is made. As already stated, such a difference avails nothing. The defendant, in his argument, says: “The question presented for the consideration of the court is this: If a factor pledges the bill of lading or warehouse receipt, having no reason to doubt that such factor is the true owner of the goods, can the consignor recover the goods without first offering to return the money borrowed ?” It will be apparent, from what
The same ruling will be had as to the second special defence. If, however, the defence, if amended, should show that defendant was pledgee for advances and charges within the term of the Missouri Statutes, and that no payment or tender thereof was made before suit brought, then said defence as to this form of action will be valid. In other words, a pledgee can maintain his pledge only for what the statute provides, and in the manner provided. If he brings himself within the terms of the statute, then as lienor he is not a tort-feasor, or guilty of conversion by refusing to surrender the property until the lien is discharged.
Demurrer sustained.