281 F. 754 | 2d Cir. | 1922
This proceeding is brought to recover “just compensation” for 20,000 bags of coffee requisitioned by the
The petitioner, the National City Bank of New York, hereinafter called the Bank, held the coffee in the city of New York “for the account” of the owners on the day of its requisition. The market value of the coffee in New York on the day of its requisition is alleged in the petition to have been $585,146.87. No part of the just compensation for the coffee has been paid by the United States, except the sum of $313,356.77, that sum having been paid to the Bank on August 22, 1919. The petitioner therefore prays for judgment in the sum of $271,790.10, with interest from November 21, 1918. The court below, on May 25, 1921, entered judgment in favor of the Bank and against the United States in the amount of $291,573.33, which includes interest and costs and disbursements as taxed.
The petition is filed under section 10 of the Act of August 10, 1917 (Comp. St, 1918, Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1919, § 3115%ii), commonly known as the Lever Act, which was passed to provide for the national security and defense. 40 Stat. at L. c. 53, p. 276. The provisions^ of section 10 of that act may be found in the margin.
The coffee herein involved having been commandeered on November 21, 1918, and the government having awarded the sum of $423,536.69 at the price of 15.29 cents per pound f. o. b. warehouse as compensation, the Bank notified the government on July 5, 1919, that the award was not satisfactory. Thereupon, and on August 26, 1919, the govern
[ 1 ] It appears that all the coffee herein involved had been imported into this country prior to January 18, 1918. On that date it was bought on a cable order from the North Oceanic Steamship & Trading Company, a Russian corporation located at Archangel. It is hereinafter referred to as the Russian Company. This cable was addressed to Francisconi & Co., a New York firm dealing in coffee. The coffee was purchased with the intention of exporting it to Northern Russia. The Bank paid for the coffee under a letter of credit in favor of Francisconi & Co. and Hard & Rand, also coffee dealers, for account of the Russian corporation. These payments resulted in an overdraft which amounted to $13,324.60. On November 21, 1918, and on July 5, 1919, the overdraft was increased to $94,312.42. This was secured by a lien on the coffee and by the warehouse receipts, which were issued to the order of the Bank and were negotiable. These warehouse receipts the Bank continued to hold during the times herein involved, and they invested the Bank with the legal title. Under the New York law a person to whom a negotiable warehouse receipt has been negotiated acquired thereby—
“such title to the goods as the person negotiating the receipt to him had or had ability to convey to a purchaser in good faith for value, and also such title to the goods as the depositor or person to whose order the goods were to be delivered by the terms of the receipt had or had ability to convey to a purchaser in good faith for value.” New Tort General Business Law .(Con-sol. Laws, c. 20) § 125.
As thq holder of the legal title, although it held the title for the real owners in Russia, the Bank was “the person entitled to receive” the compensation under section 10 of the Lever Act, and was likewise the person entitled to sue the United States in the manner as therein provided. The facts as to title alleged in the plaintiff’s petition show such title in the petitioner as sustains the judgment, if the evidence produced sustained the allegations, as we must assume it did, to the satisfaction of the trial court.
We have considered the question as to whether the government has been deprived of its constitutional right to a jury trial, notwithstanding the fact that upon the record, for a reason which will appear as we proceed, the government was, strictly speaking, not entitled to raise the question at all. But the conclusion we have expressed upon the question of constitutional right does not alter or affect the judgment to be rendered, upon- the record properly before the court. The record shows that, at the time the case was called in the District Court, the following colloquy between court and counsel occurred:
“Mr. Mead (Counsel for the Bank): I claim the right of a jury trial, but for the purpose of the trial of this ease I waive that right.
’ “The Court: Then you will have to have a signed stipulation that this may be tried without a jury.
“Mr. Barnes (Counsel for the Government): We don’t want to waive that. Our position is that it is not necessary for me to waive that The government does not waive' it. The government insists there is no waiver necessary, and that the matter he tried before the court ■without a jury as a matter of law. »
“The Court: Mr. Mead takes the position that that is not correct, but in this particular case he waives it
“Mr. Mead: Yes.”
“When an issue of fact in any civil cause in a circuit court is tried and determined by the court without the intervention of a jury, according to section 049, the rulings of the court, in the progress of the trial of the cause, if excepted to at the time, and duly presented by a bill of exceptions, may be reviewed by the Supreme Court upon a writ of error or upon appeal; and when the finding is special the review may extend to the determination of the sufficiency of the facts found to support the judgment.”
It appears from what has already been said that at the opening of the trial in this case, when counsel for the Bank stated that he would waive the right to a jury trial, the court at once suggested:
“Then you will have to have a signed stipulation that this may be tried without a jury.”
Counsel for the government did not seem to grasp the significance of the suggestion. At any rate, while he insisted that the matter should be tried without a jury, he claimed no waiver was necessary, and the case went to trial without a jury, and without any written stipulation waiving the jury. The result is that no question is now open to review in this court on the writ of error, except it be one arising upon the process, pleadings or judgment. This court had occasion to consider the subject in Illinois Surety Co. v. United States, 229 Fed. 527, 143 C. C. A. 595. We declared in that case that, as there had been no written stipulation waiving a jury trial and the case had nevertheless been tried without a jury, it was—
*759 “well settled that none of the questions decided at the trial can he re-examined in this court on writ of error. No questions, therefore, are open to review on error, except they arise upon the process, pleadings, or judgment.”
There are numerous decisions in the Supreme Court to the same effect : Campbell v. United States, 224 U. S. 99, 105, 32 Sup. Ct. 398, 56 L. Ed. 684; Rogers v. United States, 141 U. S. 548, 12 Sup. Ct. 91, 35 L. Ed. 853; Spalding v. Manasse, 131 U. S. 65, 9 Sup. Ct. 649, 33 L. Ed. 86; Andes v. Slauson, 130 U. S. 435, 9 Sup. Ct. 573, 32 L. Ed. 989; Dundee Mortgage Co. v. Hughes, 124 U. S. 157, 8 Sup. Ct. 377, 31 L. Ed. 357; Bond v. Dustin, 112 U. S. 604, 607, 5 Sup. Ct. 296, 28 L. Ed. 835; Alexander County v. Kimball, 106 U. S. 623n, 2 Sup. Ct. 86, 27 L. Ed. 311; Gilman v. Illinois & Miss. Tel. Co., 91 U. S. 603, 614, 23 L. Ed. 405.
Counsel for the government, however, relies upon Flanders v. Tweed, 9 Wall. 425, 19 L. Ed. 678. That case was tried without a jury, and there was no stipulation in writing waiving a jury filed, as required by the act of Congress. The circumstances of the case were peculiar. The case was tried in the Circuit Court for the District of Louisiana, and judgment was entered in February, 1868, or about three years after the act of Congress providing for a stipulation in writing waiving a jury; that act having been passed on March 3,1865.' 13 Stat. L. 501 (Comp. St. § 1587). The act was the first one that had authorized the parties to dispense with a jury, except two special acts, one in respect to Louisiana in 1824 (4 Stat. .62), and California and Oregon in 1864 (13 Stat. 4). And under the special circumstances existing the court reversed the judgment for a mistrial and remanded it to the court below, and we are asked to adopt a similar course in this case. This we are not at liberty to do. The Supreme Court, in Reed v. Gardner, 17 Wall. 409, 411, 21 L. Ed. 665, declined to follow Flanders v. Tweed and declared it to be exceptional, and it declined to pass upon any question presented in the bill of exceptions and stated that “the court intend to adhere to this practice.” So far as we are aware, Flanders v. Tweed has never been followed in any subsequent case. And see Ladd & Tilton Bank v. Lewis A. Hicks Co., 218 Fed. 310, 311, 134 C. C. A. 106.
The result is that this court is not at liberty on this writ of error to consider the numerous assignments of error based on the trial court’s findings of fact and refusals to find certain other facts; and for the same reason we cannot consider alleged errors in the conclusions of law which the court found, and in refusing to find certain other conclusions of law based upon its findings of fact. Neither can we consider the alleged errors in admitting certain opinion evidence.
Judgment is affirmed.
“That the President is authorized, from time to time, to requisition foods, feeds, fuels, and other supplies necessary to the support of the army or the maintenance of the navy, or any other public use connected with the common defense, and to requisition, or otherwise provide, storage facilities for such supplies; and he shall ascertain and pay a just compensation therefor. If the compensation so determined be not satisfactory to the person entitled- to receive the same, such person shall be paid seventy-five per centum of the amount so determined by the President, and shall be entitled to sue the United States to recover such further sum as, added to said seventy-five per centum will make up such amount as will be just compensation for such necessaries or storage space, and jurisdiction is hereby conferred on the United States District Courts to hear and determine all such controversies: Provided, that nothing in this section, or in the section that follows, shall be construed to require any natural person to furnish to the government any necessaries held by him and reasonably required for consumption or use by himself and defendants, nor shall any person, firm, corporation, or association be required to furnish to the government any seed necessary for the seeding of land owned, leased, or cultivated by them.”