233 Mass. 386 | Mass. | 1919
The action is in tort or contract and it is plain
that the first two counts in tort rest on a disaffirmance, while the third count in contract is based on an affirmance of the alleged sale of the butter and eggs, the property in controversy. While it does not appear that at the close of the evidence the plaintiff was required to elect, the presiding judge having given the defendants’ ninth request that the plaintiff “cannot maintain this as an action in assumpsit or otherwise for an accounting and payment over of the proceeds of sale, because he has never affirmed said sale, but has at all times claimed that the sale was wrongful, fraudulent, colorable, etc.” and found for the plaintiff on the ground “that defendants had converted the butter and eggs,” the third count calls for no further comment.
The rights of the pledgor, the Mills Tea and Butter Company, of which the individual plaintiff is trustee in bankruptcy, and the Boston Terminal Refrigerating Company, the pledgee, are to be ascertained from the contracts under which the property was delivered as collateral security for the payment with interest of certain promissory notes on demand, given for money lent by the pledgee to the bankrupt. The pledge in each instance provides, that not only on non-payment of the notes, but in case of bankruptcy the notes and all other liabilities of the pledgor shall forthwith become due and payable, and the pledgee is empowered “to sell, assign and deliver the whole or any part of said security . . . at public or private sale, without demand, advertisement or notice of any kind, which are hereby expressly waived,” and at such sale the pledgee may purchase the whole or any part of the property sold free from any right of redemption on the part of the pledgor. The pledgee, “a public warehouseman,” in accordance with authority expressly conferred by the agreements, rehypothecated for its own debts to a national bank the notes which were overdue and unpaid at the date of bankruptcy; and the pledgee, as it
But, the issue of fraud having been raised, the defendant’s first, second, fifth, and eleventh requests, which omitted all reference to good faith in making the sale, were denied rightly. The judge was warranted in finding on the evidence that the Eastern States Refrigerating Company as owner of the entire common stock, managed and controlled not only the corporation but the commercial dealings of the pledgee; or, as stated in the record, the business was "indirectly operated” by the Eastern States Refrigerating Company. And that after the negotiations for the sale of the butter to the Massasoit Creamery Company fell through, the pledgee, acting under the orders of and in combination with the Eastern States Refrigerating Company, to which the butter had been shipped from Boston to Springfield for delivery to the Massasoit Creamery Company, and for the sole purpose of benefiting themselves, made the transfer of the butter as well as of the eggs, which he further could find was known to the parties to be worth much more than the price obtained. A further finding was warranted that the Eastern States Refrigerating Company, the alleged purchaser, and not the pledgee fixed the price and ordered the property shipped to it.
It was the duty of the pledgee to use every reasonable effort to protect the interest of the pledgor. Bon v. Graves, 216 Mass. 440, 446. It could not for its own exclusive benefit, or for the benefit
The defendants contend that, even if the pledgor after default had not been divested of its general title, it had no right to a return of the property or possession until it tendered payment of the outstanding obligations. See Harding v. Eldridge, 186 Mass. 39, 42; Doyle v. Peerless Motor Car Co. of New England, 226 Mass. 561; Beacon Motor Car Co. v. Shadman, 226 Mass. 570. And by the eighth request the judge was asked to rule “that the plaintiff cannot maintain his count for conversion, because there has not been at any time any tender of payment made of the amount due on the notes in evidence.” It is argued that, until the debt is paid off, the pledgee has the whole of the present interest, and that a sale does not entitle the pledgor to bring an action for conversion which assumes the right to immediate possession. Jarvis v. Rogers, 13 Mass. 105; S. C. 15 Mass. 389. Cumnock v. Newburyport Institution for Savings, 142 Mass. 342, 346.
But a tender is not necessary as a condition precedent where the pledgee, if he acts wrongfully, has put it out of his power to return the property. The pledgor under such conditions may recover the fair market value of the merchandise less the amount of the debt for which the goods were pledged. Chamberlin v. Shaw, 18 Pick. 278. Whitaker v. Sumner, 20 Pick. 399. Briggs v. Boston & Lowell Railroad, 6 Allen, 246. Fletcher v. Dickinson, 7 Allen, 23. Fowle v. Ward, 113 Mass. 548. Farrar v. Paine, 173 Mass. 58. 21 R. C. L., Pledge, § 39, and cases and authorities there collected.
It follows that the eighth request was denied rightly, and, finding no error in the réfusal to give the fourth request, that the paramount duty of the Boston Terminal Refrigerating Company “was to protect its loans for the benefit of itself and the . . . Bank . . ., and of the holders of its own paper,” while its duty to the pledgor was subordinate, the exceptions must be overruled.
So ordered.