Akron Cereal Co. v. First National Bank

84 P. 778, 3 Cal. App. 198, 1906 Cal. App. LEXIS 180
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 1, 1906
DocketCiv. No. 179.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 84 P. 778 (Akron Cereal Co. v. First National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Akron Cereal Co. v. First National Bank, 84 P. 778, 3 Cal. App. 198, 1906 Cal. App. LEXIS 180 (Cal. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

HARRISON, P. J.

Action for conversion. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendant has appealed.

The facts out of which the plaintiff’s cause of action arose, as developed at the trial, are as follows: The plaintiff is a corporation organized under the laws of Ohio, and engaged in that state in the manufacture of an article of merchandise known as “Mother’s Oats”; and on March 15, 1900, shipped by railroad from Akron to San Francisco three hundred and fifty cases of this merchandise. At that time, J. R. Moler & Co., a firm doing business in Denver, was acting as manufacturing agent for the plaintiff in several cities, and had one F. Ingold as its own agent and representative in San Francisco. The merchandise so shipped by the plaintiff was consigned to its own order, with a direction on the bill of lading “Notify J. R. Moler, 109 California street, San Francisco, Cal.” Upon its arrival in San Francisco the merchandise was first stored in the warehouse of the Haslett Warehouse Co., and was entered on- its books in the name of ‘‘ The Akron *200 Cereal Co., c/o F. Ingold.” October 20, 1900, at the request of Ingold, two hundred and ninety-two cases of the merchandise were transferred upon the books of the warehouse to the name of “J". R. Moler & Co., c/o F. Ingold. ’ ’ No warehouse receipts were issued in either case. November 8th, one hundred and forty cases, and November 9th, one hundred and twenty-eight cases, were withdrawn from this warehouse by Ingold, he signing “J. R. Moler & Co., per F. Ingold,” to receipts therefor from the warehouse. Ingold was himself a manufacturing agent, and was also engaged in business in San Francisco upon his own account; and about this time he applied to the defendant for a loan of $500, offering two hundred and fifty cases of the above merchandise as collateral security therefor, stating that it belonged to him and was stored in a warehouse in the city in his name. Upon being told by the defendant that it would require a warehouse receipt therefor to be issued in its own favor, he shortly thereafter presented such a warehouse receipt from the Lowell warehouse, and received from the defendant $500, for which he gave his promissory note and the said warehouse receipt as security therefor. At the expiration of thirty days he paid the defendant $250 upon'the account of this loan, and soon after left the country and was not again heard from. In April, 1901, the defendant sold the merchandise for $498. out of which, after deducting the expenses of the sale, it reimbursed itself for the loan and some other expenses, and has in its hands a small balance to the credit of Ingold. Upon these facts, the superior court held that the plaintiff was at all times the owner of the merchandise; that the defendant had converted it to its own use, and thereupon rendered judgment against the defendant for $498.

The appellant does not question the finding that the plaintiff was the owner of the merchandise, but it relies for its defense and in support of its appeal upon the provisions of section 2991, Civil Code. That section is as follows, viz.: “One who has allowed another to assume the apparent ownership of property for the purpose of making any transfer of it cannot set up his own title to defeat a pledge of the property made by the other to a pledgee who received the property in good faith in "the ordinary course of business and for *201 value.” It may be conceded that the defendant received the property from Ingold in good faith and in the ordinary course of business, and for value; but in order that, by reason thereof, the plaintiff should be deprived of his right to the property, it was incumbent upon the defendant to show that Ingold had been “allowed” by the plaintiff to assume the apparent ownership thereof “for the purpose of making a transfer of it.” Mere possession of property is only prima facie evidence of ownership. The owner may place his property in the name or custody of another, as in the case of a carrier or warehouseman or other bailee, without in any respect affecting his ownership. A warehouse receipt, except as against the warehouseman, is no higher evidence of ownership than would be the physical possession of the property. “While mere possession of goods is frequently prima facie evidence of title, it is merely prima facie. Whoever deals with the possessor does it at his peril, and the purchaser from one having no other apparent title to goods than the possession thereof must see to it that his seller has the title; and if his title fails, and he is obliged to respond to the true owner of the goods his loss is due to his own misplaced confidence, and not to that of the owner. Owners of goods for commercial and other purposes must frequently intrust others with the possession of them, and the affairs of men could not be conducted unless they could do so with safety. So long as the possession of the goods is not accompanied with some indicia of ownership, or of right to sell, the possessor has no more power to devest the owner of his title or to affect it than a mere thief.” (Soltau v. Gerdau, 119 N. Y. 380, [16 Am. St. Rep. 843, 23 N. E. 864].) A factor or a mere agent who is in possession of property with power to sell the same has authority to transfer it by way of pledge (Civ. Code, sec. 2368 [2]); but for the purpose of protecting a pledgee who deals with one who is in possession of property, and takes it from him in pledge under the belief that he is the owner thereof, the legislature has enacted the above section of the code; but by the express terms of the section it has limited the grounds of such belief on the part of the pledgee to cases in which the real owner of the property has not only “allowed” the pledgor to assume its apparent ownership, but has done so *202 “for the purpose of making any transfer” of it. The pledgee must show the existence of these conditions as well as good faith on his part before he can claim a title superior to that of the original owner. “It is the act of the owner in intrusting the factor with the possession of the goods, or the documentary evidence of ownership—the apparent ownership and right of disposal—in connection with the fact that innocent third persons deal with him upon the faith of such apparent ownership, that estops the owner from following his property into the hands of bona fide vendees or pledgees, and gives the latter a better title than their vendor or pledgor had.” (Howland v. Woodruff, 60 N. Y. 73.)

The warehouse receipt which Ingold presented to defendant was only prima facie evidence of the ownership of the merchandise therein mentioned, and, as the plaintiff did not authorize, and was in no respect connected with, the issuance of this receipt, its rights as owner of the property could not be affected by it. As between the plaintiff and Ingold it is clearly shown by the record not only that the former had never parted with its ownership of the property, but also that the apparent ownership thereof by Ingold had never been authorized or allowed by the plaintiff, but had been assumed by Ingold without any authority whatever, and with the purpose of defrauding the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
84 P. 778, 3 Cal. App. 198, 1906 Cal. App. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/akron-cereal-co-v-first-national-bank-calctapp-1906.