American National Bank v. Nationall Bank of Commerce

232 P. 295, 132 Wash. 490, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 779
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 10, 1925
DocketNo. 18528. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 232 P. 295 (American National Bank v. Nationall Bank of Commerce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American National Bank v. Nationall Bank of Commerce, 232 P. 295, 132 Wash. 490, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 779 (Wash. 1925).

Opinions

Mackintosh, J.

It is unnecessary to repeat much of the history of this transaction. It may he found in Hallock v. National Bank of Commerce, 110 Wash. 385, 188 Pac. 479, 10 A. L. R. 737. So far as material to the decision of this case, the situation is that the Na *491 tional Body Manufacturing Company, of Nashville, Tennessee, agreed to sell to Hallock, at Seattle, a shipment of auto bodies. The seller (which we will call the body company) drew a draft in the sum of $2,831.40, the amount of the contract price, upon Hallock, and sold the draft to the Cumberland Valley Bank, of which the appellant is successor by consolidation. The draft was forwarded by the appellant to the respondent in Seattle, with an order bill of lading endorsed in blank, covering a shipment of auto bodies from the body company to Hallock. The .draft and bill of lading were forwarded to respondent for purposes of collection from Hallock. Upon delivery to him of the bill of lading, respondent was to remit the proceeds of the draft to the appellant. When the appellant took the draft, it was a holder in due course, but as was stated in the Hallock case (Hallock v. National Bank of Commerce, supra), the complication thereafter arose in the transaction by virtue of an escrow agreement to which the appellant became a party for the benefit of Hal-lock. By virtue of that agreement, the appellant changed its situation from a holder in due course, and permitted the introduction of defenses by the drawee and the case was no longer one falling within the facts of Old National Bank v. Gibson, 105 Wash. 578, 179 Pac. 117, 6 A. L. R. 247.

Upon receipt by the respondent of the draft and bill of lading, they were presented to Hallock, who refused to pay the draft, for the reason that the goods covered by the bill of lading had not yet arrived. The appellant, upon being notified of this, instructed the respondent to hold the draft pending the arrival of the goods. Thereafter Hallock notified respondent that part of the goods had arrived. Appellant was notified that Hallock agreed to take up the draft as soon as all the goods arrived in Seattle. Thereupon appellant in- *492 strueted the respondent to deliver the bill of lading, accept the amount of the draft and to hold the funds in escrow pending the arrival of all the goods. Pursuant to these instructions, the respondent delivered the bill of lading to Hallock, who paid the entire amount of the draft, which was placed in escrow to await the arrival of all the goods. As a matter of fact, the goods covered by the bill of lading were only a portion of the goods ordered for which the draft was drawn. Hal-lock informed respondent, after securing the goods covered by the bill of lading, that some of them were in a damaged condition.

The body company had, in the meantime, become insolvent and was unable to ship all the goods, and the freight on the goods shipped had not been paid by the body company, as it had agreed to; and, were the body company still in existence and suable, Hallock would have a cause of action against it for its failure to comply with its contract of sale. After the portion of the goods covered by the bill of lading had arrived, a small additional shipment by express was made which Hallock and the respondent, at the- time they were notified of the shipment, presumed was the entire balance called for by the contract. Through a misunderstanding, the appellant was notified by the respondent that all of the goods had arrived, taking it that the express shipment constituted the balance of the goods due;

• but, as soon as the true situation was discovered, the respondent telegraphed the appellant the true situation.

Hallock began an action (Hallock v. National Bank of Commerce, supra) against the body company for damages for breach of the contract and attempted to make service by garnishment and attachment of the funds in the hands of the respondent. In that action, we held that the funds were either the funds of Hallock *493 or of the appellant and were not subject to garnishment and attachment, so that Hallock had not obtained jurisdiction of the body company. This action was brought by the appellant to recover the full amount of the draft deposited in escrow with the respondent, asserting that the escrow agreement had been fully complied with and that, by the acceptance and retention of the goods by Hallock and by his payment of the storage charges thereon and by reason of the making of the claim for damages against the body company, the appellant was entitled to the payment of the full sum held in escrow.

The evidence shows that, while the contract called for the delivery of goods worth $2,831.40, only goods amounting to the value of probably $1,800.00 were ever delivered to Hallock. The only goods ever received by him were covered by the bill of lading and the subsequent small express shipment. He had taken these and disposed of them at the time of the trial, and testified that he had never held them as the property of the body company, but had taken them under the contract. The trial court held that the escrow agreement had never been complied with and could not be complied with, and the respondent had no authority and could not be compelled to deliver the amount held by it to the appellant, and entered judgment for the respondent, from which this appeal is taken.

We cannot agree with the contention of the appellant that the entire amount was to be paid over to it when the additional goods received by express arrived; nor can we agree with the contention that Hallock is now claiming both the property and the money for its payment; nor can we agree with the appellant’s contention that Hallock is estopped to deny the goods had arrived, because he had notified respondent of the ar *494 rival of the express shipment, which at the time he supposed covered the balance of goods due him.

Nor is Hallock estopped to claim that some of the money belongs to him, because of the institution of his action against the body company, on the theory that the money was that of the appellant and subject to garnishment. In his action in 110 Wash, it was not held that Hallock was mistaken in his cause of action. Wha.t was held was that he was mistaken in the matter of jurisdiction, because he did not have the right to garnish the funds in question, because they were either his own or those of appellant here. Of course, having failed to obtain jurisdiction of the person of the defendant or of any of its property, he was compelled to abandon his. suit; and having failed to obtain jurisdiction, he ought not to be held to have elected his remedy by instituting that action, which was unavailing because of inability to obtain jurisdiction. Such action should not preclude him from setting up what defenses he may have in establishing any claim he may have against any portion of the funds in the hands of respondent. Although it may be true that, by taking possession of such auto bodies as were received, Hal-lock can be held to have stood upon'his contract with the body company; still he cannot be held to a payment for any more of the goods than he actually received.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
232 P. 295, 132 Wash. 490, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-national-bank-v-nationall-bank-of-commerce-wash-1925.