Atlantic National Bank of Boston v. Moore

241 P. 601, 29 Ariz. 346, 1925 Ariz. LEXIS 221
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1925
DocketCivil No. 2390.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 241 P. 601 (Atlantic National Bank of Boston v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic National Bank of Boston v. Moore, 241 P. 601, 29 Ariz. 346, 1925 Ariz. LEXIS 221 (Ark. 1925).

Opinion

ROSS, J.

— In the fall of 1920, appellee, Moore, then a Salt River Valley grower of Pima cotton, made two consignments of his product, one of two bales and one of five bales, to the People’s National Bank of Roxbury, a national bank engaged in business in the city of Boston; the bank accepting the same and the warehouse receipts as a pledge for the repayment of an advancement to Moore of 35 cents per pound on the cotton and for the carriage charges from Phoenix to Providence, Rhode Island, to which place the cotton was consigned. To cover such items Moore gave the bank his four demand notes, for the amounts and upon the dates following: September 18, 1920, $385.70 covering the first consignment; November 30th, $21.63, freight on same; October 6th, $906.50, covering second consignment; January 14, 1921, freight on same $57.79. The notes are collateral form notes, and are the same, except in amounts and dates and description of property pledged. We quote, omitting the portions having no bearing upon the questions involved:

“$385.70. Boston, Sept. 18, 1920.

“On demand, for value received, I promise to pay to the People’s National Bank of Roxbury, or order at their banking rooms, 114 Dudley street, Boston, Mass., three hundred eighty-five and 70/100 dollars, with interest at the rate of 8 per centum per annum, I having deposited with said bank as general col *348 lateral security for the payment of this and any other liability, direct or indirect, joint or several, of the undersigned already existing of which may hereafter arise in favor of said bank, the following property, viz.: 2 bales Pima cotton, mark W. O. M. gross weight 1102 lbs., No. 6559, No. 6556, with power, on the nonpayment of this or any other such liability when due, or at any time or times thereafter, to sell, assign, transfer, and deliver said property or any property added to or substituted for the same or any part hereof, at Brokers’ Board or at public auction or private sale, without notice; and the holder hereof may become the purchaser at any such sale. . . . Should the market value of the property hereby or hereafter pledged, depreciate, in the judgment of the holder of this note I hereby agree to deposit satisfactory additional property on demand, so that the market value shall always be at least- per cent more than the amount of this note.

“Upon failure to comply with any such demand, or upon failure to pay any other such liability of the undersigned to the holder hereof when the same is due and payable, . . . this note shall in the discretion of the holder hereof become due and payable without notice, anything hereinbefore expressed to the contrary notwithstanding, and the whole or any part or parts of said property, or substitutes therefor and additions thereto may be sold at any time as herein provided at the option of the holder hereof. . . .

“After deducting all legal or other costs and expenses of collection of the note, and of the protection, sale and delivery of the collateral, the residue of the proceeds of any sale or sales may be applied to the payment of this note or of any then existing liability of the undersigned to the holder hereof, whether then due or not, returning the surplus, if any, to the undersigned; and in case of deficiency I agree to pay to the holder hereof the amount thereof forthwith, after such sale with legal interest.

“The holder hereof shall have no duty or liability as to the collection, or protection of any property held as collateral hereunder, or of any income thereon, nor as to the preservation of any rights pertaining *349 thereto, beyond the safe custody thereof; and the undersigned further agrees that no delay on the holder thereof in exercising any right hereunder shall operate as a waiver of such right, or of any right under this note.”

Moore did not pay the notes, but permitted the People’s National Bank and its successor in ownership of notes, the present appellant, to exercise the power of sale contained in notes, and in pursuance thereof said banks from time to time sold cotton in the open markets of Providence, Rhode Island, and after deducting expenses credited the sum realized upon notes. Allowing credits, there was due on notes when suit was brought as balance of principal and interest $398.90, and some storage, insurance and brokerage commission charges. The suit is to recover such sums, and some other charges, which we will not set out, as they have been abandoned. (Throughout this opinion, when we refer to the appellant or plaintiff we mean the original payee of notes, the People’s National Bank of Roxbury and the Atlantic National Bank of Boston, since the latter as assignee of notes and pledge took the same subject to any defense that might be interposed as against the original pledgee.)

The defendant in his answer interposed several defenses. Among others, that the plaintiff pledgee of cotton did not exercise ordinary care and diligence as to the time and manner of its sale, or the price at which it should be sold, but negligently retained said cotton until the price thereof had slumped to the point of involving defendant in direct and serious loss; that plaintiff as such pledgee engaged to act in good faith towards defendant and to exercise a reasonable degree of skill and diligence in securing a fair price for cotton, which it did not do, but wilfully and deliberately so handled the cotton as to receive, or *350 pretend to have received, the lowest market price therefor.

The case was tried by the court with a jury, and at the close of the whole case plaintiff made a motion for an instructed verdict; the basis of such motion being that under the evidence plaintiff was entitled to judgment as a,- matter of law. This motion was denied, and the court submitted the case to the jury upon the sole questions of plaintiff’s negligence, want of skill, and g-ood faith in the handling and disposition of cotton, as raised by the statement in defendant’s answer, set out above. All the other issues raised by the answer were either assumed in the instructions to the jury to have been established in favor of plaintiff, or to be without any supporting testimony and withdrawn from the jury.

The defendant also filed a cross-complaint, but no attention was given it in the trial, and neither shall we give it any attention as it presents no question.

Upon the issues submitted, the jury returned a general verdict in favor of the defendant and against the plaintiff’s right to recover anything; and judgment was entered accordingly. Plaintiff appeals.

The plaintiff complains of the court’s refusal to grant its motion for an instructed verdict at the close of the case; of the admission in evidence, over objection, of a copy of the “Daily News Record,” of New York City, dated January 15, 1924, for the purpose of proving market values of Pima cotton during the year 1923; and of instructions given, and the refusal to give a requested instruction.

If at the close of the case the state of the evidence was such as to show that plaintiff was entitled to judgment, the motion for an instructed verdict should have been granted. It is contended by plaintiff that it regularly pursued the power given it by defendant to sell the pledged property, and that there is no *351

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Bluebook (online)
241 P. 601, 29 Ariz. 346, 1925 Ariz. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-national-bank-of-boston-v-moore-ariz-1925.