Banco Mercantil, S. A. v. Sauls Inc.

295 P.2d 55, 140 Cal. App. 2d 316, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 2246
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 28, 1956
DocketCiv. 21182
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 295 P.2d 55 (Banco Mercantil, S. A. v. Sauls Inc.) 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
Banco Mercantil, S. A. v. Sauls Inc., 295 P.2d 55, 140 Cal. App. 2d 316, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 2246 (Cal. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

NOURSE (Paul), J. pro tem. *

By its complaint in this action, the plaintiff, a Mexican banking institution, seeks to recover as the holder in good faith upon an instrument executed by the defendant as drawer in favor of one Barbe as payee and upon the Bank of America as drawee. From a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, the defendant appeals.

*318 The relevant facts established by the evidence viewed in the light most favorable to the respondent are:

The defendant Sanls, Inc., was at the times hereinafter mentioned engaged in business as a commission agent in the marketing, for growers, of various agricultural products.
In January of 1952 it entered into a contract with Forest W. Barbe and B. W. Barbe (hereinafter called “Barbe”) who were in possession of a parcel of land near Ensenada, Baja California, which they were desirous of planting to tomatoes. By the terms of the contract, Barbe agreed to plant 350 acres to tomatoes during the 1952 growing season, and designated defendant as his exclusive marketing agent, and to pay it commissions upon sales negotiated by it. Defendant agreed to advance to Barbe not to exceed $21,500 to be used by Barbe in preparing the land and in the planting and growing of the crop, and to further advance Barbe $1.15 for each lug of tomatoes upon receipt of original bills of lading and inspection certificates certifying the grade of the tomatoes. It further agreed to pay to Barbe the amount received by it from the purchasers after deducting commissions due and advances. Defendant did advance to Barbe substantially all of the sum of $21,500, and after the crop started to mature and shipments to be made, made advances to Barbe on the basis of $1.15 per lug. It did not however, in making these advances, demand strict compliance with the terms of the contract by demanding the receipt of bills of lading and inspection certificates, but made the advances upon the oral, and many times telephonic, representation by Barbe that the tomatoes had been inspected and loaded aboard railroad cars, and that bills of lading had been issued. In a number of instances defendant found that Barbe had misrepresented the number of lugs packed and shipped as to which he was entitled to an advance, and that the advances made by defendant were in excess of those to which Barbe was entitled.

The advances of $1.15 per lug made by defendant up to October 23, 1952, were made by checks drawn on the Bank of America and payable to “The Order” of Barbe; they also contained the word “check” in the text of the instrument. In October defendant caused a different form of check to be printed. This new form was identical, not only as to composition but as to color, with those formerly used, except that it read “pay to” rather than “pay to the order of.” The word “check” was also omitted from the instrument. Its nego *319 liability was thus destroyed under both Mexican law and the law of California.

Between May 1 and November 15, defendant delivered to Barbe 33 checks. All but two of these were deposited by Barbe in his account in plaintiff’s bank at Ensenada. Of these 33 checks, 10, beginning with a check for $1,000 dated October 23, were not made payable to order, but read “Pay to Forest W. Barbe.” After the cheeks were made nonnegotiable in form, the defendant, instead of waiting until it was advised that the merchandise had been inspected and bills of lading issued to make its advances to Barbe on account of the shipment, would, when advised by Barbe that he was about to pick and pack tomatoes for shipment and of the amount to be picked, packed, and shipped, send or give Barbe a cheek in the nonnegotiable form with instructions that he was not to use the check until the shipment was actually made, and that if he did, payment would be stopped. All of the checks heretofore mentioned were cleared and paid in the ordinary course of business.

On November 15, 1952, defendant issued its check dated November 16, 1952, in the sum of $4,500 and on that day delivered it to Forest W. Barbe with instructions that he was not to use it until a certain number of lugs of tomatoes which were then in the process of being picked and packed had been inspected and shipped. On the same day Barbe took this check to the plaintiff bank and presented it to the manager of its Ensenada branch for deposit. The manager, before accepting the check, noticed that it was postdated and that it was not payable to order of bearer. He testified, however, that he believed that it was negotiable under the law of California. Parenthetically, we might state here that the evidence showed without conflict that if the check had been issued in Mexico and upon a Mexican bank, it would not have constituted a negotiable instrument because there was not in the text of the document a statement that it was a check. The manager accepted the check for deposit and credited the amount thereof to Barbe, who on that day and the following day withdrew the entire amount of the deposit. Several days later, before the check had been presented to the Bank of America, defendant stopped payment upon it, giving as its reason that it had not received the merchandise for which the check was issued.

In his testimony defendant Ginsburg, president of defend *320 ant Sauls, Inc., testified that the reasons for ceasing to issue negotiable checks and issuing instruments such as the one sued upon here were that the growers needed funds as soon as possible after they had delivered the merchandise; that if a check was not issued until the merchandise had been delivered there would be from three to four days’ delay in the grower’s receiving his money; therefore he issued a nonnegotiable instrument to the grower with instructions not to use it in order that he might be protected if the grower did use it before delivering the merchandise for which it was issued, and so that if the merchandise was delivered there would be no delay in the grower’s receiving his advances. He further testified that he did not entirely trust Barbe because of the fact that Barbe had in the past represented that he had inspected and shipped merchandise that had not in fact been inspected and shipped; that earlier in the year this did not make so much difference as a great deal of merchandise was being shipped and he could protect himself by deductions on future shipments ; but that in October the season was getting late, there was danger of rain spoiling the crop, and he wanted further protection. He knew that Barbe was in need of money to pay his costs in picking, packing, and shipping, and that Barbe used the advances upon the merchandise delivered for that purpose. This in fact was the reason the contract provided for such advances.

After defendant had stopped payment upon the $4,500 instrument it issued a like instrument for the sum of $2,000 to Barbe without telling him that payment had been stopped upon the $4,500 cheek. This check, while nonnegotiable under the law of California, was negotiable in form under the law of Mexico. Barbe took this cheek to plaintiff but the manager refused to accept it for deposit, giving as his reason that he did not yet know whether the $4,500 cheek had cleared. This cheek was also postdated.

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Bluebook (online)
295 P.2d 55, 140 Cal. App. 2d 316, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 2246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/banco-mercantil-s-a-v-sauls-inc-calctapp-1956.