Banco Nacional De Comercio Exterior, S. A. v. First Nat. Bank at Brownsville, Tex.

211 F.2d 409
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMay 25, 1954
Docket14703
StatusPublished

This text of 211 F.2d 409 (Banco Nacional De Comercio Exterior, S. A. v. First Nat. Bank at Brownsville, Tex.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Banco Nacional De Comercio Exterior, S. A. v. First Nat. Bank at Brownsville, Tex., 211 F.2d 409 (1st Cir. 1954).

Opinion

HOLMES, Circuit Judge.

In our opinion, a summary judgment should not be given in this case. The subject matter of this suit is a contract, made in the autumn of 1947, between appellants, Mexican corporations, as sellers, and Anderson, Clayton & Company, Inc., one of the appellees, as buyer, for the sale and delivery of 9810 bales of cotton out of a lot of 11,050 bales, belonging to appellants and stored in warehouses at Brownsville, Texas. The contract is in writing and consists of letters between the buyer and sellers, which followed oral negotiations for the purchase of cotton out of the 11,050 bales above mentioned. The basic or offering letter was written by the buyer, in which the latter confirmed the sale to it by the appellants of 9810 bales of cotton from the 1946 Laguna crop of said 11,-050 bales, upon the following terms and conditions:

Mainly strict middling and middling were to be delivered, and only strict low middling necessary to complete the 9810 bales contracted for: the buyer was under obligation to receive not more than 1000 bales of strict low middling. Liquidation was to be according to the quality outturn as follows: strict middling 28.-100, middling 27.600, strict low middling 260, per pound. Delivery was to be at the Brownsville compress, free of country damage and in merchantable condition. There were also provisions for reweighing, resampling, reconditioning, and compressing. The purchaser was to make an advance to the sellers on account of any cotton not received and paid for on October 31st, provided the corresponding warehouse receipts were delivered to the buyer. “In practice,” the letter *410 added, “we think it will be possible to receive approximately 1000 b/c daily and so a relatively small quantity of cotton should remain unpaid on the 31st, espe-rially since, for our part, we will be ready to start to work next Monday.”

Other letters were written, which elaborated the conditions of the contract, On the third of November, 1947, the buyer wrote: “In the event that for any reason it should not be possible to deliver to the buyers the total number of bales contracted for, and precisely the classes contracted for, you are obligated to return to us, for crediting to the buyers, whatever part of the advance might be in excess at the time of liquidation — made in advance in this ease — of the open account mentioned above, and to return it immediately upon verification of the facts that would justify such liquidation in advance.” This was agreed to by Banco Nacional by letter dated November 14, 1947, wherein it was stated: “In the event that the 9,810 b/c cannot be delivered to you in the grades specified in the contract, we agree to return to you whatever part of the advance might be in excess on liquidating the sale, and to return it immediately upon verification of the facts showing that it is due.

Accordingly, the warehouse receipts where delivered by the First National Bank to the buyer, the latter having deposited with it the one million dollars and delivered its trust receipt, all according to the contract except a new provision was inserted in the trust receipt which if valid made a radical change in the prices to be paid. This was that the final classification and weights were to be obtained on the basis of the respective prices for the three grades stipulated in the contract. This whole controversy turns upon the validity and effect of this change in the language of the contract, Prior to the delivery of the trust receipt, in its letter of November 3, 1947, the buyer had taken pains to provide expressly that the sellers were obligated to deliver “precisely the classes contracted for,” and that if this should not be possible, the sellers were obligated to return whatever part of the advance might be in excess at the time of the liquidation. The price was to be ae-cording to the quality outturn of only three grades. Banco agreed to this in letter of November 14, 1947, in the event “the grades specified in the contract could not be delivered,

We think that the buyer had no right to interpolate a new contractual provision in the trust receipt, while the contract was in the process of being performed; nor did it have the right to put a unilateral interpretation upon the contract. This trust receipt was executed as a necessary operation in the delivery of the cotton, and should not be held to be a modification of the contract from one covering three specific grades to a basis contract covering all grades, This trust receipt was executed about a month after the offering letter written by the buyer was agreed to by the seller, The buyer had the right to reject the cotton if not precisely equal to the classifications called for in the contract, but it did not have the right to accept the cotton and put its own price thereon,

Qne who dealg with an t acts at Mg peril ag to the gcope of the agent,g authority. The First National Bank of Brownsville was the agent of the sellers, but it had a very limited authority. I.t was authorized to deliver the warehouse receipts to the buyer in lieu of a trust receipt and the payment of a million dollars, but it had no authority to make a new contract for the parties or to change the old one. It had authority to accept payments of money by the buyer for account of the sellers and to remit the same to its principals through banking channels. All parties knew this or should have known it; and it must be remembered that, at the time the trust receipt was given, the high contracting parties had taken the precaution to reduce their oral agreements to writing and were dealing with each other across international boundaries in .the perforna-anee of their written contract. The American bank was the financial agent *411 of a Mexican principal, and it is not remarkable that the bank failed to catch the significance of the potent words of art “on the basis of,” which phrase had not previously been used in their correspondence by any of the parties.

In its letter of October 27, 1947, the buyer had offered to accept only three grades of cotton, namely, strict middling, middling, and strict low middling, the price of each grade being specifically stated. In a subsequent letter it had emphasized and reiterated the fact that the seller was obligated to deliver “precisely the classes contracted for,” which obligation the sellers had also acknowledged. If the market had declined, it is reasonable to presume that the buyer (as it had the right to do) would have rejected tendered cotton not precisely within the classes called for in the contract. The fact that the market had advanced did not give the sellers the right to tender inferior grades. Inferiority in the grades of cotton tendered was something that the buyer could waive by paying the contract price, but it could not take the cotton at prices fixed by it alone. If the inclusion of the phrase “on the basis of” in the trust receipt was a proposal to modify the contract, this proposal was rejected, since in its reply Banco Nacional instructed its agent to credit its account with the million dollars and to deliver the warehouse receipts “according to our original instructions.”

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Bluebook (online)
211 F.2d 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/banco-nacional-de-comercio-exterior-s-a-v-first-nat-bank-at-ca1-1954.