Beebe v. Mead

101 A.D. 500, 92 N.Y.S. 51
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 101 A.D. 500 (Beebe v. Mead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beebe v. Mead, 101 A.D. 500, 92 N.Y.S. 51 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

This was an action of interpleader by which the plaintiff, who was a warehouseman, asked that the defendants be required to inter-plead and settle their rights to 1,000 half chests of tea, which'.were on storage in the plaintiff’s warehouse, and that upon delivering the said tea to such person or persons as the court/should direct, the plaintiff be discharged from all liability to either qf the defendants. The complaint alleges that the' defendants Mead and Yoorhis'were' copartners. The defendants interposed separate answers, the defendant Mead denying that he and Yoorhis were copartners, and alleging that the firm. of Frederick Mead & Co. transferred . the teas on storage with the plaintiff, consisting of about 2,500 half chests, and which included the 1,000 half chests involved in this controversy, to the defendants Carter, Macy & Co.; that the firm of Mead & Co. does not make any claim to the teas referred to in the complaint, but that the same are, and ever since the 14th day of June, 1902, have been, the property of Carter, Macy .& Co. The defendants Carter, Macy & Go. allege that they are the owners of the tea and entitled to the same, and that Yoorhis has no interest in it, and demand judgment that the 1,000 half chests of [503]*503tea mentioned in the ■ complaint be adjudged to be and to have been since the 14th of June, 1902, the .property of Carter, Macy & Co., and that the same be delivered to the said Carter, Macy & Co. The answer of the defendant Yoorhis alleges that he ivas a member of the firm of Mead & Co.; that he is the owner of the 1,000 half chests of tea; that on the 17th day of June, 1902, the said teas had been transferred to and were then his property, and Yoorhis demands judgment that the complaint be dismissed as to him and declaring him to be the owner of the 1,000 half chests of teas above mentioned, and ordering the delivery of said 1,000 half chests of teas ” by the plaintiff. ■

It is not disputed but that these teas were stored with the plaintiff as a warehouseman by the firm of Frederick Mead & Co., It appeared that on the morning of the i7th day of June, 1902, the plaintiff received an order as'follows:

“Gentlemen.—Please transfer to the order of James Yoorhis and hold subject to his order 1,000 half chests of Japan tea, marked ¿Jh various ships and numbers, and oblige,
“Yery truly,
“ FREDERICK MEAD & COMPANY.”

That such order was in the handwriting of Yoorhis, and that •the plaintiff had/for many years transacted business with the firm of • Frederick Mead & Co., and that during that time Yoorhis had acted as a member of the firm in his dealings with the plaintiff; that the plaintiff accepted this order in good faith and made entries in his •books correspondingly ; that subsequently and on the same day there was presented to the plaintiff the following order:

“ New Y ark, June 17, 1902.
Mr. W. H. Beebe :
“ Please deliver to Messrs. Carter, Macy & Company all of mark ,É\ Japan, and all of mark zñx Japan, 2874 half chests.
“FREDERICK MEAD & COMPANY.”

And that Carter, Macy & Co. demanded the delivery of the teas under this order. Yoorhis and Carter, Macy & Co. each demanded possession of the teas, and the plaintiff, in consequence of both parties claiming them, refused to deliver to either and at once instituted [504]*504this suit. There is no allegation or. suspicion of any collusion between the plaintiff and either Yoorhis or Carter, Macy & Co., and upon the trial, as upon this appeal, both Yoorhis and Carter, Macy & Co. claimed to be the owners of the 1,000 half chests of teas and entitled to the delivery thereof, and both' here claim that their title to the teas was established by the evidence before the court, and for that reason the plaintiff has no right to maintain this action for an. interpleader. ■ > ■

The position of the plaintiff on the 17th day of June, 1902, when the second order directing the deliveiy of the teas to Carter, Macy & Co. was delivered to him, was that two parties claimed this 1,000-lialf chests of tea under orders purporting fcxbe given by Frederick Mead & Go., who were the. undisputed owners of the teas and who had stored them with the plaintiff. Both Yoorhis and Carter, Macy & Co. could have demanded the teas and upon refusal commenced an action for conversion. The plaintiff had not the means of ascertaining which of these conflicting claims was valid and Which of the claimants was the actual owner of the teas. If he had delivered the teas to the one not entitled to their possession, he= would have been liable to the true owner for the value of the teas. If he had refused to deliver to either until their claims were settled,, he would have been liable to one of the‘claimants for the value of the teas and possibly to both. By the position in which he was. placed, through no fault of his, he was required to adjudicate as. between these rival claimants as to which was entitled to the teas„ without the means of ascertaining the exact facts in- relation to. them, with no power to compel either party to submit to him their-evidence of title further than the orders that had been delivered,, and with no possibility of saving himself from an expensive. litigation which, because of his inability to procure the evidence of th& title of the respective owners of the tea, might have resulted in a. double liability. ■ The position now taken by the respective claimants is itself evidence that two parties claimed title to the .property ,k and, it seems to me, justified the bringing of this action. A mere bailee, making no claim to the property in his possession, having acted in good faith in relation to it and with reasonable care and prudence, should certainly be protected from rival claimants and not be compelled to determine the validity of their several claims [505]*505when a wrong determination would involve such serious consequences. “The law did not place so great a responsibility upon him, but provided him with a remedy to protect himself against the double liability, or, to speak more accurately, against a double vexation on account of one liability.” (Crane v. McDonald, 118 N. Y. 648.)

Reliance is placed upon the fact that the plaintiff recognized the transfer of the 1,000 half chests of tea to Yoorhis, and is thus estopped from disputing Yoorhis’ title, but the order purported to-be a transfer of the tea by the firm to one of its members. It placed the legal title upon the books of the plaintiff in an individual member of the firm instead of in the firm. If, as is claimed by Carter, Macy & Co. and Mead, Yoorhis was not a member of the firm, this transfer was wholly ineffectual to pass the title to the property, and the question as to whether Yoorhis was a member of the firm ivas one of the questions upon which the title to the 1,000 half chests of teas was to be determined. The mere receipt and recognition of this order by the plaintiff would not he controlling upon the plaintiff in favor of Yoorhis, unless in some way the plaintiff was estopped from questioning it. Yoorhis was not a purchaser of the property in good faith and for value.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 A.D. 500, 92 N.Y.S. 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beebe-v-mead-nyappdiv-1905.