Brown v. National Dock & Storage Warehouse Co.

239 Mass. 10
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 28, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 239 Mass. 10 (Brown v. National Dock & Storage Warehouse Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. National Dock & Storage Warehouse Co., 239 Mass. 10 (Mass. 1921).

Opinion

Pierce, J.

This is an action of contract to recover for failure to deliver thirteen bags of wool out of a lot of two hundred and six bags stored with the defendant, a public warehouseman, in September, 1918. The case was heard in the Superior Court, and is reported by the presiding judge to this court in the following terms: “ I now report the case to the Supreme Judicial Court; if my directing a verdict for the plaintiff was right, judgment to be entered on the verdict; if my so directing a verdict was wrong, a new trial granted or such other order entered as law and justice may require.”

The United States government as a war measure in 1918 assumed control of all domestic wool in order to insure to the government a prior right of purchase of all the 1918 wool clip or of any portion thereof which it might require, the remainder to be allocated for civilian purposes under the direction of the War Industries Board. For this purpose the War Industries Board made government regulations for handling the wool clip. The regula[12]*12tians provided the following method of procedure: The owner or grower was required to load the wool upon the railroad and consign it to any approved dealer in any one of designated distributing centres close to the Atlantic seaboard. The grower or consignee was entitled to receive an advance upon the wool so shipped up to but not exceeding seventy-five per cent of the fair estimated market value of his wool; and thereafter was entitled to receive the prices fixed by the government, after deducting the commission allowed to the dealer by the government, freight on shipment, and interest on all advances made on his wool to the date of the arrival of the wool at a distributing centre as shown by the railroad receipt. The approved dealers in the distributing centres were required to open and grade all their purchases or consignments as rapidly as possible after the arrival of the wool. Thereafter the government valuation committee determined the price of the wool in accordance with the regulations. The approved dealers were then required to store, insure, handle and deliver the wool under the government regulations. The regulations provided that the government could take the wool for its own use, at the prices determined by its committee plus a percentage of the selling price to cover compensation and commissions of approved dealers for their services. Wool not taken by the government for its own use was to be allocated for other uses, and the person receiving the same was to pay the same price and commissions which the government would have paid.

In September, 1918, the plaintiffs, who were approved wool dealers, as consignees received in Boston from the owners for sale two hundred and six bags of wool. The plaintiffs gave the bags their lot number 108-C, and placed them in their own warehouse, 285 Summer Street, Boston. Before September 7, 1918, they opened and graded the wool, and on that date notified the government that it was ready for inspection. Thereafter the government valuation committee inspected the wool, and on September 17, 1918, the wool administrator in writing notified the plaintiffs that the valuation committee had determined the price of the wool in accordance with the regulations. The notification conveyed to the plaintiffs the further information that the valuation committee had given the wool a lot number DF 4445, and had fixed the price at fifty-nine cents. The notice contained the following proposal of purchase by the government: “ Terms are net cash ten (lQ) [13]*13days from date of confirmation.. If this price is accepted by you, kindly sign the enclosed card and mail to this office.” The plaintiffs signed the card of acceptance presumably on September 18, 1918, that being the date of the entry of the transaction in the plaintiffs’ contract book. On or before September 30, 1918, the government confirmed the sale of September 18, 1918.

The letter of confirmation directed the plaintiffs “Do not warehouse in Quartermaster’s name until wool is weighed and ready to bill.” “ Stencil all packages U. S. Q. M. C. mark lot number .” The plaintiffs packed the wool in two hundred and six bags marked U. S. Q. M. C. D. F. 4445, and transferred it in three lots, on September 17,18 and 19,1918, from their warehouse in their own teams, to the warehouse of the defendant, the National Dock and Storage Warehouse Company. The wool was weighed and ready to bill when delivered at the warehouse of the defendant. The defendant received the two hundred and six bags for storage and gave to the plaintiffs therefor on September 17, 18 and 19, .a receipt or document, called a " Memorandum for Insurance,” for the number of packages delivered to it on each of the enumerated days. Each document had a heading which read “ This notice is not a warehouse receipt.”

On October 2,1918, the plaintiffs sent to the government quartermaster a receipt which reads:

“ Lot DF 4445 October 2, 1918.
Warehouse Receipt
Received on storage for acct. of
Quartermasters Corps U. S. A.
and deliverable to it, the following described merchandise:
206 Bags Graded Triangle Average High- 3/8’s Wool Stored at 32 National & Dock Storage Warehouse Co., East Boston, Mass. ...”

At the same time they sent a bill for this wool to the quartermasters corps, and for commissions, interest and the value of the bags as provided in the government regulations. This bill the United States paid in due course. From time to time the defendant rendered bills for storage of the wool to the plaintiffs. These bills the plaintiffs paid. Under a general arrangement between the government and the plaintiffs the latter did not ultimately [14]*14bear the storage charges; and if the government took the wool it paid the charges to the plaintiffs; if the government sold it, the purchaser paid them to the plaintiffs.

On March 17, 1919, the quartermasters corps directed the plaintiffs to deliver this wool to Hills and Nichols to whom the government had sold it. On March 21, 1919, Hills and Nichols, directed the plaintiffs to deliver the wool to their teamsters. On March 25, 1919, the plaintiffs directed the defendant to deliver the wool to Glover and Company, the teamsters of Hills and Nichols. On March 25 and 26 the defendant delivered to Glover and Company on the plaintiffs’ order, one hundred and ninety-three out of two hundred and six bags of the wool. The defendant was unable to find and deliver the remaining thirteen bags. Hills and Nichols paid the government for the two hundred and six bags, with all charges which the government had paid Brown and Adams, thereon; and by the terms of the sale were to pay the plaintiffs for-the storage charges paid by them to the defendant on this wool.. The plaintiffs, however, billed Hills and Nichols only for the charges on the one hundred and ninety-three bags delivered, and remained actually out of pocket the amount of the warehouse charges on the thirteen bags which had been paid by them to the defendant.

On May 14, 1919, Hills and Nichols rendered a bill to the plaintiffs for the missing thirteen bags. On May 15, 1919, the plaintiffs presented to the defendant a claim for the thirteen bags, with a letter from the purchasing quartermaster to the defendant which reads: “We wish to advise you that we sold to Messrs.

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Related

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176 N.E. 114 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
239 Mass. 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-national-dock-storage-warehouse-co-mass-1921.