Bryant v. De Kalb Warehouse Co.

71 So. 2d 51, 260 Ala. 443, 1954 Ala. LEXIS 304
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 11, 1954
Docket7 Div. 209
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 71 So. 2d 51 (Bryant v. De Kalb Warehouse Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bryant v. De Kalb Warehouse Co., 71 So. 2d 51, 260 Ala. 443, 1954 Ala. LEXIS 304 (Ala. 1954).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an action at law stated in three counts by appellant against DeKalb Warehouse Company, a corporation, and W. B. Mitchell, individually. The first count is in trover for the conversion of four bales of cotton. The second is on an account for the same amount, and doubtless referring to the same four bales of cotton. The third is on an account which was shown to be a claim for hauling cotton at the instance of defendants. There was a jury and verdict with judgment for defendants, and plaintiff appeals.

The evidence showed that plaintiff was operating a cotton gin and defendant corpo[445]*445ration was operating a cotton warehouse. Defendant W. B. Mitchell was one of the owners of its capital stock and bought cotton at retail. His brothers were the other stockholders.

Plaintiff’s contention is that he had an agreement with the “Mitchell boys”, operators of the warehouse, that he would haul bales of cotton from his gin to their warehouse, for which they were to pay him one dollar per bale. The cotton was owned by customers of the gin who had it ginned by plaintiff. Plaintiff decided to get a loan on the cotton from Commodity Credit Corporation for his customers. The procedure for •handling the loan, as we interpret.the evidence of plaintiff in connection with that of Mr. Bennett (the. manager of the warehouse), was that plaintiff would haul the cotton belonging to his customers from his gin to defendants’ warehouse, where it was weighed, sampled and classed, and a negotiable warehouse receipt was issued in the name of the producer. At the same time plaintiff would get a blank form which we will describe in detail. He would then get the producer to sign the note on that form, which was not filled out, and he would witness that signature. Later he would take that document so signed together with the cotton receipt indorsed by the producer back to the warehouse where it was filled out by Mr. Bennett from data on the classification card and the receipt and instructions from Commodity Credit Corporation fixing the amount of the loan value, with the warehouse company as payee. Mr. Bennett, acting for the warehouse company; would then return to plaintiff a carbon copy of the paper thus filled out and signed, giving him a check for the loan value thus ascertained, and indorse the instrument without recourse to Commodity Credit Corporation, and carry it to a bank and get that amount on account of Commodity Credit Corporation. The form consisted of (1) a schedule of pledged cotton; (2) an agreement by the warehouseii'wn; (3) the producer’s note (to be payable to the warehouseman at the office of Commodity Credit Corporation); (4) Lienholders’ waiver;' (5) clerk’s certificate; (6) payee’s indorsement. These ■were all printed on the face of one sheet of paper, on the back of which was printed much detail matter. The warehouseman was due to sign the agreement (No. 2, supra). The producer’s note (No. 3) was to be filled out with the warehouseman as payee and signed by the producer. The clerk’s certificate (No. 5) was signed by the manager of the warehouse, Bennett. The payee’s indorsement (No. 6) was signed in the name of the warehouse company and purported to be by W. B. Mitchell, manager. Bennett signed Mitchell’s name as manager with his authority, although Bennett was the manager. That paper with all those features seems to be what plaintiff meant by saying he would get the papers and receipt back to the warehouse. Plaintiff testified: “He (warehouseman) would give me the check, give it to me all in one check, then I would pay the customers”. That plaintiff delivered four bales of cotton for which he was not paid. This cotton was owned by L. A. Dake, M. J. Bryant, L. R. Brooks and Noah (or Buck) Vaughn, a colored man.

Plaintiff testified that he paid those producers for the cotton before he took their papers, including the warehouse receipt, back- to the warehouseman for the check from him. That he never received the money for those four bales of cotton. Plaintiff further testified that he afterwards went to Bennett seven or eight times to see about it, and the last time he said, “Here is your cotton (meaning in the warehouse), and no.body can get it.” He also said he would not turn it out to anyone without a receipt for it.

The testimony for defendant tends to show that the four bales were “turned out” to those who claimed the cotton and presented the receipts. They were cotton buyers or textile owners, who were not examined as to how they received the cotton receipts and the evidence does not otherwise show. That, when plaintiff complained about the cotton, Mr. Bennett told him that he (plaintiff) had never turned the receipts over to the warehouse, and being negotiable the warehouse could not deliver the cotton without the receipts. That he delivered the cotton only when the receipts were presented. But Bennett told plaintiff if he had lost [446]*446the receipt he could make a bond and get .the cotton as provided by law. This plaintiff refused to do.

Plaintiff’s theory, as we understand the brief, is that when he would return the receipt and loan paper to Bennett and he would fill out the blank Bennett would sometimes sign the name of the producer to the note and sign plaintiff’s name as a witness to it, as well as sign for the warehouse the indorsement and then get the loan value from the bank and not pay him or the producer for the cotton. Or that if the cotton was purchased, the warehouseman received the receipt but did not pay the purchase price.

Defendants’ evidence tended to show that the warehouse bought no cotton, but that Bennett bought cotton for defendant W. B. Mitchell, and signed Mitchell’s name to a check for the purchase price in each instance, but that none of these four bales were purchased and the receipt for none of them was turned over to Bennett or Mitchell or the warehouse for a sale or -for a loan.

It does not clearly appear whether plaintiff claims that a sale was made either to the warehouse or to Mitchell, or that Bennett put the cotton in the loan to Commodity Credit Corporation and did not pay plaintiff the amount received by Bennett from the Commodity Credit Corporation. There was no evidence to support the claim of conversion made- in the first count.

As to the third count for hauling the cotton, defendants’ evidence tended to show that plaintiff was paid for all the hauling up to a certain time when plaintiff was notified that defendant would not pay for any more'hauling: that the claim is for bauling after that notice. Plaintiff’s evidence tended to contradict that of defendant in that connection. There was therefore a clean cut issue for the jury and their verdict for defendant should not be disturbed in that respect.

Count 2 remains to be considered. To support that count plaintiff claims the amount of the loan or purchase price of the four bales of cotton and the value of one hundred pounds claimed to be short in another bale, for which the receipt was issued to Noah (Buck) Vaughn. As to the shortage, it seems that a receipt was first issued for 553 pounds. Plaintiff claims that a receipt for that amount was returned to the warehouse with an application for a loan, but that when the return was made it was for 453 pounds. A carbon copy of the application was offered (Exhibit 4) in evidence by plaintiff showing the weight of the cotton to be 453 pounds.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 So. 2d 51, 260 Ala. 443, 1954 Ala. LEXIS 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryant-v-de-kalb-warehouse-co-ala-1954.