C. T. Fuller and Louisiana Stud, Inc. v. Fasig-Tipton Company, Incorporated

587 F.2d 103, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 7838
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 9, 1978
Docket15, Docket 78-7121
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 587 F.2d 103 (C. T. Fuller and Louisiana Stud, Inc. v. Fasig-Tipton Company, Incorporated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. T. Fuller and Louisiana Stud, Inc. v. Fasig-Tipton Company, Incorporated, 587 F.2d 103, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 7838 (2d Cir. 1978).

Opinion

MANSFIELD, Circuit Judge:

In this diversity suit for damages based on claims of conversion, breach of fiduciary duty, money had and received and breach of contract, which arises out of the sale of horses owned by plaintiffs-appellants at the annual “Saratoga Yearling Sale” in 1974, plaintiffs appeal from an order of the Eastern District of New York, Thomas C. Platt, Judge, granting defendant’s motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint pursuant to Rule 56, F.R.Civ.P. Since the record discloses a genuine issue with respect to a material fact, we reverse and remand the case for trial.

Most of the facts are undisputed. Appel-lee concedes that since the remainder of the facts were furnished in affidavit form by appellants they must be accepted as true upon this appeal from the district court’s grant of summary judgment to it. In *105 March 1974, plaintiff-appellant C. T. Fuller, a Pennsylvania citizen and sole stockholder of plaintiff-appellant Louisiana Stud, Inc., a Louisiana corporation, engaged Peter D. Tattersall, a horse trader, to act as their agent through Tattersall’s trade name “Rosalie Plantation” in selling at the 1974 Sara-toga Yearling Sale several yearlings that had been acquired by Fuller for resale. The Saratoga Yearling Sale is an annual thoroughbred auction conducted at Sarato-ga, N.Y., by defendant-appellee, Fasig-Tip-ton Company, Incorporated (“Fasig-Tip-ton”), a New York corporation. The sale is limited to thoroughbreds nominated for sale by their owners and selected by Fasig-Tip-ton on the basis of its study of their pedigrees and its physical inspection. The five thoroughbreds involved in this case were duly nominated for sale, inspected and accepted by Fasig-Tipton for auction, and registered in the name of Fuller’s wholly-owned company, appellant Louisiana Stud, Inc. On August 6, 1974, four of the horses were sold by Fasig-Tipton at the Saratoga Yearling Sale for $135,000. The fifth, valued at $32,000 remained unsold. The net proceeds of the sale after deduction of Fa-sig-Tipton’s charges and a credit for the unsold horse, amounted to approximately $125,900.00. 1 Fasig-Tipton understood that this sum belonged to the plaintiffs.

As of August 10,1974, Tattersall or Rosalie Planation owed approximately $117,300 to Fasig-Tipton. This debt arose out of Tattersall’s purchase of other horses and advances made to him by Fasig-Tipton. It does not appear that plaintiffs were then aware of this Tattersall indebtedness. From the net proceeds realized from the sale of appellants’ four horses, Fasig-Tipton charged back $32,000 for the unsold filly Herbager-Chinook and deducted Tattersall’s indebtedness to it plus monies owed to it by another consignor for whom Rosalie Planation had acted as agent at the 1974 Sarato-ga sale. On September 11,1974, it remitted the balance of $6,777 to Tattersall by mailing to him a check in that amount made to the order of Louisiana Stud with a statement scheduling the deductions.

Fasig-Tipton did not send a copy of the statement of account to Fuller or notify him or Louisiana Stud directly that the net payment to Tattersall had amounted to only $6,777. Nor did Tattersall inform Fuller of the accounting he had received from Fasig-Tipton. On the contrary, Tattersall, by letter dated September 19, 1974, advised Fuller that he had received an incomplete accounting from Fasig-Tipton but that payment would be received within 10 days. This misrepresentation appears to have been compounded when representatives of Fasig-Tipton, instead of stating how much had actually been paid to Tattersall for appellants’ account, told Fuller on September 23 or 24, 1974, that payment of the proceeds from the sale of plaintiffs’ yearlings had been forwarded to Tattersall. Several days later Tattersall advised Fuller falsely that net proceeds totaling $125,900 had been received from Fasig-Tipton. As a result, Fuller and Louisiana Stud remained completely ignorant of the fact that Tatter-sall had in fact received only $6,777. Acting on the assumption that Tattersall had in hand $125,900 belonging to Fuller, the latter agreed at Tattersall’s request to make an interest-bearing loan of the $125,900 proceeds to Tattersall for two months.

In mid-October, 1974, Tattersall, in repayment of the loan, sent to Fuller a letter enclosing two checks dated November 28, 1974, one for $125,900 representing the principal amount borrowed, and the other for $3,681.97, constituting the interest on the loan. When Fuller deposited the two checks in mid-December, 1974, the one for interest was honored but the check for $125,900 was returned unpaid.

Over the next eight months Fuller attempted without success to ascertain from Fasig-Tipton why the proceeds from the sale of the yearlings had not been remitted *106 directly to Fuller or Louisiana Stud, Inc., and to obtain from Fasig-Tipton copies of the contract or other documentation between it and Tattersall relating to the sale of the horses and remittance of the proceeds. Various representatives of Fasig-Tipton failed to answer Fuller’s queries or advised him that the “net proceeds of sale had been paid to Louisiana Stud on September 14, 1974” and that Tattersall had the documentation, without correcting Fuller’s erroneous impression, communicated by him to Fasig-Tipton, that the net proceeds remitted to Tattersall had amounted to $125,-900 instead of only $6,777.

On August 20, 1975, Tattersall filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy in the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana. On October 7, 1975, plaintiffs-appellants learned for the first time that Fasig-Tipton had not paid to Tattersall the net proceeds of $125,900 and that Fasig-Tipton’s normal procedure was to remit the proceeds of a sale to the principal’s agent so that the agent could first deduct his commission before turning the balance over to his principal.

Upon learning that Fasig-Tipton had deducted from the proceeds in this case $118,-895.50 owed to it by Tattersall and had remitted to him for their account only $6,777, appellants by letter to Fasig-Tipton dated October 29, 1975, demanded that it remit to them the full proceeds from the sale of appellants’ horses, less the $6,777 paid to Tattersall. Moreover, Fuller swears that if he had known that Fasig-Tipton had not actually paid the total sale proceeds to Tattersall but instead had deducted $118,-895.50 and remitted only $6,777, he would not have agreed to Tattersall’s request for a loan of the $125,900 which Tattersall falsely represented as having been received by him from Fasig-Tipton.

Upon the foregoing facts the district court granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint. Although Judge Platt rejected defendant’s argument that Fuller’s extension of credit to Tattersall had ratified the manner in which Fasig-Tipton had accounted for and settled with Tattersall the amounts owing to plaintiffs, he did hold that Fuller’s later unconditional loan of the sale proceeds to Tattersall effectively relieved Fasig-Tipton of any liability to plaintiffs.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
587 F.2d 103, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 7838, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-t-fuller-and-louisiana-stud-inc-v-fasig-tipton-company-incorporated-ca2-1978.