Cargill v. Toledo Linseed Oil Co.

6 Ohio N.P. 261
CourtLucas County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 1, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio N.P. 261 (Cargill v. Toledo Linseed Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cargill v. Toledo Linseed Oil Co., 6 Ohio N.P. 261 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

Pratt, J.

The petition in his ease — to state it very briefly — -alleges the sale by plaintiffs to The National Linseed Oil Company cf a certain quantity of flaxseed at a certain price, possession to be retained by the plaintiffs until paid for by defendant. That plaintiffs had it in 'their possession (and I will, for convenience, here designate the parties as “The National Company” and “The Toledo Company”); that the National Company thereby became indebted to the plaintiffs in a certain sum named, they holding the seed as collateral security, the National Company having the right, as alleged, to sell the seed at not 'ess than the amount of the indebtedness; that the National Company did thereafter sell the same to defendant The Toledo Company, for the same price as that from the plaintiffs to the National Company; and then follows this allegation.

“It was provided by said contract of sale to defendant” — and that would be The Toledo Linseed Oil Company —-“that said flax seed should be paid for by defendant to plaintiffs by permitting plaintiffs to draw a draft upon defendant with the bill of lading attached, and which said draft was to be paid at the time of the delivery of said flax seed, and which delivery was by the terms of said agreement to be made within the month of July, 1898, as directed by defendant.”

This is the only allegation of the petition, so far as it relates to the contract between the National Company and The Toledo Company, in reference to any connection of the plaintiffs with the sale or with the Toledo Company, the defendant. There is no allegation even of any knowledge having been communicated to the defendant —The Toledo Company — of the alleged contract between plaintiff and The National Company, nor as to the terms of any contract, if any such there was, or of any interest of theCargills in the seed, or any limitation of the right of The National Company to make a sale of the seed; no allegation that The Toledo Company knew of any debt of The National Company to the plaintiffs. Although the allegation, does not specifically state that defendant was to pay The National Company for the seed, by t'he acceptance and payment of a draft to the plaintiffs,yet such is the plain purport,, as I construe it, of the allegation that the seed was to be paid for by defendant, &o, as I have read.

Upon these allegations as to contract, the petition proceeds to state the shipment of a portion cf the seed to Toledo, the drawing of a draft, &c, and the íefusal of the defendant — • The Toledo Company — to receive the seed or pay the draft. It alleges readiness on the part of plaintiffs to ship the remainder; alleges that they made requests upon defendant fcr orders designating or directing the shipment, and then goes on to allege a sale as having been made by the-plaintiffs of the whole seed —- that-which had been shipped to Toledo and that which was not shipped to Toledo-—at a certain price, less by a number of cents per bushel than the sale by the plaintiffs — the Cargills — to The National Company, and by The National Company to defendant, and asks judgment for damages for the difference between these prices, together with freight, insurance and various and sundry other charges. The prayer of the petition designates these charges, and I do not heed to stop to. read them, they covering, not only the difference between the prices — in' whioh there seems to have been what is ordinarily called a “slump”- — marine insurance and charges, &c.

This case was argaed orally upon demurrer, also in an exhaustive brief cn the part of demurrant — the defendant; but it does not seem to me necessary, to go over the whole ground of the argument cr the whole [263]*263discussion that was had before me, but simply to strike at what seems to me to oe the vital question presented on this demurrer.

There is an entire lack of any notice to The Toledo Company cf the alleged contract between the plaintiffs and The National Company, or of the existence cf any debt of that company to the plaintiffs. I repeat that, because that is the viral point, as it seems to me, that is before me for hearing — a lack of notice that th9 plaintiffs had or claimed to havé any interest in the property in their own right by the way of security or otherwise. Plaintiffs allege their business to be,in part at least, that of commission merchants; and the fact that they were in possession of the seed, gave no notice to the purchasers that they had any other interest in it than a claim for storage or commission, which might raise a presumption that the grain would go through their hands as agents and enable them to claim their commissions and charges. No greater right — and I mean by that no higher right — would be conferred by, such a draft than if it had been one for payment on a bank draft or the deposit of the money m a bank.

That an action may be maintained by a third party upon a oontract between two parties made for the benefit of a third part}', the consideration passing between the two, is undoubted. It might be done before the code, and it can be done in jurisdictions where there is no code. The difference is one not of right, but only in the form of procedure. Before the code, the action would have been in the name of the promisee, for the use of the beneficiary. This form, however, is done away with by the code under our practice. Now, upon this question, a large number of authorities are cited — upon the question as to when an action may be maintained by the party for whose benefit it is made. I only deem it necessary here to refer to the case of Emmitt v. Brophy, 42 Ohio St., 82, to the opinion of Owen, J., which was delivered in that case, and his citation of authorities and comments upon the cases, to show the principles upon which such an action must be based.

The syllabus states enough of the faots in that case to show its application here:

1. “An agreement made on a valid consideration by one person with, another to pay money to a third, oan be enforced by the latter in his own name; and the facts that the instrument evidencing such agreement is under seal, and that such third person is not named therein, dc not affect the right to enforce it.”

Of course, the seal part has nothing •to do with the question.

“2. Where a bridge company, owning a toll bridge, sells it, under authority of law, to the commissioners of a county, for a consideration, in money, paid to a controlling stockholder of the company, who, tc induce, and as part consideration cf the purchase, gives his bond for the use and benefit of the county, conditioned — and now comes the important part —conditioned, among other things, tc pay off all liens and debts, whether m judgment or otherwise, existing against said bridge, judgment creditors of the company, who had an execution lien upon the bridge at the date of the bond, may recover the amount of their judgment thereon against the obligor.”

Now, on page 88, Judge Owen, delivering the opinion of the court, says:

“These facts are strongly suggestive that it entered into the contemplation of the parties to this bond' — (he had been reciting the facts, which I do not nei d to recite) — at the timeof its execution, that this particular lien of the plaintiffs upon the bridge was to be discharged by Emmitt. Its existence was known to them, and they seem to have left nothing to conjecture.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio N.P. 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cargill-v-toledo-linseed-oil-co-ohctcompllucas-1897.