Carnal v. W. B. Thompson & Co.

132 So. 149, 16 La. App. 192, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 408
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 19, 1931
DocketNo. 13,530
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 132 So. 149 (Carnal v. W. B. Thompson & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carnal v. W. B. Thompson & Co., 132 So. 149, 16 La. App. 192, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 408 (La. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinions

HIGGINS, J.

Plaintiff brings this suit against the late firm of W. B. Thompson & Company and its individual partners and the Hibernia Bank & Trust Company to obtain a judgment ordering the defendant to deliver to the plaintiff, as owner thereof, the possession of seventeen bales of cotton claimed to be illegally held by defendants, and, in the event that the said judgment be not complied with, that there be judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants, in solido, for the value of the cotton, namely $1,700, with legal interest thereon from judicial demand.

The petition alleges in substance that the plaintiff was a cotton farmer residing at Lecompte, Rapides parish, Louisiana; that during the years of 1926 and 1927 he shipped seventeen bales of cotton to Thompson & Company, a partnership domiciled in New Orleans and composed of W. B. Thompson and his sister, Mrs. Florence Thompson, with written instructions and under an agreement that Thompson & Company would not sell, or otherwise dispose of the cotton until ordered to do so by the plaintiff; that he never gave Thompson & Company instructions or authority to sell, or otherwise dispose of his cotton, but during August, 1928, when the firm of W. B. Thompson & Company had been dissolved by the death of W. B. Thompson, he was informed that the said partnership had stored his cotton and secured negotiable warehouse receipts for the same and had delivered and pledged these receipts to the Hibernia Bank & Trust Company as security for an indebtedness of the said firm to the bank and that, consequently, the partnership was unable to comply with plaintiff’s order to deliver the cotton to him; that 'thereupon plaintiff made demand for delivery of the. cotton upon the Hibernia Bank & Trust Company, which refused to comply therewith.

The petition further charged that Thompson & Company had no power, or ability, to convey title even to a purchaser in good faith and for value, either directly or by the warehouse receipts, and further that the said firm had no right, or authority, to dispose of his cotton, or to place it in a warehouse and secure receipts therefor that could be negotiated, and that, if such receipts were in fact negotiated, they were obtained and disposed of without the plaintiff’s knowledge or acquiescence, in bad faith and in fraud of his rights, and no title was conveyed thereby; that it was generally known to all banking institutions in New Orleans, and particularly within the knowledge of the Hibernia Bank & Trust Company, that the sole business of Thompson & Company was that of cotton factor and commission merchant and that the business and the practice of the said firm was at no time that of buying, selling, or handling cotton for its own account, but handling only the cotton shipped to it by planters and farm- [194]*194• ers; that the Hibernia Bank well knew, when Thompson & Company presented the said warehouse receipts, that the said cotton and receipts did not belong to the said firm, but to some customer of the said firm, said bank being fully informed and placed on notice and inquiry as to the origin of the said receipts; and that the Hibernia Bank was, therefore, a possessor in bad faith, and acquired no right, title or interest to the cotton or warehouse receipts.

The petition further avers that Thompson & Company pledged the said warehouse receipts to the said bank, which-failed, to exact of Thompson & Company the affidavit required by Act No. 72 of the legislature of Louisiana of 1876, as amended by Act No. 176 of 1902.

Exceptions of no cause of action were filed by the defendants and overruled, and two of the defendants answered as follows:

(1) The sole defense of Mrs. Florence Thompson Fulton was that she was not a member of the partnership of W. B. Thompson & Company.

(2) The defense of the Hibernia Bank was that it had accepted and secured, as collateral security for monies advanced to Thompson & Company, the negotiable warehouse receipts covering the cotton in good faith and for value in due course from W. B. Thompson & Company and that, consequently, its pledge should- be upheld.

The firm of W. B. Thompson & Com-' pany interposed no defense whatever.

On the trial of the case on its merits the first time there was judgment in favor of the plaintiff, as prayed for, setting aside the alleged pledge of the Hibernia Bank and ordering the defendants to deliver the cotton to plaintiff, or to pay the value thereof. Mrs. Fulton and the bank filed motions for a new trial. A new trial was granted in favor of the bank, but refused with respect to Mrs. Fulton, and, therefore, the controversy as between plaintiff and defendants, Thompson & Company and Mrs. Fulton, is not before us, as neither of these defendants have appealed.

On the second trial between the plaintiff and the Hibernia Bank the issue was Whether the pledge of the warehouse receipts was valid or invalid. There was judgment in favor of the bank upholding the validity of the pledge and dismissing plaintiff’s suit as far as the defendant bank was concerned, and plaintiff has appealed from that judgment.

The pertinent facts of the case may be stated as follows:

Plaintiff is a young man living at Lecompte, Louisiana, and is rural mail carrier and operates a small farm. He had raised small crops of cotton and had been shipping several bales of cotton during the seasons of 1920, 1921, 1922 and 1923 to W. B. Thompson & Company at New Orleans. In the year of 1926 he shipped four bales and in 1927 he shipped thirteen bales. These seventeen bales are the ones over which the present controversy arose. On each occasion when the shipment was made on a straight bill of lading he wrote a letter to Thompson & Company containing positive instructions to hold the cotton until he gave them orders to sell it. He testifies that he did not know Mr. Thompson personally and had never been in his place of business in New Orleans, and believed that Thompson & Company owned its own warehouses and was storing his cotton there; that he did not authorize the storing of -the cotton in a pub-[195]*195lie warehouse and the obtaining of negotiable warehouse receipts in Thompson & Company’s name. The four bales of cotton of the crop of 1926 were received by Thompson & Company about October 15, 1926, and placed in a public warehouse and negotiable warehouse receipts obtained in its name. These receipts were pledged to the New Orleans Bank & Trust Company to secure an individual debt of Thompson & Company. In 1927 this company paid its loan to the New Orleans Bank & Trust Company, which returned the warehouse receipts to it and thereupon, in December of 1927, these four receipts were pledged to the Hibernia Bank as collateral security for an individual loan to Thompson & Company.

Plaintiff’s crop of 1927 consisted of thirteen bales of cotton and were shipped to Thompson & Company in September of 1927. This cotton was likewise stored in a public warehouse and negotiable warehouse receipts obtained in Thompson & Company’s name and these receipts were pledged with the Hibernia Bank as securiity for its individual debts, or loans.

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Related

In Re Pine Grove Canning Company
226 F. Supp. 872 (W.D. Louisiana, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
132 So. 149, 16 La. App. 192, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carnal-v-w-b-thompson-co-lactapp-1931.