Carothers Warehouse Bldg. Ass'n v. McConnell

1911 OK 458, 121 P. 191, 30 Okla. 394, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 471
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 18, 1911
Docket1236
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1911 OK 458 (Carothers Warehouse Bldg. Ass'n v. McConnell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carothers Warehouse Bldg. Ass'n v. McConnell, 1911 OK 458, 121 P. 191, 30 Okla. 394, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 471 (Okla. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion by

BREWER, - C.

This is a suit for damages for the conversion of certain goods, wares, and merchandise. The facts appear to be substantially as follows: About September, 1907, the Farmers’ & Bankers’ Warehouse & Building Association of Houston, Tex. (hereafter called the Texas Company) entered into a written contract with nine citizens of Oklahoma (who were later to organize a corporation to be called Farmers’ Union Warehouse Company) to build at Frederick, Okla., a certain cotton warehouse. These parties will hereafter be called the “nine citizens.” About the last of September, 1907, the Texas Company shipped from Texas to Frederick, Okla., a quantity of building material, consisting of two cars of lumber, a car of brick, a pair of scales, some sheet iron, building paper, and four barrels of pitch. This material was shipped by the Texas Company to Frederick to its own order. After billing out the shipment the Texas Company wrote a letter to J. E. McConnell, the defendant herein, who seems to have been a banker at Frederick, and in no way connected with either of the parties to the building contract, and who will hereafter be called defendant, stating in the letter that the material had been shipped and asking defendant to pay the freight and all charges on its arrival, and to take charge of the property and hold it, and to draw a draft on them, the Texas *396 Company, for the advancements, etc. It is not clearly stated, but the inference is irresistible, that the bill of lading must have been sent to defendant, so he could procure delivery of the material. Upon the arrival, acting on the letter and instructions of the Texas Company the defendant procured delivery to himself of the material, paying all freight and other charges, including the purchase price of the car of brick which had been shipped collect. These advances amounted to between $500 and $600. Upon paying the charges and obtaining the property from the railroad company, the defendant put the smaller portions in a house, and unloaded and stacked the heavier material, such as lumber and brick, on some vacant lots, in the vicinity where defendant supposed .the building w.ould later be erected. The nine citizens had 'not at this time acquired a site for the proposed building. It seems the)' later did buy the lots where the lumber was stored. After paying the charges and taking possession of the property, defendant drew a draft on the Texas Company for the amount thereof, but payment was not made. About this time the Texas Company appears to have failed or become embarrassed, and it sold its building contract to one W. A. Carothers, who will hereafter be called Carothers. It appears Carothers stepped into the shoes of the Texas Company, and talked with defendant about turning over the property to him so he could erect the building, and, while there is conflict in the evidence as to whether defendant turned over to Cai'others any of the material, yet it is admitted by all that Carothers assumed the indebtedness due defendant and agreed to pay same for the Texas Company, to whose contract he had'succeeded. Carothers defaulted and made no payment to defendant. Defendant testifies he continued in absolute possession of all the property, trying all along, unsuccessfully, to get payment for his advances. On November 29, 1907, defendant brought a suit against Carothers for judgment for the advances, and to have declared and enforced a pledgee’s lien on the material. Carothers appears to have defended this suit, but defendant here, plaintiff there, obtained judgment against Carothers for the debt, and that he had a lien on the property. *397 which in due course appears to have been sold under the judgment by the sheriff. W. IT. Dial seems to have been attorney in that suit for Carothers, as he. is in the one at bar. On November 29, 1907, the said Dial procured a copy of the petition in the suit for judgment and to foreclose the lien against Carothers. On the 30th of November or 1st of December, 1907, one or two days after procuring the copy of the petition, the said Dial testifies he went personally, as the agent of the Carothers Warehouse • Building Association, hereafter called plaintiff, and bought all the rights of the Texas Company in the material. It also appears that Dial owned about one-third of the capital stock of plaintiff, and that Carothers was a stockholder. The evidence is silent as to when plaintiff became a corporation, but it appears in this transaction, after defendant was in court, to enforce his lien against Carothers, one of its stockholders, and who is described in the evidence as its agent, and after Dial, one of its large stockholders, who testifies he was plaintiff’s agent, had appeared in court as the attorney for Carothers, and obtained copy of the petition in the suit. The suit of defendant against Carothers to foreclose the lien was pending for two or three months .after plaintiff claims to have bought the rights of the Texas Company in the property, but the plaintiff stood by without intervention, or an assertion in the case of its rights, and saw the matter proceed to judgment and the property sold at sheriff’s sale. The plaintiff after the property had been sold filed March 20, 1908, this suit for its conversion.

The defendant answered, setting up his advancement of freight and purchase price, his pledgee’s lien and possession of the property, and that it had been sold under judgment and order cf court, and denied any conversion or illegal handling of the property. The suit was tried on this issue as to whether defendant had a pledgee’s lien, and whether he had maintained a continuous possession of the property under the same. The jury found for the defendant, and plaintiff below, as plaintiff in error, brings error to this court.

*398 The Texas Company and the nine citizens of Frederick, the original projectors of this matter, seem to have all dropped out of the transaction early, in the proceedings, leaving the struggle between the defendant, who made the advances, and who appears to have been drawn into the matter without interest or prospective benefit, upon the one hand, and Dial, Carothers, and plaintiff, who appear connected with the matters from different angles, upon the other hand.

The plaintiff in error urges, in its brief the following alleged errors: (1) That defendant had no lien as pledgee, and that the sale of the property in the proceeding was tortious. (2) That the court erred in giving instructions 8 and 9. (3) That the court erred in not giving plaintiff’s instruction No. 1. (4) That the court erred in sustaining objection to one question asked defendant.

We will dispose of the questions in their order. Did the letter from the Texas Company in connection with the conduct of the parties with’ relation thereto and to the property constitute a contract of pledge express or implied? And if so, did defendant maintain such a possession of the property as was necessary to preserve its character of pledge? As to the question of possession, it was said in Jackson v. Kincaid, 4 Okla. 554, 46 Pac. 587: “There must be an immediate, actual and continued change of possession of the property pledged as against subsequent purchasers,” etc. But as this question was determined by the jury under proper instructions upon ’ conflicting evidence, its finding in favor of defendant’s continuous possession forecloses the matter here.

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Bluebook (online)
1911 OK 458, 121 P. 191, 30 Okla. 394, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carothers-warehouse-bldg-assn-v-mcconnell-okla-1911.