Coan v. Plaza Equity Elevator Co.

239 N.W. 620, 61 N.D. 627, 1931 N.D. LEXIS 319
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1931
DocketFile No. 5983.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 239 N.W. 620 (Coan v. Plaza Equity Elevator Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coan v. Plaza Equity Elevator Co., 239 N.W. 620, 61 N.D. 627, 1931 N.D. LEXIS 319 (N.D. 1931).

Opinions

Burke, J.

This is an appeal from an order overruling a motion for a new trial. The action was brought in December, 1927, and upon trial a verdict was returned for the defendant. A motion for a new trial was denied and the court’s stenographer, who took the testimony at the trial, having died before a transcript of the testimony could be procured, so that an appeal from the judgment might be taken, an action was commenced in equity to vacate the judgment and grant a new trial upon the ground that the plaintiff had been deprived of his right to appeal. The district court made findings of fact and conclusions of law favorable to the plaintiff and ordered judgment thereon vacating the former judgment and granting the plaintiff a new trial. On appeal to this court the judgment was duly affirmed. Coan v. Plaza Equity Elevator Co. 60 N. D. 51, 232 N. W. 298. On the second trial of the action there was a judgment rendered for the plain *628 tiff and the defendant below moved for a new trial, first, on newly discovered evidence, and second, insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict. The motion is made upon the records, pleadings, files, the minutes of the court, affidavits and a transcript of the testimony given in a certain action in which L. R. Baird, as receiver of the State Bank of Bertbold was plaintiff and Frank Coan, plaintiff herein, et al., were defendants, with all the records and files in said action.

In the instant case the plaintiff sues to recover for the conversion of 1500 bushels of rye and 67 bushels of wheat deposited in defendant’s elevator at Plaza, North Dakota, in November, 1924. The records show that on October 30, 1924, Frank Coan, the plaintiff, and W. J. Kielty, deposited in the Plaza Equity Elevator Company, 1402.46 bushels of rye. The. warehouse receipt issued therefor is marked “canceled” and upon its face there is written “Reissued ticket 3999.” A stub in the elevator warehouse receipt book shows that ticket 3999 was issued to C. S. Stevenson for 1302 bushels and 46 pounds and another warehouse receipt for 100 bushels was issued to Frank Coan, the plaintiff, which appears in evidence as exhibit “E.” This warehouse receipt, exhibit “E,” for 100 bushels to Frank Coan, was again reissued on April 8, 1925; 81.28 bushels in warehouse receipt No. 589 to Boy Hartgrove and on this warehouse receipt there is written “Settlement against Frank Coan.” This warehouse receipt was cashed by Boy Hartgrove on the 8th day of April, 1925 and on the same day, namely, April 8th, 1925, a warehouse receipt No. 588 was issued to Frank Coan for 18.28 bushels of rye, and on the same day, April 8th, 1925, it was cashed by Frank Coan who signed the receipt for the purchase price. Exhibit “E,” the warehouse receipt to Frank Coan for 100 bushels of rye, which was split and. reissued was not indorsed by Frank Coan although he must have been present at the settlement mentioned in writing on the face of the Hartgrove warehouse receipt, for, at the same time, warehouse receipt No. 588 was issued to Coan and No. 589 to Hartgrove, both cashed and receipted for on the same day. Exhibit “E,” the warehouse receipt issued to Coan, at the same time that the tickét for 1302 bushels and 46 pounds was issued to Stevenson, was handled in the same way that plaintiff’s exhibit 1, the original canceled receipt, was handled. This exhibit 1 was sent with other papers to the E. T. Salyards & Company, a commission house in *629 Duluth, and was stamped “Paid/’ although receipt for the purchase money was not signed by any one, and exhibit “E,” which had been reissued into checks Nos. 588 and 589 was also sent to the commission house and stamped “Paid,” although the receipt for the purchase money was not signed by Coan. Mr. Myhre testifies that it was the custom to send all the warehouse receipts down with the other papers to the commission house and have them stamped paid.

Again, the plaintiff seeks to recover for 67 bushels of wheat which he claims he deposited and the defendant converted at said time. At the trial he swore positively that he deposited 67 bushels of wheat; that he made demand for it and the defendant had refused to deliver or to pay for it. The records show that the only wheat he delivered to the defendant in the fall of 1924 was- delivered on November 12, 1924, and a warehouse storage receipt was issued to him' for 134 bushels and 20 pounds and on the same day the check on the back of the warehouse receipt was filled in by the defendant’s agent, Benjamin J. Oliva, who signed the same as buyer of the wheat and the plaintiff, Frank Coan, signed the receipt for the purchase money in full payment for said wheat.

It is the contention of the defendant that Stevenson, who was president of the Berthold bank, was authorized by the plaintiff to sell the grain. Mr. Oliva, the agent, when asked what method was employed with reference to the issuing of storage tickets on the sale of grain testified: “Approximately the same procedure was followed” (each year.) “The grain was delivered and after all was in the possession of the elevator, Mr. Stevenson would sell the grain with the exception probably of a few loads that Mr. Coan would sell on permission, from Mr. Stevenson to pay incidental expenses.” This seems very reasonable as the record shows that Stevenson’s bank held mortgages on the crop every year and ordinarily the elevator company would not issue and deliver to the mortgagor negotiable warehouse storage tickets for grain upon which there was a mortgage and it is corroborated by Mr. Coan on page 12 of the transcript of the record in the case of Baird, Keceiver v. Coan et al. Mr. Coan is asked if he sold the crops in 1924 and turned the money over to Mr. Stevenson. He testified: “I didh’t sell any crops at all only enough for expenses.” On page 6 of the same record when asked about the crop in 1922 he stated: “I gave him the *630 crop that fall, of gave him something like four hundred dollars in the fall he got, and I gave him some in the spring of 1923. Four hundred twenty-four dollars I think it was in the fall of 1922 and in the spring of 1923, nine hundred and thirty-eight dollars. It was from the 1922 crop.” On page 8 of this record he is asked how much he owed the bank. “Well, I knew that I was up to about four thousand dollars. . .. Charley said I was getting up somewhere in there and then I commenced to pay it off. So I thought it would get down some lower.” Again on page 12 of this transcript,’he is asked: Q. “And he (meaning Stevenson) never took any crop under any mortgage from you, did he ? A. No, I always gave it to him.” On page 6 of the transcript in the record of Baird, Receiver v. Coan, et al., he is asked in reference to the note dated February 6, 1924, and stated: “Well I must have. I didn’t know that I signed such a note as that but I must have signed it ... at Stevenson’s bank.”

Q. “Did you at the time you signed that note receive anything from either Mr. Stevenson or the bank ?
A. “No.
The Court: “Why did you sign it ?
A. “Why he wanted me to sign it. I was signing some notes there and he wanted to make a renewal and he said they were small notes and I never looked at them.
Q. “Do you never look at them ?
A. “No, I dont.
Q. “You are in the habit of doing that ?

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Related

Buri v. Ramsey
2005 ND 65 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2005)
Frank v. Schaff
123 N.W.2d 827 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1963)
Kelly v. Lang
62 N.W.2d 770 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1954)
State Ex Rel. Coan v. Plaza Equity Elevator Co.
249 N.W. 108 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1933)
Coan v. Plaza Equity Elevator Co.
249 N.W. 104 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
239 N.W. 620, 61 N.D. 627, 1931 N.D. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coan-v-plaza-equity-elevator-co-nd-1931.