Commercial Bank of Keokuk v. . Pfeiffer

15 N.E. 311, 108 N.Y. 242, 13 N.Y. St. Rep. 506, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 578
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 17, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 15 N.E. 311 (Commercial Bank of Keokuk v. . Pfeiffer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial Bank of Keokuk v. . Pfeiffer, 15 N.E. 311, 108 N.Y. 242, 13 N.Y. St. Rep. 506, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 578 (N.Y. 1888).

Opinion

Roger, Ch. J.

Prior to Junnary 11, 1877, the defendants, who were dealers in live stock at Buffalo, N. Y., entered into a contract with the plaintiff, a banking corporation located at Keokuk, Iowa, by which they agreed to accept and pay O. Quick’s sight drafts for cattle and hogs purchased by him, to the amount of their cost price less $50 per car load, when they should be notified of the shipment and draft, and such draft ■should be received with bill of lading attached consigning such property to them at Buffalo. On January 11,1877, certain cattle and hogs were shipped from Keokuk, under this arrangement, to the defendants at Buffalo, which were afterwards received and sold by them for the sum of $5,631.82, over and above charges and commissions thereon. It appears from the evidence that the cattle and hogs were accompanied on their transit by one Jenkins, an agent of Quick, and when they arrived in Buffalo, he procured their delivery by the carrier to the defendants, without the production of the bill of lading. Thus the office which the bill of lading was designed to perform, so far as the defendants were concerned, was effected *246 without its production to the carrier. A day or two after the receipt of the cattle and hogs by the defendants, there was presented to them for payment a draft in the following words and figures:

“ $5,778. “ Keokuk, 11th January, 1877.
“ Pay to the order of Edmund Jaeger, cashier, fifty seven hundred seventy-eight dollars, value received, and charge the same to account of 86 cattle, 135 hogs.
“O. QUICK.
“ To Pfeiffer & Windsor Bros., Buffalo, B. YP

This draft was accompanied by a bill of lading consigning the cattle and hogs to the defendants. The defendants did not accept the draft, but after the sale of the consigned property and on January 28, 1877, paid from the proceeds of such sale to the holder of the draft and bill of lading, $5,249.47, leaving unpaid of such proceeds, $380.35. This sum the-defendants claimed the right to retain on account of a demand held by them against Quick for a loss sustained on a previous shipment, made under the same general arrangement as that existing in this case.

The facts above recited, so far as they relate to the plaintiff’s cause of action, were all substantially stated in the complaint and admitted in the answer.

The complaint, perhaps, was liable to the objection that it. stated two causes of action in the same count, and left it. in some doubt whether the plaintiff intended to rely upon the guaranty, or upon an implied contract to account, for the proceeds of the consignment. This, however, is of no importance now, for the defect, if any there was, could have been taken advantage of only by motion to make the complaint, more definite and certain, and was not open to such an objection upon the trial or afterwards. The case was tried upon the theory, of showing all of the circumstances attending the transaction and leaving it to the court to determine whether any cause of action was made out. The plaintiff omitted to-produce upon the trial the bill of lading, or to prove the fact *247 of its own incorporation, or that the draft in question was drawn for a sum. aggregating $50 less for each car load than the cost of the cattle and hogs.

At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence the defendants moved for a nonsuit upon the following grounds, viz.: •

First. 'Because plaintiff had failed to show that it was incorporated.

Second. That plaintiff had failed to show that the draft had ever been presented to defendants.

“ Third. That the plaintiff had failed to show that the terms and conditions upon which the defendants agreed to accept such draft, have ever been performed; that plaintiff had failed to show that the amount of said draft was less than the cost of said cattle and hogs by the amount of $50 for each car load thereof; that there has been no proof of any bill of lading sent to the defendants by the bank or by Quick, and nothing to show title in the bank excepting the draft, and that, the defendants claim, does not show it.”

This motion was denied and the plaintiff excepted. This exception is now made the principal ground upon which the appellants base their allegation of error. It is a sufficient answer to some of these objections to say that they relate to a cause of action not relied upon at the trial, and not considered by the court in rendering its judgment. The court ordered judgment for the amount of the net proceeds of the property received by the defendants, less the amount which they had paid upon the draft and bill of lading. This judgment was founded upon the theory, that the plaintiff had a special interest in the consigned property to the extent of the amount of the draft discounted and held by it, and the amount received being less than the amount of the draft, entitled the plaintiff to the whole proceeds of the consignment, less charges and commissions.

It was not essential to this cause of action that the plaintiff should show that the draft was drawn in accordance with the terms of the guaranty, because the action was not sought to *248 be supported upon the theory of a breach of defendants’ undertaking to accept and pay the draft.

The scheme contemplated by the parties to the arrangement between plaintiff, defendants and Quick, was mainly for the benefit of Quick, the general owner of the property designed to be purchased, and was intended to f acilitate, his adventure in buying live stock in the west and sending it to an eastern market for sale. The circumstances imply that the defendants entered into it at the request of Quick and became the guarantors, for his benefit, of such drafts as should thereafter be discounted for him by the plaintiff, which should conform to the terms of their guaranty.

It does not appear that the plaintiff had any means of determining the actual cost of the property bought by Quick, except from his representations, and its general knowledge and information as to the value of such property,' and the same means of information on that subject were equally open to the defendants. When the plaintiff was applied to for discount by Quick it was necessarily compelled to trust mainly to its own judgment and knowledge to protect itself from an over advance upon the property pledged, and the defendants had the same means within their power, when by the receipt of drafts, bills of lading and property, they were informed of the amount of the claim and the value of the property, to determine whether the amount called for by a draft left them the stipulated margin. If the plaintiff should at any time discount drafts for Quick which exceeded in amount the limitation placed upon them by the defendants’ guaranty, it would lose the benefit of such guaranty and be compelled'to rely upon the property transferred to it by the bill of lading, and the responsibility of Quick for indemnity.

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.E. 311, 108 N.Y. 242, 13 N.Y. St. Rep. 506, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-bank-of-keokuk-v-pfeiffer-ny-1888.