Commercial Trust Co. v. American Trust Co.

139 N.E. 626, 245 Mass. 166, 1923 Mass. LEXIS 1065
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 23, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 139 N.E. 626 (Commercial Trust Co. v. American Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial Trust Co. v. American Trust Co., 139 N.E. 626, 245 Mass. 166, 1923 Mass. LEXIS 1065 (Mass. 1923).

Opinion

Pierce, J.

After a finding for the defendant, by a judge of the Superior Court sitting without a jury, at the request of both parties this case was reported to this court and is to be determined upon the pleadings, requests of both parties for rulings, and upon my [the judge’s] findings of fact and rulings of law.” The report contains the following provision: If 'these rulings were correct, and law and justice require no other finding than for the defendant, then judgment is to be entered for the defendant, otherwise such order shall be made as law and justice may require.”

This is an action of contract by a trust company of New York against a trust company of Boston to recover, in its first count, upon an alleged acceptance of a certain bill of exchange drawn by the plaintiff on April 8, 1921, to its own order, in the sum of $56,683.60 on the defendant company; the remaining counts for the same cause of action [168]*168are founded upon the alleged breach of the defendant’s written promise to accept a bill of exchange before it was drawn, and to recover damages alleged to have arisen from the failure of the defendant to accept and pay a draft or to pay sums of money due from the defendant to the plaintiff upon the facts set forth.

The facts, so far as they are applicable to certain crucial questions of fact which underlie and determine any obligation of the defendant to the plaintiff, succinctly stated are as follows: On May 19, 1920, the steamship Mount Shasta, owned by the United States, was chartered to the Mount Shasta Steamship Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Delaware. On July 14, 1920, Victor S. Fox and Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of New York, agents of the steamship Mount Shasta, executed a charter party of the Mount Shasta to Palmer and Parker Company, a Massachusetts corporation engaged in the business of importing and manufacturing mahogany, for the transportation of a cargo of round and square mahogany logs from a port on the Gold Coast of West Africa to Boston. By the terms of the charter the freight rate was $25 per ton, fifty per cent of the estimated amount of the freight to be payable when the vessel was loaded, the balance of the freight to be payable when the cargo of the' Mount Shasta ’ has been discharged at Boston and the out turn weight of same has been agreed upon by both parties.” The charter party also contained the following clauses: “ It is hereby understood and agreed that lay days for discharging, if required, shall not commence until forty-eight (48) hours after captain reports vessel ready to discharge cargo. It is also hereby agreed and understood that Charterers will establish a Letter of Credit, upon signing charter party with a New York Bank for the balance of the freight to be payable upon the out-turn weight of the cargo, as agreed upon by both parties.” On the day the charter party was sighed .Victor S. Fox and Company sent the following telegram to Palmer and Parker Company: Charter party Mount Shasta signed this day established a letter of credit favor Victor S. Fox & Co. [169]*169Commericial Trust Co. of N. Y.” Upon receipt of the telegram on July 15, 1920, Palmer and Parker Company and the defendant, the American Trust Company, signed and forwarded to “ Victor S. Fox & Co. Inc., New York City, New York ” the following letter, which is the basis of this action and which, the plaintiff claims, constituted an acceptance of the draft above referred to, or, if not an acceptance, a promise to accept, for the breach of which the action may be maintained. “ Referring to the charter party between Victor S. Fox & Co. Inc., and Palmer & Parker Co., dated July 14th, 1920, and covering steamer ‘ Mount Shasta ’ with a cargo of logs from Gold Coast, West Africa, to Boston, Mass., we beg to advise you that when the cargo of the ‘ Mount Shasta ’ has been discharged at Boston and the out turn weight of same has been agreed upon by both parties, you are hereby authorized to draw on Palmer & Parker Co. for the balance of the freight due you in accordance with the terms of the charter party, and we hereby guarantee that if draft is in order, it will be paid on presentation to the American Trust Co., at Boston.” The trial judge found as a fact that This letter was sent in compliance with the provision of the charter quoted above, that the charterers on signing the charter party would establish a letter of credit with a New York bank for the balance of the freight to be payable upon the out-turn weight of the cargo. While the letter does not purport to establish a credit with a New York bank, but to establish one with a Boston bank, its terms were acceptable to Fox and Company, and may fairly be considered to have been adopted by both parties as performance, by way of substitution, of the provision of the charter calling for the establishment of a credit with a New York bank.”

On July 16, 1920, Victor S. Fox and Company borrowed $75,000 of the plaintiff, the Commercial Trust Company of New York, and executed and delivered to it, as security, an instrument which purported to be an assignment of the charter party between Victor S. Fox and Company and Palmer and Parker Company; the instrument also contained an assignment to the Commerical Trust Company of $75,000 [170]*170out of the freight moneys received from said charter, the total sum of which would be approximately $130,000. This single instrument of assignments was also executed by the Commercial Trust Company which agreed to hold the charter party upon the terms and conditions contained therein and to credit the account of Victor S. Fox & Co." Inc., Agents, with any surplus.” At the same time the charter party and the letter of July 15, were handed to the plaintiff bank, and the loan was made in reliance on both the letter of- July 15, the charter party and the accompanying assignment. The note thus secured fell due August 30, 1920, and was renewed for thirty days. On September 16, 1920, the plaintiff made a further loan to Victor S. Fox and Company of $40,000 upon the same security and took from it an assignment in substantially the same terms as that of July 16. The note itself contained this clause: having deposited with said trust company, as collateral security for the payment of this note, freight moneys as per assignment attached.’ ”

The charter party provided that one half of the freight, as estimated, should be paid at the time the loading was completed; and on September 21, 1920, on receiving a cable message to this effect, Palmer and Parker Company sent its check for $52,500 to Victor S. Fox and Company, which indorsed it to the plaintiff bank. This reduced the first loan which the plaintiff had made to Victor S. Fox and Company, from $75,000 to $22,500; and on September 29, 1920, a new note was given for this amount which contained the clause: “ having deposited with said trust company, as collateral security for the payment of this note, assignment attached covering charter party, freight moneys and guaranty.” Accompanying this note was a third assignment, covering the charter party and the right to receive and collect the freight money, and also specifically covering the letter of July 15, 1920, signed by the defendant, and securing not only the note renewing the unpaid proportion of the first loan, amounting to $22,500, but also the second loan of $40,000. On September 29, 1920, the Commercial Trust Company by writing, on the same instrument, agreed [171]*171to hold said assignment on the terms and conditions therein set forth.

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Related

Commercial Trust Co. of New York v. American Trust Co.
152 N.E. 104 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 N.E. 626, 245 Mass. 166, 1923 Mass. LEXIS 1065, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-trust-co-v-american-trust-co-mass-1923.