Federal Coal Co. v. Royal Bank of Canada

10 F.2d 679, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2243
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 1, 1926
DocketNo. 158
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 10 F.2d 679 (Federal Coal Co. v. Royal Bank of Canada) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Federal Coal Co. v. Royal Bank of Canada, 10 F.2d 679, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2243 (2d Cir. 1926).

Opinion

HAND, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). We can see no reasonable question of the correctness of the court’s ruling upon the first cause of action. Indeed, the letter of September 6th was not intended to be the permanent obligation of the defendant, but only a contract with the buyer to write a letter of credit to the Jacksonville bank, which it did on the next day, and which was intended to be performance of the contract laid in the complaint. However, we see no reason to press this feature of the cause, and do not mean to rest our decision upon it, or upon any rights which its analysis might disclose. We are content, for argument, to accept the plaintiff’s position, and to say that it was a letter of credit, at least a contract for the benefit of the plaintiff, on whose repudiation it might sue.

The question then becomes whether the defendant had the right of revocation under its terms. Its duration appears only in the postscript, which says that the credit shall be in effect for a year. The plaintiff’s argument depends upon the assumption that at least prima facie this made the letter irrevocable while it ran, and that the incorporation by reference of the former letter, written at the buyer’s instance in favor of Hyams, must be so limited as not to contradict the period so expressed. We should hardly assent to that construction of the letter, even if a revocable letter never had a period of its own; that is, if it must be for an indefinite time. But that is quite contrary to any reasonable understanding of such documents. A letter of credit, whether revocable or not, so far as we know, is always given a limited duration; at least, it is natural to give it one, and there is no reason to infer that a letter is irrevocable merely because it has a limit. It may or may not be.

At any rate, there is no warrant for circumscribing the reference to Hyams’ letter of the year before. The phrase, “under the same conditions,” can scarcely be treated as inapt to include the vital feature of revoeability, nor can we see any but an arbitrary basis for the plaintiff’s argument that it could refer only to the defendant’s security, its commissions, interest, and “other compensations.” None of these particulars are con-[682]*682tamed in the Hyams letter, which, indeed, adds little of consequence to the terms set out in the letter of September 6th, except the very provision for revocation.

We do not, of course, mean that in this or in any other contract the intent of the parties is material, or that they are .not to be held according to the meaning which courts will impute to their words; but we say that no one reading the letter of September 6th would be justified in concluding that it in- • corporated the complete understanding of the parties. Whatever were the conditions in the Hyams letter, they were to be a part of the defendant’s undertaking. The parties, of course, so understood it, and any one who acted upon it acted at his peril in ignoring the contents of the other document. Indeed, if there could be the least uncertainty that this was its necessary meaning, the plaintiff has answered it. The Jacksonville bank knew of no letter but that of September 7th, and a question arose of the time of the revocation allowed by its terms. On November 1st, the bank, having got a letter from the defendant that it would only revoke on 30 days’ notice, communicated this to the plaintiff. Again, when the defendant canceled the letter on December 2d, the bank at once advised the plaintiff. To neither of these communications did the plaintiff raise any objection at the time, or, so far as we can find, during the month of December. In the face of such admissions, we should have to find far greater ambiguity in the language of the letter of September 6th than appears. The District Judge was altogether right in supposing that the defendant’s obligations were revocable, whichever was the document that created them, and the judgment upon the first cause of action is affirmed.

The first question as respects the second cause of action is of the admission of Pujol’s conviction in Cuba. The fact that the crime was committed about a month after his testimony was given appears to us of not the slightest moment. The relevancy of the testimony depends upon its probative value in estimating Pujol’s credibility. Plainly it is as rational to conclude that he was of a dishonest disposition, because he was convicted of a crime committed within a month after he testified, as if it had been a month before. The notion is that the crime throws light on the witness’ moral nature. The force of the inference is no doubt affected in some degree by the intervening period between the commission of the crime ánd the testimony; but the competency of the proof cannot be so determined, and, if it could, so short a period would not on any theory be of the least probative significance.

The more serious question is whether a conviction for theft in Cuba is competent to discredit a witness on a civil trial in a federal court. That the crime is of a suitable kind to discredit the witness’ veracity admits of no doubt and is not disputed. On no rational principle can it make any difference that the conviction took place in another country, provided that it was civilized, and that its judicial proceedings were likely to result in a true conclusion. Cases like Logan v. U. S., 144 U. S. 263, 12 S. Ct. 617, 36 L. Ed. 429, are not in point, because the competency of a witness is by no means the same thing as the evidence which impeaches his credibility. Curiously enough we have found no case in point, certainly none in New York, because cases like Sims v. Sims, 75 N. Y. 466, and National Trust Co. v. Gleason, 77 N. Y. 400, 33 Am. Rep. 632, concerned only the competency of witnesses. However, it was ruled in Commonwealth v. Knapp, 9 Pick. (Mass.) 496, 20 Am. Dec. 491, that a conviction in another state was competent to impeach a witness, and this was followed in Attorney General v. Pelletier, 240 Mass. 264, 134 N. E. 407. The same ruling was made in Ball v. U. S., 147 F. 32, 78 C. C. A. 126 (C. C. A. 9). There can be no rational distinction between a conviction in another state and one in a foreign country, so it be one in which civilized jurisprudence obtained. We think that the record was properly admitted.

There remains only the question of the motion non obstante. As the plaintiff did not ask for the direction of a verdict, the question does not arise to the sufficiency of the proof, and the verdict is conclusive, if there was a material issue. Moreover, no assignment of error was taken to the error, if any, in taking the verdict. In the-brief of the trustee in bankruptcy are contained certain “additional assignments of error.” These are not in the record, and the trustee does not appear as a party. If he did, we should decline to recognize any such “added assignments”; nor are we disposed to take notice nostra sponte, under our tenth rule, of any of the matters contained in them. We confine ourselves to the question whether the plaintiff’s motion non obstante should have been granted.

The theory is that the defendant’s pleas admitted that the letter of credit was extended to the coke contract between the Cuban corporation and the plaintiff. The [683]*683trustee has been at pains to prove that under the law of New York in such a case the traverses raise no issue. We find it unnecessary to consider that question. The complaint alleged in article 4 a promise to pay the prices in the coal contract, and in article 10 a separate promise to pay the prices in the coke contract.

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10 F.2d 679, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federal-coal-co-v-royal-bank-of-canada-ca2-1926.