First Nat. Bank of Hoquiam, Wash. v. DeWitt

81 S.W.2d 396, 18 Tenn. App. 634, 1934 Tenn. App. LEXIS 64
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 3, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 81 S.W.2d 396 (First Nat. Bank of Hoquiam, Wash. v. DeWitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Nat. Bank of Hoquiam, Wash. v. DeWitt, 81 S.W.2d 396, 18 Tenn. App. 634, 1934 Tenn. App. LEXIS 64 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

McAMIS, J.

This bill in this ease seeks recovery against appellee, John T. DeWitt, trading as DeWitt & Meredith, by reason of his alleged unconditional promise in writing to accept a trade acceptance in the sum of $6,370.

On February 7, 1930, appellee (hereinafter referred to as defendant) wired Whitney-Ellsworth Company, a firm of brokers, packers, and distributors of canned salmon, as follows:

“If you desire, you may ship us minimum car first quality chums guaranteed by yourselves dollar thirty regular brokerage date invoice sixty days salmon selling slowly but expect better prices later. Wire reply giving shipping date if proposition accepted. (Signed) DeWitt and Meredith.”

On the following day, February 8, 1930, Whitney-Ellsworth Company replied as follows:

“As per your wire February 7 have car One Thousand One Hundred eases chums One Dollar and Thirty Cents and One Hundred Sixty cases pink cohoes labeled medium reds at One Dollar and Forty Five Cents. If you will sign trade acceptance payable May 1 without interest, believe can arrange with packer and bank interested. These are first quality chums under our well known White Cross label without grade showing. (Signed) Whitney-Ellsworth Company. ’ ’

*636 On February 9, 1930, defendant wired Whitney-EIlsworth Company as follows: “Answering ship chums and pinks as per your wire. Mail acceptance payable in Seattle May 1, route Southern Railway quickest and cheapest. (Signed) DeWitt and Meredith.,

On February 10, 1930, defendant wrote Whitney-EIlsworth Company as follows:

“Confirming our wire, please ship the car ordered and we want your firm guarantee as to the quality of both pinks and chums.. Have no doubt but that this is good stuff, but have had so much trouble with the quality of your salmon, and especially the White Cross brand, that we want to be sure this is first quality goods.
“Mail trade acceptance payable May 1, as per our wire of yesterday.”

The Mohawk Packing Company agreed to fill the order, and its proprietor, Victor Borden, about February 13, 1930, offered to discount the trade acceptance, when drawn, to complainant bank, advising it that defendant had agreed to accept a trade acceptance payable May 1, and that the agreement to accept said trade acceptance had been communicated to the broker, Whitney-EIlsworth Company, by wire from defendant.

Under date of February 11, 1930, Whitney-EIlsworth Company wrote complainant bank as follows:

“In order there may be no mistake about the way this car is to be handled, we wish to advise that it is sold to DeWitt and Meredith at Knoxville, Tennessee; payment to be made by trade acceptance, payable here May 1.”

On February 19, 1930, the trade acceptance was prepared and turned over to the bank and the full amount paid to Mohawk Packing-Company. The bank in this manner became the owner of said trade acceptance.

The bill of lading is dated February 19, 1930. The trade acceptance was forwarded to complainant’s correspondent at Knoxville, and on February 27, 1930, was accepted conditionally as follows:

“Accepted February 27, 1930, payable at First National Bank Hoquiam, Washington, whom I hereby authorize to charge to my account.
“DeWitt & Meredith
“Knoxville, Tenn.
“Provided salmon is first quality, payable in Hoquiam, Washington.”

It will thus be seen that the acceptance was conditioned upon the salmon being “first quality;” but complainant, claiming to have relied, as it claims to have had a right to do, upon defendant’s agreement to accept, contends that defendant’s telegram of February 9, 1930, directing Whitney-EIlsworth Company to “mail acceptance payable in Seattle, May 1st,” is an unconditional promise in writing *637 to accept said trade acceptance, binding defendant to pay tbe amount •of same to complainant as an innocent purchaser for value.

Defendant answered the bill alleging that said telegram, by referring to the two previous telegrams, amounted to an agreement to accept only upon condition that the salmon should be as represented. The answer further alleges that the salmon was not as represented, but was in an unmerchantable condition and unfit for sale and that complainant, having taken the trade acceptance with defendant’s conditional acceptance, could not recover, but that said trade acceptance is subject to the same defenses it would have been subject to in the hands of the original drawer, Mohawk Packing Company.

The chancellor held that defendant’s agreement to accept was conditioned upon the salmon being of the quality represented; that there had been a breach of said condition, and ordered a reference to determine the amount of damage, which he held should be applied in abatement of the amount of the draft.

Complainant has appealed.

Section 135 of the Uniform Negotiable Instruments Act (Code, see. 7459) provides as follows:

“An unconditional promise in writing to accept a bill before it is drawn is deemed an actual acceptance in favor of every person who upon the faith thereof, receives the bill for value.”

We agree with learned counsel for defendant that the telegrams must be considered jointly in determining whether or not the agreement to accept was conditional. The second telegram contains specific reference to the first and likewise the last, the one relied upon as an unconditional agreement to accept, shows that it is in reply to a previous telegram, necessitating a review of the whole telegraphic correspondents in order to arrive at the agreement intended. 'See 8 C.' J., page 314, note 50. Without reference to the previous telegrams, the telegram of February 9, 1930, would be too vague, and indefinite to describe and identify the paper with the required certainty.

But whether the telegrams, even when thus construed and considered, constitute defendant’s agreement to accept conditional, may be doubted.

It is held, with apparent unanimity, that a mere reference to the consideration for which a bill is accepted is insufficient to make the acceptance conditional. 3 R. C. L., page 1311, sec. 542, and 8 C. J., page 323.

The general rule is that such reference to some extrinsic agreement to be sufficient to render the agreement conditional, thereby destroying its negotiability, must be in such terms as to indicate that the paper is to be burdened with the conditions of such agreement. 33 A. L. R., page 1174.

As might be. expected from the nature of the subject and *638 the great diversity of phrases employed in making reference to some collateral agreement, the authorities are not in agreement as to the effect of such references as “according to agreement,” “subject to agreement,” and “as per agreement.”

The prevailing diversity of opinion is noted and fully discussed in International Finance Corporation v.

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Bluebook (online)
81 S.W.2d 396, 18 Tenn. App. 634, 1934 Tenn. App. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-hoquiam-wash-v-dewitt-tennctapp-1934.