First National Bank v. Witherspoon Livestock Commission Co.

90 S.W.2d 453, 230 Mo. App. 285, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 100
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 6, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 90 S.W.2d 453 (First National Bank v. Witherspoon Livestock Commission Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank v. Witherspoon Livestock Commission Co., 90 S.W.2d 453, 230 Mo. App. 285, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 100 (Mo. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

Defendants are livestock commission merchants in Kansas City and as such they sold certain cattle, the proceeds of which aggregate the sum of $4,118.63. This suit was brought against them by plaintiff for said sum of money, based upon two chattel mortgages owned by the plaintiff upon the cattle so sold. The defendants filed separate answers admitting that they had said sum of money in their hands from the sale of said cattle but setting up that the same was claimed by both plaintiff and the Shamrock Cotton Oil Company, Inc. Defendants offered to pay the money into court and prayed that the plaintiff and' the oil company be required to litigate their respective claims to the fund. The prayer of the defendants was granted, resulting in ■ the money being paid into court and defendants discharged. The Shamrock Cotton Oil Company interpleaded, basing its claim to the fund on the ground that it had an agister’s lien upon the cattle in question. The court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the entire fund. Interpleader has appealed.

The facts show that, in the summer and fall of 1932, one Earl George owned a large ranch near the city of Shamrock in Wheeler *287 County, Texas, where he held 408 steers which he owned and desired to fatten for the market; that prior thereto, or on March 15, 1932, he executed two notes in favor of the plaintiff, aggregating the sum of $10,305.73. To secure the payment of this indebtedness, on said day, he gave plaintiff a first mortgage on 284 of said cattle upon said ranch. On said date he also gave to O. P. Jones, doing business as the O. P. Jones Loan Company, a second mortgage on these same 284 cattle, together with a first mortgage on the other 124 head of cattle upon his ranch and owned by him, to secure the latter’s note in the sum of $10,038.39. All of these notes were to become due on September 1st of that year and were renewals of other renewal notes covering the balance of funds that had originally been advanced by the mortgagees to George for the purpose of buying the cattle in controversy.’ Both mortgages contained clauses to the effect that the cattle were to be fed by the mortgagor at. his own expense; The note given Jones, on March 15, 1932, was sold by the latter to the First National Bank of Fort Worth, Texas.

The facts further show that interpleader was engaged in the cotton oil business with its plant in Shamrock, Texas; that it produced cotton seed products consisting of cake, meal, oil, lint and hulls. It maintained feeding pens at its plant in Shamrock where as many as 2000 head of cattle could be fed at one time. Primarily the pens were maintained for the convenience of interpleader’s customers who bought cake, meal and hulls from it and fed them to the cattle in such pens. However, interpleader, itself, had been in the habit of feeding 100 to 200 head of cattle each year in its pens. It was the object of interpleader to dispose of its products at its own feeding pens and in the fall of each year when the. cotton crop had been harvested to have the cattle brought into its pens to consume the feed manufactured by it. George had been buying feed fromi inter-pleader for years. At times he would feed such feed to his cattle in interpleader’s pens and sometimes he would feed them in his own pens, which were close to the former’s pens.

In the fall of 1932 the interpleader and George entered into a different ararngement than had ever existed between them theretofore. This was what is referred to as a “gain in weight” contract, which was executed in writing on September 14, 1932. By this contract interpleader agreed to feed 406 head of George’s said cattle, the former to furnish the feed pens, feed, water, salt and all necessary labor in feeding and earing for the cattle until such time as they were ready for market. Before being fed they were to be weighed at the railroad pens and, after deducting three per cent from their weight for shrinkage, the resultant was to constitute the aggregate weight of the cattle. It was agreéd that interpleader was to receive, as compensation for the feeding and caring of the cattle, the “gain or increase in weight between now and the time said *288 cattle axe sold on the market.” Four hundred seven cattle of the average weight of 1029 pounds were delivered, on September 15 and 16, 1932, by George to interpleader to be fed under said contract, all of which cattle were covered by the mortgages in question. The feeding contract was fully performed by the interpleader. Some of the cattle were marketed in January, 1933, and some in March of that year.

The note and chattel mortgage, that were sold by Jones to the First National Bank of Fort Worth, Texas, were assigned to the plaintiff on April 21, 1933, and prior to the bringing of this suit.

It is claimed by the interpleader that the two banks in question waived their liens in favor of interpleader’s agister’s lien and are estopped to claim their liens to be superior to its.

B. R. Tinsley, testifying for the interpleader, stated that he was manager of the interpleader; that on or about September 11th, he and George, at the latter’s ranch, talked about feeding the steers in question;■ that George “didn’t seem to be able to feed the cattle himself” and suggested that interpleader feed them on the “gain in weight” plan. Tinsley never before had fed cattle on such a basis and v'anted time to study the matter. On his way back to Shamrock he called upon Mr. Koger, vice-president of the plaintiff bank, who was in active charge of its affairs. The witness testified that he knew that George conducted his banking business with the plaintiff bank and thought that the bank might have a mortgage on the cattle, but did not know, in fact, that it had any mortgage. He told Koger that he and George had been considering feeding the cattle on a gain-in-weight basis and Koger said: “Well, it might be all right, I notice that is working out in various states, I notice where some packer over in Hall County is doing that, he said, ‘I think Mr. George should give me a guarantee of price on the gain-in-weight,’ and I think that was about the end of the conversation, only Mr. Koger said that might work out all right, and for George to come in and we will discuss it;” that he reported this conversation to George; that September 11th was on Sunday and on the following Tuesday morning George came into Tinsley’s office and they agreed upon the contract that they entered into; that the same day, after George left the .office, the witness went to the bank and related to Koger the agreement that the witness had had with George and Koger said: “ ‘What do you think these cattle will weigh?’ I said, ‘Well, the cattle I saw, I didn’t see them all, but what I saw, I thought would weigh around a thousand pounds,’ he said, ‘Well, I don’t think they are that good cattle;’ that Koger asked him “when he was to bring them in, and I said, ‘Well, part of them on Thursday, and part on Friday; ”’ that Koger said nothing to him about the existence of the chattel mortgages; that on the following Saturday, after the cattle were in the pens, the witness went to- the bank *289 and told Koger that they were there; that the latter asked “me about the weight, and I told him what they weighed, 1029 pounds, I think they was, and he said, ‘Well, they are much better cattle than I thought they were.’ I said, ‘Yes, they are pretty good cattle.’ ”

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.W.2d 453, 230 Mo. App. 285, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-witherspoon-livestock-commission-co-moctapp-1936.