Flour Mulls of America, Inc. v. Burrus Mills, Inc.

258 P.2d 341, 174 Kan. 709, 1953 Kan. LEXIS 367
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 6, 1953
Docket38,982
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 258 P.2d 341 (Flour Mulls of America, Inc. v. Burrus Mills, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flour Mulls of America, Inc. v. Burrus Mills, Inc., 258 P.2d 341, 174 Kan. 709, 1953 Kan. LEXIS 367 (kan 1953).

Opinion

*710 The opinion of the court was delivered by

Price, J.:

This was an action brought by Flour Mills of America, Inc., a corporation, for a declaratory judgment to determine who should bear the loss for a large amount of grain which was damaged as a result of the Great Flood of 1951 in the valley of the Kansas (Kaw) River. From a judgment adverse to its contentions plaintiff has appealed.

The basic question involved is whether our statute, G. S. 1949, 34-273, with reference to the disposition of “out of condition” grain stored in a public warehouse applies to grain which is damaged by flood waters. In other words, is grain thus damaged “out of condition” within the meaning of the statute?

The statute, although lengthy, is quoted in full:

“In case any public warehouseman shall discover that any grain stored in his warehouse, pther than special bins, is out of condition, or is becoming so, and it is not in his power to preserve the same, he shall immediately give such notice of that fact to the owner of such grain or to the person in whose name the same is stored, as is reasonable and possible under the circumstances, and shall also give notice of such fact to the chief inspector. The chief inspector, unless otherwise requested by the owner of such grain, or the person in whose name the same is stored, shall cause an inspection to be made of such grain, and if it is found on such inspection that said grain is out of condition, or is becoming so, and the owner of said grain fails promptly to remove the same, the warehouseman may sell said grain upon giving tire same public notice of sale as is required by this act for the sale of grain to satisfy the lien of a warehouseman: Provided, That said grain may be sold at either public or private sale without advertising, if, in the opinion of the chief inspector, such grain should be sold without delay and written authority to make sale without advertisement is given by him to the warehouseman: Provided, That for the purpose of this section the owner of such grain shall be deemed to be the holder of warehouse receipts of the oldest dates then in circulation or uncanceled and the grain represented by winch has not previously been declared out of condition. Nothing herein contained shall be held to relieve any warehouseman from exercising due care and vigilance in preserving any such grain after discovery that the same is out ol: condition, or is becoming so, but such grain shall be kept separate and apart from all direct contact with other grain and shall not be mixed with other grain while in store in such warehouse. Any public warehouseman guilty of any act of neglect, the effect of which is to depreciate property stored in a public warehouse under his control, shall be liable on his bond therefor to the person damaged thereby. After grain has been sold as herein authorized, the warehouseman shall not thereafter be hable for the delivery of such grain even though the receipt therefor be negotiable, but shall be hable as a trustee for the amount of the proceeds of such sale in excess of the amount of any lawful charges for which he had a hen at the time of such sale.”

*711 With the possible exception of one or two matters, which, as will be developed, are immaterial for our purposes, the facts are not in dispute. The parties entered into a stipulation of certain facts, the material (for our purposes) portions of which are summarized as follows:

In 1951 plaintiff was engaged in the business of milling flour and, as such, bought, sold and stored grain, including milo, in public warehouses in the state of Kansas. Defendant, Burrus Mills, Incorporated, a corporation, was engaged in buying and selling grain and in operating public warehouses for the storage of grain in Kansas and other states. During 1951 it operated a terminal public warehouse for the storage of grain at or near Turner in Wyandotte County, such warehouse being commonly known as Santa Fe Elevator “A”. Its operation of the elevator was such as to constitute it a public warehouseman within the meaning of Article 2, Chapter 34, G. S. 1949, and the elevator was at all times during 1951 a public warehouse and terminal public warehouse within the meaning of the Act, including G. S. 1949, 34-224 and 225, and was duly licensed by the Kansas State Grain Inspection Department.

On July 13,1951, plaintiff was the owner and holder of uncanceled negotiable warehouse receipts issued by Burrus on the elevator in question, representing 470,000 bushels of No. 2 yellow milo. Two of such receipts, representing a total of 110,000 bushels, were dated April 23 and April 24,1951.

On July 13, 1951, Burrus was the owner and holder of uncanceled negotiable warehouse receipts issued by it on the elevator representing 546,306.04 bushels of No. 2 yellow milo. The earliest date of these receipts was May 9, 1951.

On July 13,1951, defendant, Bates Grain Company, Inc., a corporation, was the owner and holder of uncanceled negotiable warehouse receipts issued by Burrus on the elevator representing 14,869.14 bushels of No. 2 yellow milo. The earliest date of these receipts was June 1,1951.

On July 13, 1951, defendant, Jean Woods, was the owner and holder of an uncanceled negotiable warehouse receipt issued by Burrus on the elevator representing 117.28 bushels of No. 2 yellow milo. This receipt was dated December 21, 1949.

On July 13, 1951, defendant, Wolcott & Lincoln, Inc., a corporation, was the owner and holder of uncanceled negotiable warehouse receipts issued by Burrus on the elevator representing 30,000 bushels *712 of No. 2 yellow milo. The oldest date of these receipts was May 18, 1951.

It will be seen that with the exception of the receipt owned and held by defendant Jean Woods, representing 117.28 bushels, two of tire receipts held by plaintiff, and representing 110,000 bushels, were of the oldest dates.

On July 13,1951, there was on deposit at the elevator in question an aggregate quantity of 1,061,292.46 bushels of comingled No. 2 yellow milo, none of which was specially binned.

For several weeks prior to July 13, 1951, the entire watershed of the Kansas River had been deluged with rains of great intensity, resulting in the river carrying a very large volume of flood water. During the week preceding July 13th the heavy rains continued, resulting in the river suddenly overflowing and flooding large industrial areas along its watercourse, including the area where the Burrus elevator was located. On July 13th flood waters entered the elevator to a height of approximately twenty feet, as a result of which large amounts of comingled No. 2 yellow milo, a fungible grain stored therein, were made wet, and as a result thereof were rendered of a grade and quality inferior to that called for by the warehouse receipts issued for such grain. Other No. 2 yellow milo, in addition to that which came into direct contact with the flood waters, became of a grade and quality inferior, to that called for by warehouse receipts issued for such grain as a result either of the chemical or mechanical processes set in motion in the grain that was subjected to the direct flood waters or by the warehouseman’s inability to turn or otherwise care for such grain.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
258 P.2d 341, 174 Kan. 709, 1953 Kan. LEXIS 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flour-mulls-of-america-inc-v-burrus-mills-inc-kan-1953.