Goldstein v. Hort
This text of 30 Cal. 372 (Goldstein v. Hort) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Replevin for two thousand half sacks of flour of the alleged value of five thousand five hundred dollars. The defendant Hort answered, denying each and every allegation of the complaint. Cohen intervened, claiming the property and asking for a judgment that plaintiff take nothing by his action and for judgment against Hort, who had possession of the flour, for the recovery of the possession thereof, or for its value in [374]*374the sum of four thousand dollars in case a delivery of it could not be had. The plaintiff and the defendant Hort respectively controverted the matters contained in the complaint of the intervenor. The issues joined were tried before a jury, and upon the trial the plaintiff was, on motion of the defendants and intervenor, nonsuited and judgment thereupon entered against him. The plaintiff’s appeal is from the judgment.
From the bill of exceptions contained in the transcript of the record it appears that on the 17th of January, 1863, one Henry Garthwaite proposed to borrow of the plaintiff eight thousand dollars, to be paid, with interest, in ninety days thereafter, and in consideration thereof to secure the sum so to be borrowed by a pledge of four thousand half sacks of flour on storage with A. S. Eldridge, a warehouseman at the Empire Warehouse in San Francisco; and to consummate the matter Garthwaite made and delivered to the plaintiff his promissory note for eight thousand dollars, payable in ninety days after that date, and at the same time executed to him an assignment in writing of the four thousand half sacks of flour as collateral security for the payment of the note and interest, and also pointed out to the plaintiff the flour as his flour. This was done in the presence of oneLoring, who was in charge of the warehouse at the time as the clerk of Eldridge, and who , was authorized to act for his principal in receiving goods on storage and giving warehouse receipts for the same in the absence of Eldridge. By the request of Garthwaite a warehouse receipt was then made 'out by Loring, the clerk, and signed and delivered to the plaintiff. The receipt described the four thousand half sacks of flour, and. acknowledged the receipt of the same on storage from the plaintiff. It was signed “Á. S. Eldridge, per Loring.” Upon receiving the note, the instrument of transfer and the storehouse receipt, the plaintiff counted the sacks of flour and placed 'the initial letters of his name .on some of them, on the front side of the pile of sacks, and then delivered to Garthwaite the eight thousand dollars. At the time of this transaction the flour belonged to Marten-stein & Co., and was'on storage at the'Warehouse on their [375]*375account. But previous to this date, to wit, on the 12th day of January, 1863, Martenstein & Co. had verbally agreed with Garthwaite to sell to him two thousand half sacks of the flour so belonging to them for five thousand one hundred and ninety-five dollars, and made an entry in their books charging to Garthwaite the price of the flour so agreed to be sold to him, but no money was then paid therefor, nor was the flour or any part of it then delivered, nor was there any note or memorandum other than the entry on said books made of the sale. On the 20th of the same January, Garthwaite paid Martenstein & Co. for the two thousand half sacks previously purchased by him as stated, and received from them an order on the warehouseman to deliver to him that number of the half sacks of flour; and a few days subsequently he paid Martenstein & Co. for the other two thousand half sacks, and thereupon received from them a like order on the warehouseman. The flour which Garthwaite undertook to pledge to the plaintiff was the flour which was so purchased of Martenstein & Co.
At the time this action was commenced, the defendant Hort had possession of two thousand half sacks of the same flour which the plaintiff had duly demanded of him. The two thousand half sacks of flour were worth at the time the suit was commenced five thousand five hundred dollars.
Assuming that Garthwaite had no interest in the flour at the time he undertook to pledge it to the plaintiff, it is to be ascertained whether, by force of his contract with the plaintiff, the attempted transfer in pledge became effective at the time he did acquire the title thereto. The person who trans-fers personal property in pledge as security for a debt must own it, or at least have authority to deposit it in pledge. (Edw. on Bail. 192.) A delivery of the possession of the pledged property must be made to the pledgee, otherwise his right cannot be consummated. When the property is of a character or quality not capable of manual delivery, such as debts and dioses in action, the sanie may be pledged by a written assignment or other effective means of transfer, as the transfer of the capital stock of a corporate company by the [376]*376delivery of the scrip or certificate ; or of goods at sea by an assignment of the bill of lading, which is deemed equivalent to actual possession, because it is a delivery of the means of obtaining possession. (Wilson v. Little, 2 Coms. 447.)
In the consideration of this case it is important in the first place to understand the relations, rights and obligations of the respective parties to the contract entered into when the plaintiff loaned his money to Garthwaite and when the latter assumed to transfer to the former the flour as security for the money loaned. The plaintiff supposed he was receiving from Garthwaite a delivery of property belonging to him in pledge as security for the payment of the note then made and delivered. As between them, Garthwaite could not afterwards have been permitted to say he did' not own the flour which he had assumed to transfer as his property. (Story on Bail. Sec. 291.) Had Garthwaite ¡been the owner of the flour at the time, the transfer which he undertook to make of it was a sufficient transfer and delivery to invest the plaintiff with its possession and the right to retain it' until his debt was paid. (Wilkes v. Ferris, 5 John. 325 ; 2 Kent’s Com. 500.) By the contract Garthwaite impliedly stipulated that he owned the property which he assumed to pledge. Edwards, in his work on Bailments, at page one hundred and ninety-two,j treating of the obligation which the law imposes on the pledgors in such cases, says : “To the extent of the interest which he undertakes to convey he in fact warrants his title’as much as 'does the vendor on an absolute sale,” and further, he says: “ If he undertakes to pledge property that belongs to another, without his consent, he cannot afterward, so long as the owner refrains from claiming it, seek to have it restored, until his debt is dischargedand still further he states the rule of law to be that, though the pledgor “ is not the owner at the time the pledge is made, if he subsequently acquire the property, by what title soever, his ownership will be deemed to relate back to the time of the contract, and the pledge will stand good.” The doctrine here announced without reserve accords- with the rule which [377]*377obtains in cases of absolute sales and transfers of personal property, to which the law annexes an implied warranty of title; and also in cases of conveyances of real property with covenants of seizin and warranty. And we can perceive no reason why the rule should not be applied in case of a pledge as well as in a case of an absolute sale and delivery of goods and chattels.
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