Goodsell, Budillon & Co. v. Robert Benson & Co.

13 R.I. 225, 1881 R.I. LEXIS 13
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 12, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 R.I. 225 (Goodsell, Budillon & Co. v. Robert Benson & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodsell, Budillon & Co. v. Robert Benson & Co., 13 R.I. 225, 1881 R.I. LEXIS 13 (R.I. 1881).

Opinion

Potter, J.

This is a bill in equity in the nature of a bill of interpleader. Story Eq. PI. $ 297; Story Eq. Jur. § 824.

Goodsell, Budillon & Co., a Boston firm, wishing to buy gloves of Joseph Budillon of Naples, Italy, in January, 1875, ma.de this arrangement for payment. They procured from Benson & Co. of London, through their agency in Boston, two letters of credit, one for said Joseph Budillon, the other to themselves, but assigned by them to said Joseph, for acceptance of drafts to be drawn by said Naples party on the London firm payable in London; and said Boston firm, the purchasers, agreed in a paper addressed to Benson & Co., Boston, in consideration thereof, immediately on receipt of the goods, to provide them with funds to meet the corresponding acceptances, commissions, &e. The bills of lading were to be drawn to the order of Benson & Co.

*227 Under this arrangement thirteen drafts were drawn amounting to ¿63,900 by the Naples vendor, all accepted by the London firm, were discounted and held by the Westminster Bank of London and others, and had not been paid when June 15,1875, the London acceptors became bankrupt. They filed a petition in bankruptcy June 21st, and were subsequently discharged as of September 8, 1875. The holders presented said drafts in bankruptcy and received a dividend of twenty per cent., as appears from the agreed statement of facts in the case.

The bills of lading bad been forwarded to the London firm with the drafts, and on acceptance had been sent to their agent in Boston, and by him delivered to the Boston purchasers, who had at the same time, as per agreement,- provided the Boston firm with funds to meet the particular drafts. The purchasers in this way had paid to the London firm up to June 9th the sum of $22,314.21, for the purpose, as they claim, of being remitted to meet the different drafts, commissions, &c. These moneys so paid were by the London firm and their agent mingled with their other moneys, as they claim they had a right to do.

The Naples vendor has settled with the holders of the drafts, and the Boston purchasers have paid the Naples vendor for the goods bought.

The complainants have in a suit at law attached property of the London firm in this country, which property is claimed by one Kidder as assignee of Glyn, hereinafter named, by virtue of a prior equitable assignment. In order to properly understand this question a statement of other facts is necessary.

Frederick Abbot and P. Adams Ames were doing business in Boston under the firm name of Page, Richardson & Co., and bad been the former Boston agents of the London firm. They had drawn drafts on the London firm in favor of the Providence Marine Railway Company, and had taken as security for the drafts the promissory notes of said Providence Marine Railway Company. On these notes Page, Richardson & Co., July' 3, 1876, recovered a judgment for $14,672.86, and their solicitor, Mr. Bradley, collected it, and, deducting charge for services, &c., deposited $13,000 in the Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company, to be paid to whomsoever it should be decided to belong. Before *228 that, on November 7, 1874, Page, Richardson & Co. had signed an agreement that the moneys in controversy were the property of the London firm, and by the same instrument gave an irrevocable power of attorney to collect them, and delivered the power to Charles H. Glyn, then agent in Boston of the London firm.

Goodsell, Budillon & Co., the Boston purchasers and complainants in this bill, commenced a suit at law against the London firm in the courts of Rhode Island, and on July 27, 1876, served their writs on said Bradley and said Trust Company, in order to attach the money in their hands. They claim as creditors of the London firm and by virtue of their said attachment.

But these moneys are also claimed by Edwin Waterhouse, the English trustee or assignee in bankruptcy of Benson & Co., and also by Henry P. Kidder, the assignee in this country of Charles H. Glyn, who became bankrupt in November, 1875. Said assignee was appointed in the district of Massachusetts under the United States bankruptcy laws.

The complainants have brought this bill for themselves and all the creditors of Benson & Co. who may come in, and have made Benson & Co. and Waterhouse, Glyn, Kidder, Bradley, and the Trust Company, parties. All have appeared, and as the rights of the several claimants could not be well decided in the pending action at law, have agreed in writing that the court shall decide in the present suit to whom the money so attached belongs.

It is obvious that the claim of Kidder as assignee of Glyn must be first considered; as, if the property attached had been equitably assigned to Glyn, there was nothing belonging to Benson & Co. which could be attached.

Glyn, and his assignee in bankruptcy Kidder, claim by virtue of an alleged equitable assignment of this and other assets of Benson & Co. in this country, made by Benson & Co. to Glyn through R. J. Wigram, one of the partners of said firm, under the following circumstances:

After it became evident that the arrangement between the London firm and Page, Richardson & Co., would fall through, in consequence of the embarrassments of the latter, the London firm, in the fall of 1873, sent over Charles H. Glyn, not a partner, but a clerk in their employ, as their agent, to attend to their *229 affairs here. Subsequently, in the fall of 1874, Wigram, the partner before mentioned, came over and made a new arrangement by which Glyn was to draw upon the London firm and sell the bills and remit the funds to London. He gave Glyn a general power of attorney to collect, &c., dated December 81,1874.

Glyn did draw upon them, sometimes in his own name and sometimes in the name of Benson & Co., which he says he was authorized by the power to do. According to Glyn’s statement certain stocks, notes, and funds were placed in his hands as indemnity for the drafts drawn in his own name, and he contends that the claim to the moneys attached and now in controversy was among them. Glyn had drawn drafts upon Benson & Co. in London in-his own name, to the amount of , not paid at the time of the bankruptcy.

This makes it necessary to examine the other testimony in the case.

Mr. Wigram .testifies there was no written agreement and no special agreement to secure Glyn for his personal liability. It was understood that the securities were to follow the drafts. He was to collect the funds and remit: “ He had only the control which he would have as general agent,” &c.; he would have received the debt of the Marine Bailway Company if collected, under his general power of attorney. The question of risk never arose. It was not supposed there was any risk. “ I am not aware that the said claim has come into Glyn’s possession, nor was it ever to the best of my recollection agreed to be assigned or transferred to him.”

Mr. Fiske states that Glyn said the claim belonged to Benson & Co., and made no claim to it as his own. This was after the bankruptcy. Mr.

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13 R.I. 225, 1881 R.I. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodsell-budillon-co-v-robert-benson-co-ri-1881.