J. Wilton Graves v. Harry L. Garvin, as Agent

272 F.2d 924, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 2934
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedDecember 8, 1959
Docket7973_1
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 272 F.2d 924 (J. Wilton Graves v. Harry L. Garvin, as Agent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. Wilton Graves v. Harry L. Garvin, as Agent, 272 F.2d 924, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 2934 (4th Cir. 1959).

Opinion

BOREMAN, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from the order of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of South Carolina, Charleston Division, approving and confirming the report of the Standing Master, adopting such report as the court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law and rendering judgment in favor of ap-pellee. Involved is the foreclosure of two mortgages made, executed and delivered by the appellant, hereinafter referred to as Graves, a resident of Beaufort County, South Carolina, to The Savannah Bank & Trust Company of Savannah, Georgia, hereinafter referred to as Bank. The mortgages were assigned by the Bank to appellee, hereinafter referred to as Garvin.

Graves is a farmer who, during the years from 1948 to 1953, was engaged in raising turkeys for the fresh and frozen market. As turkeys were prepared, they were placed in storage with Garvin’s Quick Frozen Products Company in Savannah, Georgia, an employee of that company issuing a receipt to Graves showing the quantity of each delivery. These receipt forms were contained in books, five to each sheet or page, and were designed for execution in triplicate. Up until October of 1952, each customer, including Graves, was given the original and one carbon copy of the receipt, the third copy being retained by the storage company. These receipts were referred to as representing “ins”. As Graves’ turkeys were released, the customer receipted therefor, the amount of each delivery was recorded in a bound book and these deliveries were referred to as “outs”. Admitted in evidence were three of these bound books, referred to as “day books”, all of which pertained solely to the account of Graves, and it was testified that the various items showing “ins” and “outs” were posted in the day books by the bookkeeper from the copies of receipts given to Graves and from customers’ receipts for “out” deliveries. In October 1952, the use of these receipt books was discontinued and some type of machine or register receipt was substituted. Thereafter, Graves received only one copy of a receipt for each “in” delivery. Periodically Graves visited the storage company and, after being shown the customers’ receipts, signed or initialed the day book showing the “out” deliveries.

In order to finance his operation, Graves borrowed money from the Bank and gave as security for the loans mortgages on his home and also pledged to the Bank, as collateral security, the turkeys stored in Garvin’s Quick Frozen Products Company, for whose benefit this action is brought by its agent. Graves procured from the Garvin Company inventory statements or receipts which purported to show the number of pounds of turkey' in storage and these statements were furnished to the Bank. On at least one or two occasions, these statements were addressed by the Garvin Company direct *927 ly to the Bank rather than to Graves. An officer of the Bank recorded on the face of the renewal notes the number of pounds of turkey in storage as shown by the inventory statements. The first of such statements was dated January 1, 1951, statements thereafter being furnished as required for the renewal of notes up until July 1953, the date of the last such statement.

Customers of Graves were authorized to obtain turkeys from storage and a record of deliveries to customers was kept by the storage company. In August 1953, Graves learned that delivery to a customer had been refused because the Garvin Company claimed that Graves had no turkeys remaining in storage. Graves disputed this fact, reported it to the Bank and requested the Bank to bring suit against Garvin Company on the inventory receipt or statement. Graves’ claim was based primarily upon a statement dated January 21, 1952, indicating 38,000 pounds of turkey then in storage, signed by Mrs. Youmans, an employee of the Garvin Company. Graves contends that, after taking into account the turkeys removed by customers, he should have had 23,865% pounds of turkey in storage as of August 1953. The Garvin Company disputed the correctness of the January 21, 1952, inventory statement, alleging that it was an error made by Mrs. Youmans in accepting Graves’ representation as to the number of pounds of turkey in storage, that Graves knew and subsequently acknowledged the error, and that the error had been carried forward in later statements furnished to Graves and to the Bank.

The Bank refused to bring suit against Garvin Company and, on August 26, 1953, Graves filed a trover suit in the City Court of Savannah, Georgia, to recover the turkeys, or the value thereof, that he had, or should have had, in storage. While this action was pending, the Bank sued Graves on his notes and “filed garnishment” against any indebtedness of the Garvin Company to Graves. While both of these actions were pending, Garvin Company paid to the Bank the amount admittedly due from Graves to the Bank and took from the Bank an assignment of Graves’ notes and mortgages. Graves then dismissed his suit against Garvin Company upon advice of his counsel that such act constituted an extinguishment of Graves’ debt to the Bank. Since a counterclaim had been filed by the Garvin Company for storage charges, Graves paid the amount of the counterclaim, as reduced by agreement, and the action was dismissed. The present action was then filed by Garvin, as agent, to foreclose the Graves’ mortgages. Graves filed his answer, asserting extin-guishment of the debt, or, in the alternative, a counterclaim or right of setoff in the amount of the value of the turkeys he had, or should have had, in storage.

The case was referred by the District Court to a Standing Master who took testimony and reported the following findings of fact and conclusions of law relevant to this appeal:

1. That there was a valid assignment, for valuable consideration, from Bank to Garvin and that the amount owing by Graves to Bank was owed to Garvin, less any amount which Graves could establish as due from Garvin to him for frozen turkeys not accounted for;

2. That the burden of proving the setoff or counterclaim was upon Graves and that he failed to sustain this burden of proof;

3. That the testimony of an accountant, one Carson, as to his examination of the books and records of the Garvin’s Company pertaining to the Graves’ account, and a report of the audit made by him were entitled to great weight and that the audit, as checked and corrected by the Master, is a correct statement of the account;

4. That Garvin should have in storage 596 pounds of turkey belonging to Graves and that the value thereof, at 53^- per pound, is $305.88;

5. That the $305.88, with interest at 7% per annum from July 21, 1953, should be set off and deducted from the indebtedness of Graves to Garvin;

*928 6. That the principal amount due and owing from Graves to Garvin on the notes and mortgages, plus interest and a reasonable attorney’s fee, shall constitute a first lien upon the premises covered by the mortgages.

Graves relies primarily upon an alleged error in the admission of certain evidence tending to challenge the correctness of the inventory statement of January 21, 1952, showing the number of pounds of turkey in storage, contending that the evidence, unsupported by books of original entry of the Garvin Company, was inadmissible.

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272 F.2d 924, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 2934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-wilton-graves-v-harry-l-garvin-as-agent-ca4-1959.