Kaminow v. Cooper-Kenworthy Inc.

89 A.2d 165, 79 R.I. 352, 1952 R.I. LEXIS 54
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 22, 1952
DocketEx. No. 9116
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 89 A.2d 165 (Kaminow v. Cooper-Kenworthy Inc.) 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
Kaminow v. Cooper-Kenworthy Inc., 89 A.2d 165, 79 R.I. 352, 1952 R.I. LEXIS 54 (R.I. 1952).

Opinion

*353 Baker, J.

This action of trover and conversion was heard in the superior court by a justice thereof sitting without a jury. He found for the defendant and the plaintiffs thereafter duly prosecuted to this court their bill of exceptions which contains only an exception to the decision of the trial justice.

There is little or no dispute as to the facts. The plaintiffs were partners doing business as textile converters in the city of New York. The defendant is a Rhode Island corporation located in the city of Providence and is in the business of dyeing yarns and other materials. The goods alleged by plaintiffs to have been converted by defendant to its own use were eleven warps of bleached white mercerized warp twisted yarn valued at $2,362.10.

It appears from the testimony and exhibits in evidence that the plaintiffs were the owners of the yarn in question and on December 1, 1948 one of them conferred in New York City with the president of Carien Textile Mills, Inc., a New York corporation, hereinafter referred to as Carien, which wished to purchase yarn for warps. Credits and other matters were discussed and eventually plaintiffs accepted Carlen’s order for the yarn involved herein. Also on December 1 plaintiffs sent to defendant a so-called “converting order” relating to the eleven warps of yarn and stating that they were being shipped from the Champagne Winding Company in whose possession they actually were. This order reads as follows: ■

“Converting Order Kaminow Bros.
Yarns No. 15714
3-5 Waverly Place
Shipped via: Champagne Winding Co
New York, Dec 1 1948 To Cooper Ken worthy Cust 594 12/2/48
Please convert the following 11 Warps 30/2 Bleached White Merc Warp Twist 392/6000 2054 lbs
Hold for Further Instructions”

*354 Under date of December 3 defendant acknowledged receipt of the yarn.

On December 2 plaintiffs charged Carien on their ledger in the amount of $2,362.10 for such yarn and on the same date sent an invoice covering the goods in dispute to the New York office of Carien where it was received by its president. That invoice contained the following language:

“Kaminow Bros.
Our Order No. 2366 Novelty
Yarns Invoice No. 68880
3-5 Waverly Place, New York 3
Shipped via At Cooper Date 12/2/48
Kenworthy
Terms Net 30 Days No Anticipation Allowed
Sold Carien Textile Mills Inc.
To 40 E. 34th St.
■ N.Y.C.
Shipped To
Cooper Kenworthy Inc.
1-15 Pomfret St.
Providence, R. I.
Description Net Price Amount Total
Lbs. Oz.
11 Warps 392/6000 -30/2
Bleached White Merc. Warp twist. 2054-0 1.15 2362.10 2362.10
Order Completed”

After receiving the' above-described invoice the president of Carien went from the New York office to that company’s mill in New Bedford, Massachusetts, stopping on his way at defendant’s office in Providence. He gave the correct warp numbers of the yarn to defendant’s president and general manager and also showed him the invoice of such goods that had been sent by plaintiffs to Carien. Orders were then given defendant by the president of Carien to dye eight warps certain colors, to leave three warps unprocessed, and to deliver all the warps to that corporation in New Bedford. The above work was completed and by December 9 the goods had been shipped by defendant as directed. Subse *355 quently the original invoice itself was given by the president of Carien to defendant.

In March 1949 one of the plaintiffs called at defendant’s plant and had a conversation about the goods in question. Starting on April 4, 1949, about four months after the transaction under consideration took place, there was correspondence between the parties. The plaintiffs demanded that the yarn be shipped to them or that defendant pay for it, but the latter denied any liability therefor. On April 6, 1949 Carien was adjudged bankrupt in New York.

The plaintiffs contend in substance that they had retained title to the yarn in question; that they did not intend to transfer said title to Carien on December 2, 1948; that when they had the yarn sent to defendant the notation on the converting order “Hold for Further Instructions” referred to instructions plaintiffs would give; and that defendant, by acting upon Carlen’s order to dye and deliver the goods to the latter, wrongfully converted them without first communicating with plaintiffs. They further argue that even if title to the yarn did pass to Carien, they nevertheless retained the right to possession thereof by virtue of a lien for payment under the provisions of the Sales Act, general laws 1938, chapter 462.

On the other hand defendant urges generally that, according to the invoice in evidence, plaintiffs made an absolute sale of the yarn to Carien on December 2 and divested themselves of title thereto and all interest therein. They also urge that the notation to hold for further instructions was ambiguous in that it did not show who was to give such instructions and did not in any way refer specifically to the plaintiffs in that connection. The defendant maintains that in the circumstaces it acted reasonably in deciding, after .being shown the inv'oice which plaintiffs had sent to Carien, that such corporation was the owner of and had undisputed title to the yarn.

In Donahue v. Shippee, 15 R. I. 453, the court approved a definition of a conversion which contained the following *356 language: “The action being founded upon a conjunct right of property and possession, any act of the defendant which negatives, or is inconsistent with,-such right, amounts in law to a conversion. * * * Does he exercise a dominion over it in exclusion or in defiance of the plaintiff’s right? If he does, that is in law a "conversion, be it for his own or another’s use.” In the case at bar the trial justice reviewed the evidence and in making his decision stated: “If we come to the conclusion that Kaminow did not own the property after December 2, then there can be no trover and conversion. * * * So if Kaminow had transferred title to the yarn to the Carien Textile Mills, then Kaminow is no longer the owner and Carien is the owner. * * * I hold that transfer of title of this yarn was made by Kaminow Brothers, plaintiffs here, on December 2, 1948 to the Carien Textile Mills.

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Bluebook (online)
89 A.2d 165, 79 R.I. 352, 1952 R.I. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaminow-v-cooper-kenworthy-inc-ri-1952.