Lawrence Warehouse Co. v. Menary

143 F. Supp. 883, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3052
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Iowa
DecidedSeptember 14, 1956
DocketNo. 1-163
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 143 F. Supp. 883 (Lawrence Warehouse Co. v. Menary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawrence Warehouse Co. v. Menary, 143 F. Supp. 883, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3052 (S.D. Iowa 1956).

Opinion

DAVIES, District Judge.

This is a civil action against two sets of guarantors to recover $25,736.99 represented by three promissory notes given by the principal obligor to a creditor bank, which assigned the guaranty contracts and notes to the plaintiff.

This amount was made the subject of two separate and independent claims, one against A. R. Menary and 'Harvey C. Moeller as guarantors under an agreement made June 23, 1952, and the other against R. B. Mead and A. A. Mead under an agreement made June 16, 1952. The guaranty agreements were executed as additional security devices in financing the business operations of Mid-States Packing Company, Inc., a meat-packing plant in Milan, Illinois, working within the field warehousing ‘ system of the plaintiff Lawrence Warehouse Company, a California corporation.1

R. B. Mead was president of Mid-States, and the secretary was his daughter-in-law, A. A. Mead; his son and her husband, Everett Mead, was manager of [885]*885the company. A. R. Menary was a veterinary doctor who had invested in and was employed by Mid-States, and Harvey C. Moeller was a farmer whom Menary persuaded to join in making one of the guarantees. Moeller was not an investor but was interested in the success of Mid-States since he had sold cattle to the company in consideration of a note for $14,-786.38 given him by Menary.

Mid-States bought and slaughtered livestock and stored the meat in the warehouse part of its own plant, which was under the exclusive supervision and control of Earl E. Ostrander as agent for the plaintiff. With nonnegotiable warehouse receipts of the plaintiff issued by Ostrander for such meat, Mid-States obtained money on credit from First National Bank of Rock Island, Illinois, executing company notes and pledging the warehouse receipts to the bank as security. Under this arrangement the plaintiff was required to store all meat covered by receipts until the bank gave its written authorization to release the meat for sale by Mid-States.

Ordinarily the bank would regard itself as secure by advancing credit to the extent of 90% of the value of meat under warehouse receipts. But because Mid-States had been having refrigeration troübles resulting in some loss by spoilage, the bank demanded additional security by way of guarantees from responsible persons interested in the company. At the request of Ostrander who was handling the company’s financial operations, the defendants R. B. Mead and A. A. Mead signed their guaranty, containing a $50,000 liability limit, on the understanding known to the bank that a similar guaranty would be made by the other two defendants.

The guaranty signed by Menary and Moeller involved rather complicated negotiations with Everett Mead and Earl Ostrander, and later between Menary and two officers of the bank, Lewis Wilson and George C. Trauten. Menary and Moeller wanted to limit the guaranty to the risk of spoilage, as to which they felt loss was quite unlikely in view of recent refrigeration improvements. But Ostrander insisted that they use blank forms of unconditional guaranty furnished by the bank. Menary and Moeller acceded to this request provided that most of the printed language was stricken and the following language inserted: “This guaranty is limited entirely to Mid-States Packing Co., Inc., notes issued in support of Lawrence Warehouse Company warehouse receipts.” Such language' was typed in, and Moeller signed the instrument, relying on Menary’s promise to see that the guaranty was limited by striking the unwanted general provisions. Menary later visited the bank with Ostrander, and was persuaded by the bank officers to agree to substitution of the words “secured by” for the words “issued in support of,” contained m the added clause. Menary put his okay and initials by the change and signed the instrument without having the printed provisions stricken. This alteration, along with the insertion of “$100,000” as liability limit, was made in the presence and with the knowledge of Ostrander.

The present action was precipitated by the following events: On the basis of a check to Mid-States from a buyer of meat, brought by Everett Mead from Chicago to Milan on July 30, 1952, Ostrander released a load of 62 beef carcasses without the required authorizati°n of the bank. The next day this load was hijacked in Chicago. The buyer stopped payment of the check, and as a consequence Mid-States could not pay the notes held by the bank. To avoid liability to the bank on the warehouse receipts, plaintiff paid the notes and received from the bank an assignment of the notes and the two guaranty contracts,

In a pretrial order of this Court on September 1, 1954, it was determined that the value of the hijacked load of meat was $28,002.50, and that the plaintiff had recovered from insuranee the sum of $12,000 by which the amount of its claim in the present action would be reduced. Inasmuch as the operative facts which are the subject óf this action occurred in Illinois, the law [886]*886of that state is controlling. Twohig v. Lawrence Warehouse Co., D.C.Iowa 1954, 118 F.Supp. 322, 328; see, in general, Goodrich, Conflict of Laws (3rd ed. 1949), pp. 260-262 (tort liability), and 321-323 (contract liability). Under Illinois law plaintiff, as warehouseman, committed a conversion of the 62 carcasses by releasing them without authority from the bank. Ill.Ann.Stat. Smith-Hurd, c. 114, § 242, 3 U.L.A., Uniform Warehouse Receipts Act, See. 10; Sugar Supply Corporation v. Great Lakes Transit Corporation, 1933, 272 Ill.App. 129; Restatement, Torts (1934), Sec. 235(1), pp. 602-603.

The ultimate issue in this case is whether a warehouseman, wrongfully releasing and making possible the theft of goods covered by warehouse receipts pledged to a bank as security for promissory notes also secured by guarantees, can by paying the notes and receiving an assignment from the bank recover from guarantors the amount paid.

It is the opinion of this Court that the warehouseman cannot recover from the guarantors under such assignment. The plaintiff certainly cannot recover from the defendant Moeller because material alteration of the guaranty agreement without his consent (increasing the risk by substitution, insertion, and non-deletion of terms) discharged him from liability. Despres v. Folz, 1907, 134 Ill.App. Ill; see, in general, Restatement, Contracts (1932), Secs. 434 and 435; Simpson, Suretyship (1950), Sec. 72, pp. 329-351. And the plaintiff cannot recover from the defendant Menary because the guaranty as signed by him was applicable only to notes of Mid-States secured by warehouse receipts of the plaintiff, and Menary was discharged from liability when the notes were no longer so secured as a consequence of the plaintiff’s own wrongdoing.2 Finally, the plaintiff cannot recover from the defendants Mead because a condition precedent to the effectiveness of their guaranty — that a similar guaranty be obtained from Moeller and Menary — was never fulfilled. Restatement, Security (1941), Sec. 102(1); Restatement, Contracts (1932), Sec. 241.

The guarantors, although respectively entitled to rely upon these particular defenses, are further protected from liability on the fundamental general ground of public policy that a right of action cannot be based upon a wrongful act of the plaintiff. Kessinger v. Standard Oil Co., 1925, 245 Ill.App. 376; Mc-Clintock, Equity (2d ed. 1948), 59-61. The claim of the plaintiff is a direct outgrowth of its conversion of the 62 beef carcasses.

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Bluebook (online)
143 F. Supp. 883, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3052, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-warehouse-co-v-menary-iasd-1956.