Leavenworth State Bank v. Wenatchee Valley Fruit Exchange

204 P. 8, 118 Wash. 366, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 683
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 1922
DocketNo. 16550
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 204 P. 8 (Leavenworth State Bank v. Wenatchee Valley Fruit Exchange) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leavenworth State Bank v. Wenatchee Valley Fruit Exchange, 204 P. 8, 118 Wash. 366, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 683 (Wash. 1922).

Opinion

Bridges, J.

— This action grows out of a written contract between the Peshastin Mill Company, as the seller, and Wenatchee Valley Fruit Exchange, a corporation, as the purchaser. In many respects this is a companion case with that of Leavenworth State Bank v. Cashmere Apple Co., ante p. 356, 204 Pac. 5. The contract here is substantially the same as the one involved in that case, except as to the amount of the boxes. In this contract the seller agreed to sell and the purchaser agreed to purchase “40,000 apple boxes, now manufactured and in stock at Leavenworth, Washington”, and “200,000 apple boxes to be manufactured”, according to certain specifications, and “15,000 pear boxes to be manufactured” according to certain specifications, and certain other kinds of boxes which this action does not particularly concern. The purchaser paid $1,000 down on the purchase price. Further provisions will be found in the contract shown in the Cashmere Apple Company case, supra.

Apparently all of the 40,000 lot of apple boxes “now manufactured and in stock at Leavenworth” were delivered; but a large amount of the lot of 200,000 apple boxes “to be manufactured” were never delivered. It appears that there were eight different carloads of boxes shipped out in the name of the Wenatchee Valley Fruit Exchange, some of which were delivered to that company, and some to the S. & Gr. Fruit Company. The sixth carload, which was of pear boxes and which is the basis of plaintiff’s sixth cause of action, and in [368]*368part the basis of a cross-appeal by tbe plaintiff, was delivered to the S. & Gf. Fruit Company.

The situation of the various parties to the action is somewhat confusing, and we think it advisable to sáy a few words with reference thereto. The Pesbastin Mill Company, which was tbe seller in tbe contract, assigned its claim against tbe Wenatchee Valley Fruit Exchange for all of tbe eight carloads of boxes shipped, to the Leavenworth State Bank, which originally brought this action against tbe Fruit Exchange, as the sole defendant. In a general way, that defendant’s answer denied any liability to tbe bank. At this stage of tbe proceedings, tbe S. & G. Company intervened and joined witb tbe original defendant, Wenatchee Valley Fruit Exchange, in what they designate as,

“an affirmative defense, and by way of counterclaim and set-off against each of the several causes of action set up in the plaintiff’s complaint, and as a cross-complaint against tbe Pesbastin Mill Company, a corporation, and the Leavenworth Box Company, a corporation, and joined therewith and made a part thereof tbe complaint in intervention of tbe S. & G. Fruit Company, a corporation.”

These joint pleaders, in substance, admitted that they bad received the various boxes sued for, and alleged that the bank and the Pesbastin Mill Company and the Leavenworth Box Company bad breached the contract hereinbefore mentioned, in that they bad failed to ship a large portion of the 200,000 lot of apple boxes, and sought set-offs and damages in a sum in excess of $15,000.

The total amount sued for by the plaintiff was $7,533, less certain freights which bad been paid by the companies receiving the shipments. The court gave tbe bank judgment for $6,012.78, together witb [369]*369interest, and refused any relief to the Wenatchee Valley Fruit Exchange and the S. & G. Fruit Company on their cross-complaint and counterclaim. The companies last named have appealed from that part of the judgment refusing them damages on their counterclaim, and the bank has cross-appealed on the ground that its judgment should have been for a larger sum.

In discussing the original appeal, we will refer to the Wenatchee Valley Fruit Exchange and the S. & G. Company as appellants, and the other parties as respondents ; and in discussing the cross-appeal, we will refer to the bank and the Peshastin Mill Company as cross-appellants, and all of the other parties as cross-respondents.

We will first discuss the original appeal.

The respondents have at all times admitted they failed to deliver a large portion of the 200,000 lot of apple boxes and as an excuse therefor alleged, and undertook to prove, as was done in the Cashmere Apple Company case, supra, that under the terms of the contract all of those boxes were to be manufactured by the Peshastin Mill Company at its lumber and box factory, located near Blewett, Washington, and that, after it had manufactured and delivered a portion of such boxes, and on, to wit, the 13th day of August, 1919, its entire mill was destroyed by fire, thus making it impossible for it to comply with its contract; and that, under the provisions of that instrument with reference to fires, strikes, etc., they were relieved of further duty in that regard. The appellants, however, contend that the contract was one of bargain and sale and not manufacture and sale, and that the destruction of the mill did not relieve the respondent from furnishing the whole of the boxes provided for in the contract.

The legal questions involved here, in so far as the original appeal is concerned, are substantially the [370]*370same as those involved in the original appeal in the Cashmere Apple Company case, supra, and what was said there with reference to the original appeal is applicable here, and we do not consider it necessary to make any further discussion of the question. The conclusion reached in the Apple Company case, supra, was to affirm the judgment to the effect that the appellants were not entitled to recover anything on their counterclaim and cross-complaint. For the reasons there given we come to the same, conclusion here.

We will now consider the cross-appeal.

Two distinct questions are involved therein. The first one is based upon the following facts: The testimony shows, and the trial court found, that, as the Peshastin Mill Company loaded and shipped out each carload of boxes, it borrowed from the bank eighty-five per cent of the amount of the value of each invoice, and at that time gave to the bank its promissory note for the amount so obtained, and delivered to the bank, as collateral security, the invoice. Each one of these invoices was assigned to the bank in the following words: “For value received this account has been assigned to the Leavenworth State Bank, Leavenworth, Washington. Please remit to them when due.” The trial court refused to give the bank judgment for any amount more than it advanced on the invoices, to wit, eighty-fiv.e per cent thereof, and it has cross-appealed because the court refused judgment for the full amount of the invoices, less proper set-offs or counterclaims. The cross-respondents concede that an assignee of an account may recover the whole amount assigned, less proper offsets, even though there was no consideration for the assignment, and the assignee is in law bound to account to the assignor; but contend that, where the assignment is [371]*371made only for security, the recovery is limited to the amount of the debt which was secured. On the other hand, the cross-appellant argues that the fact that the assignment was made as security can make no difference so long as the whole amount has been assigned.

Section 191, Rem. Code (P. C. § 8272), provides that any assignee of any book account or chose in action for the payment of money and by assignment in writing, may by virtue of such assignment:

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Bluebook (online)
204 P. 8, 118 Wash. 366, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leavenworth-state-bank-v-wenatchee-valley-fruit-exchange-wash-1922.