Lewis v. James McMahon & Co.

271 S.W. 779, 307 Mo. 552, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 734
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 9, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 271 S.W. 779 (Lewis v. James McMahon & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. James McMahon & Co., 271 S.W. 779, 307 Mo. 552, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 734 (Mo. 1925).

Opinions

This is an action in replevin, tried by the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri, without a jury, on a third amended petition, in which appellants sought to recover twenty-five separate shipper's order bills of lading, representing twenty-five separate tank cars of fuel oil, shipped in interstate commerce from Coffeyville, Kansas, to Findlay, Ohio. It is alleged in the above *Page 559 petition, and admitted in the answer of the defendant bank, that plaintiffs were and are a copartnership, doing business under the firm name and style of F.J. Lewis Petroleum Company, with their chief office in the city of Chicago and State of Illinois; that defendant James McMahon Company is a corporation, organized under the law, with its chief place of business in the city of Tulsa and State of Oklahoma; that defendant Fidelity National Bank Trust Company of Kansas City, formerly Fidelity Trust Company, is a corporation organized according to law and doing business as a banking and trust corporation, with its chief office and place of business in Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri.

The bills of lading were duly indorsed by the shipper, the Kansas Oil Refining Company, and, together with invoices for each of said cars, were sold to the plaintiffs at Tulsa, Oklahoma. After this purchase by the plaintiffs, on March 28, 1918, they sold to defendant, James McMahon Company, at an agreed price, aggregating for the twenty-five cars of oil, $11,189.47, for which McMahon Company gave to plaintiffs their check drawn on the respondent Fidelity National Bank Trust Company of Kansas City, Missouri, then the Fidelity Trust Company of said city. The bills of lading with a separate invoice for each car, were delivered by plaintiff's to McMahon Company contemporaneously with the giving of said check.

On delivery of the twenty-five bills of lading, McMahon Company surrendered them to the issuing carrier, and took out interstate shipper's order bills of lading for the twenty-five cars, reconsigning them to Cleveland, Ohio. The new or substitute bills of lading disclosed that they had been issued in exchange for the prior bills of lading.

The above check given plaintiffs by McMahon Company, was deposited for collection in the bank of Tulsa, Oklahoma, and was forwarded through the mails to defendant bank for payment. On receipt of the check the defendant bank refused to pay it, and thereupon it *Page 560 was protested. The bills of lading had in the meantime been placed by McMahon Company in the hands of defendant bank and, on the refusal of the latter to pay the check, the plaintiffs demanded from said bank and McMahon Company the bills of lading aforesaid, which they refused to deliver to plaintiffs and, hence, the institution of this suit followed.

After the commencement of the suit, and before the writ of replevin was served, the bank sold the twenty-five cars of oil at Kansas City, Missouri, and delivered to the purchaser the bills of lading therefor, sought to be recovered by plaintiffs, and this case thereupon proceeded as an action for damages, for the conversion of the oil represented by the bills of lading.

The bank, in its answer, claimed to be an innocent purchaser, for value, of the bills of lading in question, and that by reason thereof it was entitled to their possession as against the plaintiffs. The answer also alleged that the sale by plaintiffs to McMahon Company was not a cash sale, and that the title to said oil passed to McMahon Company on delivery of the bills of lading to them; and that plaintiffs waived their right to immediate cash payment. It likewise charges that plaintiffs were guilty of laches, and were estopped from claiming the bills of lading in the hands of the bank.

Plaintiffs' reply consisted of specific denials of the new matter pleaded in said answer.

At the conclusion of the evidence, both sides asked for specific findings of fact, separate from the court's conclusion of law. The court refused plaintiffs' requested findings, and gave those requested by the bank.

There is but little, if any, controversy over the material facts of the case. After carefully reading the evidence, we have reached the conclusion that the statement of facts made by appellants is substantially correct and we hereby adopt the same as our statement, as follows:

The plaintiffs were the unquestioned owners of the twenty-five cars of oil and the twenty-five bills of lading issued therefor on March 28, 1918, when they sold the oil *Page 561 and bills of lading to McMahon Company for $11,189.47, and as a part of the same transaction, and in payment therefor, McMahon Company gave plaintiffs their check for that amount, drawn on defendant bank. The check was in the form of a voucher check, showing that it was given for the purchaser price of the twenty-five cars of oil, the numbers and initials of these cars and the price of each car being listed on the check.

On obtaining the bills of lading McMahon Company took out exchange shipper's order bills of lading therefor and delivered these bills of lading with the identical invoices received from plaintiffs to defendant bank on March 29, 1918. These bills of lading were attached to sight drafts drawn on Fred G. Clark Company, Cleveland, Ohio, for $11,810.15. This latter amount, less twenty cents per one hundred dollars as exchange, was at once credited by the defendant bank to the checking account of McMahon Company in that bank.

The bills of lading, drafts, etc., were sent by messenger of McMahon Company to the bank, and the bank officers had no talk or discussion with McMahon Company regarding their handling or disposition of the proceeds.

On April 1, 1918, the Central National Bank at Tulsa, Oklahoma, then having in its custody the check given plaintiffs as above mentioned, called the defendant bank over long-distance telephone and asked if this check would be paid and was told that it would not. The Tulsa bank then forwarded the check direct to the defendant bank by the United States mail. The check came to the defendant bank on the morning of April 3rd, at which time there stood to the credit of McMahon Company in their checking account the full amount of the deposit of the drafts on March 29th. The check, as before stated, contained an invoice of the twenty-five cars of oil, giving the car initials, numbers and the price of each car and was of itself notice to the defendant bank that it was for the purchase price of the oil in question. *Page 562

In addition to this statement on the check, plaintiffs' representative, Mr. Loehle, called at the defendant bank on the morning of April 3rd and discussed the matter of the check with the bank officials and was informed that the check would not be paid. Mr. Loehle thereupon gave written instructions to the bank to protest the check. In the afternoon of April 3rd and after refusing to pay the check, and after learning, both by the memoranda on the check as well as by the conversation with Mr. Loehle, that it was for the purchase of the oil in question, the bank charged off of McMahon Company's account $7500 and applied the same to McMahon Company's note held by the bank, but not then due. This note bore date March 16, 1918, was for $10,000, due sixty days after date. In addition to the company's name signed to the note as maker, it was indorsed by James D. McMahon and F.B. Bordenkinter.

The testimony showed that this note had been given under an arrangement made by the bank a few days previous to its date, by which McMahon arranged with the bank to give his company a line of credit in the purchase of oil.

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Bluebook (online)
271 S.W. 779, 307 Mo. 552, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-james-mcmahon-co-mo-1925.