Lippincott Distributing Co. v. Peoples Commercial & Savings Bank

30 N.E.2d 691, 137 Ohio St. 399, 137 Ohio St. (N.S.) 399, 19 Ohio Op. 116, 1940 Ohio LEXIS 495
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1940
Docket28101
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 30 N.E.2d 691 (Lippincott Distributing Co. v. Peoples Commercial & Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lippincott Distributing Co. v. Peoples Commercial & Savings Bank, 30 N.E.2d 691, 137 Ohio St. 399, 137 Ohio St. (N.S.) 399, 19 Ohio Op. 116, 1940 Ohio LEXIS 495 (Ohio 1940).

Opinion

Day, J.

The record discloses that the trial judge, in his instructions to the jury, charged that the rights of the parties were to be determined by the provisions of Sections 8360 and 8361, General Code, parts of the Factors ’ Act.

The Court of Appeals reversed the judgment of the trial court on the ground that the wrong statutes were applied to the issues in the case; that Sections 8360 and 8361, General Code, insofar as they are applicable to warehouse receipts, have been repealed by implication by the subsequent enactment of Sections 8503, 8505 and 8508, General Code, parts of the Uniform Warehouse Eeceipts Act (Sections 8457 to 8509, inclusive, General Code); and that, therefore, the trial court should have determined the issues of this cause pursuant to the provisions of Sections 8503, 8505 and 8508, General Code.

Appellant herein denies that there was any such repeal and contends that the trial court applied the correct statutes.

Section 8360, General Code, provides: “Every factor or other agent, intrusted with the possession of a bill of lading, custom-house permit, or warehouse-keeper’s receipt for the delivery of any such merchandise, and every such factor or agent, not having the documentary evidence of title, intrusted with the possession of merchandise for the purpose of sale, or as a security for advances to be made or obtained thereon, shall be deemed to be the true owner thereof, so far as to give validity to any contract made by such agent with any other person for 'the sale or disposition of the whole or any part of such merchandise, for any *403 money advanced or negotiable instrument, or other obligation in writing, given by such other person upon the faith thereof.”

Section 8361, General Code, provides: “Every person who accepts any such merchandise on deposit from any such agent, as security for any antecedent debt or demand, shall not thereby acquire or enforce any right or interest in or to such merchandise or document, other than was possessed or might have been enforced by such agent, at the time of such deposit.”

Section 8503, General Code, reads as follows: “The validity of the negotiation of a receipt is not impaired by the fact that such negotiation was a breach of duty on the part of the person making the negotiation, or by the fact that the owner of the receipt was deprived of the possession of the same by loss, theft, fraud, accident, mistake, duress or conversion, if the person to whom the receipt was subsequently negotiated, paid value therefor in good faith, without notice of the breach of duty, or loss, theft, fraud, accident, mistake, duress or conversion.”

Section 8505, General Code, provides: “When a negotiable receipt has been issued for goods, no seller’s lien or right of stoppage in trcmsitu shall defeat the rights of any purchaser for value in good faith to whom such receipt has been negotiated, whether such negotiations be prior or subsequent to the notification to the warehouseman who issued such receipt of the seller’s claim to a lien or right of stoppage in transitu. Nor shall the warehouseman be obliged to deliver or justified in delivering the goods to an unpaid seller unless the receipt is first surrendered for cancellation.”

Section 8508, General Code, provides:

“In this chapter [Sections 8457 to 8509, General Code] unless the context or subject-matter otherwise requires- — - * * *
“ ‘Holder’ of a receipt means a person who has both actual possession of such receipt and a right of property thereon. * * *
*404 “ ‘Value’ is any consideration sufficient to support* a simple contract. An antecedent or preexisting obligation, whether for money or not, constitutes value where a receipt is taken either in satisfaction thereof or as security therefor.
“ ‘Warehouseman’ means a person lawfully engaged in the business of storing goods for profit.
“A thing is done ‘in good faith’ within the meaning of this chapter, when it is in fact done* honestly, whether it be done negligently or not.”

Section 8497, General Code, provides:

“A person to whom a negotiable receipt has been duly negotiated acquires thereby:
“1. Such title to the goods as the person negotiating the receipt to him had or had ability to convey to a purchaser in good faith for value, and also such title to the g*oods as the depositor or person to whose order the goods were to be delivered by the terms of the receipt had or had ability to convey to a purchaser in good faith for value * *

The controlling question presented is this: Where one intrusted with the possession of merchandise on consignment to him from its owner places it in a warehouse and obtains negotiable warehouse receipts therefor and thereafter pledges them to a bank as collateral security for a promissory note or notes, and the bank subsequently takes possession of the merchandise under such warehouse receipts, does the bank have title to such merchandise superior to that of the consignor ?

Under the provisions of Sections 8360 and 8361, General Code (enacted in 1844 as parts of an act “to prevent fraudulent practices,” 42 Ohio Laws, 49), a factor or other agent, intrusted with the' possession of merchandise for the purpose of sale, is to be deemed the true owner thereof, and any disposition which he may make of such merchandise (whether by actual delivery of the merchandise or by delivery of a document *405 of title thereto), and any contract which he may make with respect thereto, are valid; hut if he deposits such merchandise or document of title thereto in pledge as security for an antecedent debt or demand, the pledgee “shall not thereby acquire or enforce any right or interest in or to such merchandise or document, other than was possessed or might have been enforced by such agent, at the time of such deposit.” Section 8361, General Code. In other words, in such case, the pledgee acquires whatever title the factor or agent had, subject to all the equities which the consignor of the merchandise had against such factor or agent with respect thereto.

Under the Factors’ Act, a factor or other agent, intrusted with the possession of merchandise for the purpose of sale, is deemed to be the true owner thereof, and any disposition which he may make of it, and any contract which he may make with respect thereto, are valid. There is nothing in the Uniform Warehouse Receipts Act (enacted in 1908, 99 Ohio Laws, 400) which conflicts with this provision. The difference, however, is that under the Uniform Warehouse Receipts Act if a factor or other agent pledges such goods or negotiable document of title thereto as collateral security for “value” (as that term is defined in Section 8508, General Code), the pledgee, who in good faith acquires such goods or document of title, does so free from any and all equities of the consignor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 N.E.2d 691, 137 Ohio St. 399, 137 Ohio St. (N.S.) 399, 19 Ohio Op. 116, 1940 Ohio LEXIS 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lippincott-distributing-co-v-peoples-commercial-savings-bank-ohio-1940.