Lynn Storage Warehouse Co. v. Senator

3 F.2d 558, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3772
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 6, 1925
DocketNo. 1757
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 3 F.2d 558 (Lynn Storage Warehouse Co. v. Senator) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lynn Storage Warehouse Co. v. Senator, 3 F.2d 558, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3772 (1st Cir. 1925).

Opinion

BINGHAM, Circuit Judge.

This is an action in contract or tort in three counts brought in the federal District Court for Massachusetts by Mordka Senator, a citizen of Russia, against the Lynn Storage Warehouse Company, a Massachusetts corporation. The first count is for conversion of 291 bales of leather containing 5,300 oak sides'weighing about 150,000 pounds. The second count is based on section 8, chapter .582, of the Acts of .Massachusetts of -1907, and charges the defendant as a warehouse[559]*559man for failure to hold the leather in question in accordance with its contract under a certain warehouse receipt and for failure to deliver it upon demand to the plaintiff, the indorsee, owner, and holder of the receipt, which did not have placed upon its face the words “nonnegotiable” or “not negotiable,” and which he purchased for value supposing it to be negotiable. The third count declares that the plaintiff bought the warehouse receipt and has acquired the right to have the defendant hold possession of the merchandise to his account and that the defendant neglected and refused to deliver the merchandise according to the terms of its obligation in said receipt. The case was tried before a jury. In the submission of the case the jury were instructed to answer certain questions, which questions and answers were as follows:

1. Did the plaintiff in Moscow, Russia, on or about December 2, 1917, buy and pay for Bogatsky’s interest in the leather here in question, and in the documents representing it? Answer: Yes.

2. Was the alleged transaction between Bogatsky and the plaintiff sufficient under Russian law to vest Bogatsky’s interest in the plaintiff? Answer: Yes.

3. Was the plaintiff duly authorized by Bogatsky and the Moscow Industrial Bank to receive from the Guaranty Trust Company the warehouse receipt in question? Answer: Yes.

4. Was the plaintiff, at the time when he purchased the leather in question or the documents representing it from Bogatsky, informed that the documents of title were held by the Guaranty Trust Company under instructions that they were to be delivered to the purchaser or his representative only upon receipt by the trust company of $99,-000 for the seller’s account? Answer: No.

4a. Was he then informed that the full amount had not been paid? Answer: No.

5a. Was the warehouse receipt intrusted to the Guaranty Trust Company under instructions that it should be delivered only upon payment of $99,000 to the trust company? Answer: No.

5b. If so, did those instructions continue throughout the entire transactions? Answer: No.

6. Did the plaintiff at the time when he received the warehouse receipt from the Guaranty Trust Company suppose it to be a negotiable receipt? Answer: Yes.

6a. If the jury find that the plaintiff bought Bogatsky’s interest in the leather and the receipt; did the plaintiff at that time (December, 1917) suppose the receipt to be negotiable? Answer: Yes.

7. Did the Guaranty Trust Company on behalf of the plaintiff make due demand upon the defendant for the delivery of the leather in question? Answer: Yes.

7a. If so, was that demand refused upon the ground that the leather had already been delivered? Answer: No.

7b. And if so, was the plaintiff informed of such demand and refusal before he received the receipt? Answer: Yes, but not the grounds of the refusal.

8. Did the International Manufacturers’ Sales Company accept the 347,370 rubles in the hands of the Guaranty Trust Company as complete payment for the leather in question? Answer: Yes.

8a. Did Hilliard & Merrill accept the 326,-315 rubles in the hands of the Guaranty Trust Company as complete payment for the leather in question? Answer: Yes.

9. What was the fair value of the leather in question (a) in September, 1917? (b) in October, 1919? Answer: (a) 62e. per pound, (b) 72e. per pound.

10. Had a reasonable time for the completion of the purchase of, the leather by the payment in full of the purchase price to the Guaranty Trust Company elapsed before Hilliard & Merrill retook the leather? Answer: No.

11. Did the Guaranty Trust Company1 at any time have $99,000 applicable to payment for the leather in question? Answer: No.

11a. What was the highest value which the ruble had in American money after the receipt of the credit of 347,370 rubles by the Guaranty Trust Company? Answer: ,27%oc.

12. Was the delivery of the warehouse receipt by the Guaranty Trust Company to the plaintiff a breach of duty on its part? Answer: No.

, Having returned these findings the jury, under further instructions of the court (the terms of which are not given), returned the following verdict:

“The jury find for the plaintiff and assess damages in the sum of one hundred thirty-three thousand three hundred eighty ($133,-380) dollars.
“But if, as a matter of law, the plaintiff is not entitled to a verdict, then the jury find for the defendant and consent that this verdict may be entered on order of the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts, or of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, [560]*560or of the Supreme Court of the United States, with same effect as if returned by them.”

The defendant excepted “to the action of the court in so instructing the jury as to the verdict.”

A motion having been filed to set aside the verdict and certain of the specific findings, after hearing the parties the District Court set aside the findings embodied in the answers to questions Nos. 4, 5a, 5b, 6, 7a, and 7b as being against the, weight of the evidence, but allowed the other findings and the verdiet for the plaintiff to stand, and thereafter entered a judgment for the plaintiff from which this writ of error was taken.

There are some 66 assignments of error. They consist largely in objections to 'the court’s refusal to instruct the jury that on all the evidence the plaintiff could not recover on all or any oné of the counts, and to the refusal to give other requested instructions; to the admission and exclusion of evidence ; and to certain instructions that were given. ■

At the argument before us there was discussion' as to whether what was returned by the. jury subsequent to its special findings was a-, general verdict for the plaintiff for $133,380, with permission • to the court to enter the provisional verdict returned for the defendant if, as a matter of law, the verdict for the plaintiff was erroneous; or whether what they then returned was a directed verdiet for the plaintiff based upon the special facts found; and a verdict for the defendant if, as a matter of law, the special facts found would not warrant a verdiet for the plaintiff. The record does not show that the verdiet returned for the plaintiff was a directed one. It purports to be the verdiet of the jury and to embrace such findings of fact as to liability and damages as were essential to support it; and, in the absence of a showing to the contrary, the presumption is that it was such. The exception of the defendant saved at the time the verdict was taken presents no question of law, for it does not appear what the ‘instructions were to which the exception was saved. It is not claimed, and could not well be, that the specific facts found are inconsistent with the verdict; for they are not.

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Bluebook (online)
3 F.2d 558, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynn-storage-warehouse-co-v-senator-ca1-1925.