Manget Brothers, Inc. v. The Bank of Greenwood, Greenwood, Mississippi

381 F.2d 91
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 20, 1967
Docket22769_1
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 381 F.2d 91 (Manget Brothers, Inc. v. The Bank of Greenwood, Greenwood, Mississippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manget Brothers, Inc. v. The Bank of Greenwood, Greenwood, Mississippi, 381 F.2d 91 (5th Cir. 1967).

Opinion

GOLDBERG, Circuit Judge:

These three diversity suits concern certain courses of dealing and usages of trade within the cotton business. The consolidation of the suits has brought about a three-way battle in which each of three parties 1 interprets these dealings and usages as falling easily and squarely within his choice of common legal rubrics. Nothing, however, is that simple.

The suits were brought by Manget Brothers, Inc. (Manget) and Anderson-Clayton and Company (Anderson), two cotton companies, and by H. A. Phillips, the Trustee in Bankruptcy for Collins Hill, Jr. and Mrs. Eleanor Hill, doing business as the Hill Cotton Company (Hill). Each suit named the Bank of Greenwood, Greenwood, Mississippi (Bank), as defendant, and each arises from the dealings of the Hill partnership in the cotton business in Greenwood.

The subject matter of the suits is $300,713.42 in checks made'by the Commodity Credit Corporation payable jointly to Hill and Bank. After endorsement, Bank used the entire sum to reduce Hill’s indebtedness to it. The trustee argues that Bank was entitled so to apply only $100,000 of the sum and should have turned the remainder over to Hill, and that failure to do so caused the bankruptcy. Manget and Anderson claim that Bank was under a duty to pay $63,000 of this sum to them. No one would contend that the mere knowledge by Bank that Hill had outstanding debts to them immobilized or disarmed Bank in pursuit and capture of Hill’s funds to reduce and liquidate Hill’s indebtedness to Bank. They do claim that Hill had acquired that sum only while acting as agent for Manget and Anderson in purchasing from the C.C.C. and Bank knew it; or because a resulting or constructive trust was impressed on that *93 sum by dealings to be explained below, and because Bank had sufficient knowledge of the facts for creation of such a trust.

Bank’s answer contained denials and affirmative defenses. Generally it denied the knowledge ascribed to it by plaintiffs and stated that Hill had not been Manget’s and Anderson’s agent in the C.C.C. transactions.

After trial without a jury, the district judge, upon exhaustive findings of fact and law, found for the defendant. The plaintiffs appeal, and we affirm.

Hill began buying and selling cotton in Greenwood in 1952. Under a written agreement, Bank financed Hill by allowing Hill to draw overdrafts on its account as long as those overdrafts were adequately secured. The Bank had broad powers to call overdraft loans and to liquidate the account. Hill usually pledged as collateral warehouse receipts for cotton which Hill currently owned.

The transaction producing the questioned payment in the present case was part of a C.C.C. program which sought to foster export of American cotton. C.C.C. had large quantities of American cotton which it had purchased to support the domestic price. It offered this cotton for sale to purchasers who promised to export for foreign sale an identical amount of cotton (but not necessarily the identical cotton purchased) by the end of a certain stated period. 2 The price of cotton from the C.C.C. was generally about $30 a bale less than that of cotton purchased on the open market in the United States. The C.C.C. price of cotton was attractive, but many firms were unwilling to incur the concomitant export obligation. Induced by this situation, a practice arose in the cotton industry whereby a firm such as Hill would purchase C.C.C. cotton for immediate resale to another firm. In such a transaction, all parties, including the C.C.C., understood that only the direct purchaser from C.C.C. incurred the export obligation. For its services in purchasing the cotton and in incurring this obligation, the direct purchaser was paid a commission by the subsequent purchaser. The direct purchaser was then left to satisfy the obligation to sell a similar amount of cotton on the foreign market by himself, with no interference or aid from the subsequent purchaser.

Upon delivery, the C.C.C. cotton was generally reweighed and regraded to check whether the C.C.C. had been overpaid or underpaid. 3 When this process showed that the C.C.C. had been overpaid (as was often the case), the C.C.C. refunded the excess to the direct purchaser, who in turn was obligated to pay it to the subsequent purchaser. Refunds usually amounted to about $7.50 a bale. The right to receive such refunds arose so frequently that the cotton trade gave the name “rights” to a subsequent purchaser’s entitlement to them. A subsequent purchaser who had such “rights” became known as a “rights creditor.”

Hill participated in these programs as a direct purchaser of cotton from C.C.C., reselling the C.C.C. cotton to domestic buyers and incurring the obligation to sell abroad. When refunds from C.C.C. became due, Hill deposited those sums in its overdraft account with Bank.

Under C.C.C.’s 1958-59 program, Hill at the request of the plaintiffs Manget and Anderson (and another party not a part of this lawsuit) made a purchase of 5,420 bales of C.C.C. cotton for $553,079.49, in a transaction known as Sale Number 1845. Upon confirmation of Hill’s bid to C.C.C., C.C.C. drafts on Hill came to Bank with warehouse receipts for the cotton attached. Bank permitted Hill to accept these drafts and advanced funds for payment through the overdraft account, using the warehouse receipts as collateral. At this point in *94 the transaction, Bank was obligated to honor the C.C.C. drafts drawn on Hill, but the funds of the subsequent purchasers, Manget and Anderson, had not yet been received.

Then Hill drew drafts on Manget and Anderson and attached warehouse receipts for the respective amounts of cotton purchased by each, forwarding these to the subsequent purchasers’ banks, which honored the drafts and forwarded payment to Bank, which payment was used to reduce Hill’s overdraft indebtedness.

The net effect of this payment procedure, which is crucial to an aspect of this case, was that Hill purchased the cotton from C.C.C. with funds from the overdraft account, Bank accepting the warehouse receipts as collateral before payment from Manget and Anderson arrived. Then, in a subsequent sale, Bank released to Manget and Anderson the warehouse receipts attached to sight drafts which were then honored.

As was usual, requests by Manget and Anderson prompted Hill to ask C.C.C. for reclassification and reweighing of the Sale 1845 cotton, which resulted in the determination that about $63,000 in refunds was due Hill andj subsequently, Manget and Anderson. However, during 1958, Hill had become involved in a serious controversy with C.C.C. concerning Hill’s fulfillment of export obligations arising from its C.C.C. contracts. As a result, C.C.C. refused to pay to Hill any refunds due after reclassifieation and reweighing. Among the refunds which C.C.C. refused to make at this time was the $63,000 refund from Sale 1845.

This withholding of refunds seriously impaired Hill’s financial position and its overdraft account with Bank. 4

On January 24, 1959, Bank’s financial status was checked by Mississippi bank examiners.

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