Marks v. Bridges

62 S.W. 153, 106 Tenn. 540
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 62 S.W. 153 (Marks v. Bridges) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marks v. Bridges, 62 S.W. 153, 106 Tenn. 540 (Tenn. 1901).

Opinion

Winnies, -T.

Tliis is an action commenced before a Justice of ilie Peace for the conversion of fifteen barrels of ■whisky.

On appeal to the Circuit Court it was tried before the Judge without a jury, and there was j udgment for the defendant, and plaintiffs have appealed and assigned errors.

It appears that on March 5, 1892, J. C. Marks & Go. bought twenty-five barrels of whisky from Jno. R. Bridges & Son, for which they gave their note for $617.54, due at sixty days. The whisky at the time was stored in the United States bonded warehouse of the sellers, and the government tax • thereon had not been paid. The purchase note not having been paid when due, Bridges & Son filed an attachment bill to collect it. The whisky was attached May 18, 1892, and was sold January 25, 1S93, and bought by Bridges & Son for $678.12, and their debt was satisfied as well as the costs.

When the whisky was stored in this bonded warehouse, certificates were issued for it in five-barrel lots. These* certificates were in substance as follows:

■‘Received from J. R. Bridges & Son on storage in my United States bonded warehouse, at Distillery Uo. 83, ' located near. Springfield, Tenn., [542]*542in the Fifth District of Tennessee, the following described whisky for account and subject to the risk and order of J. C. Marks & Co., deliverable only on return and surrender of this receipt properly indorsed and payment of government tax and storage charges. This receipt is given in deference to the Tennessee warehouse laws as well as the laws of the United States. Loss or damage by fire, elements, shrinkage or natural decay at the owner’s risk. Signed,

“Thomas Waters, U. 8. Storekeeper.

“J. R. Beidges & Son, Proprietors.”

“Indorsed:

c O ¿8 m M fa. £ d

o O og <i > l> hrj

It appears that three of these certificates or receipts went into the hands of the Jefferson County Savings Bank, at Birmingham, Ala., in April, 1892. It is explained by the president of that bank that they were taken as collateral for a loan made to the firm of J. 0. Marks & Co. by the bank; that Marks & Co. failed, and were attached in Alabama, and the bank sold these collaterals to F. V. Evans & Co., in December, 1893, at the price or rate of forty-two cents per gallon for the whisky represented by them. No notice wTas given to Jno. R. Bridges & Son of any of these matters until after they had sold the whisky under their attachment proceeding, when [543]*543a demand was made for tide whisky on behalf of E. Y. Evans & Co., and it was refused npon the ground that Bridges & Son • had already sold it and bought it in for their debt nnder the attachment proceeding. This suit was then brought by Evans & Co. in their own right, and by Marks & Co., for nse of Evans & Go., against Bridges & Son, and is based npon the idea that after issuing their receipts, which are claimed to be the same as warehouse receipts, they converted the whisky to their own use. The case turns upon the effect to be given- to these receipts or certificates, and to the rights which Evans & Co. acquired under their purchase from the bank.

In the case of Tolly and Cannon v. F. M. Canden & Co., from the Chancery Court of Lincoln County, decided by this Court several terms since (oral opinion), this Court passed upon the character and effect to be given to receipts exactly similar to these in every material respect. In that case the warehouseman had retained a lien for the unpaid purchase money, and this fact was recited in the face of the receipts or certificates. This Court held that such certificates' could not be regarded as the usual statutory ware- ■ house receipts, and are not governed by our statute of 1879, Chapter 236 (Shannon, § 3601), because such warehouse was in the joint possession of the owner of the warehouse and the government official; that such receipts are not negotiable as [544]*544provided by that Act, nor do they vest in the transferee the absolute ownership of the property <ts provided by that Act. Shan.j § 3605. Still they were assignable (Stewart, Gwynne & Co. v. Ins. Co.), 9 Lea, 109, and all other questions aside, the transferee would have the right to apply for and receive the property on payment of government tax and storage charges. It was held that the lien attempted to be retained was indefinite, and not set out with sufficient particularity of detail to make it effective to hold the property or give notice to a transferee for value. .

The Court in that case also passed upon the effect which must be given to the statement in the receipt that it was issued in deference to the Tennessee warehouse laws as well as the revenue laws of the United States.

The Court was of the opinion that the intent of the statement was to make the receipts negotiable under the Tennessee laws, and that they should circulate as bills of exchange or promissory notes, and have' the same effect and virtue as warehouse receipts; that the intention of the warehouse keeper was to enable the parties to negotiate them as though they were statutory warehouse receipts. Stress was laid in that- case upon the fact that the bank was an innocent holder for full value of the certificates, and that they had been regularly transferred to it, and this being plainly apparent from the record, the bank [545]*545was allowed to recover upon the certificates, though rot occupying the status of statutory warehouse receipts.

If in this case the purchaser of these . certificates can he considered as holder in good faith, and for a full consideration, then it would be identical with that of Tolly & Cannon v. Vanden & Co., and the plaintiffs would he entitled to recover. But upon this feature of the case. the record is not at all satisfactory. It appears that the hank took them as collateral. This of itself would not prevent it from being an innocent holder, hut the president of the hank, under a very searching cross-examination, fails and refuses to state £he particulars of the transactions hy which the hank became the holder of tlje certificates.

The hank president, on cross-examination, was asked when he' got the receipts; how he got them; if they were bought or taken as collateral, or for cash loaned, or to secure a pre-existing debt, or in renewal of another note, and to state the facts fully and hónestly.

The only answer given to this searching question was a general one that the hank took them as collateral for cash loaned a.t the time the receipts came into the hands of the hank.

He further says the hank has no entry of purchase of the receipts, and none of the sale [546]*546of them on its books. The only entry it has is of a whole lot of whisky certificates (something like two hundred barrels) sold on the same day to various parties. It was impossible to obtain from him information as to what amount the bank had loaned upon the receipts, as he would only state in a general way that the bank loaned money upon them as collateral.

When the. bank sold the receipts it declined to indorse them, and they, were not at any time indorsed by it.

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Related

National Bank of Commerce v. Chatfield
118 Tenn. 481 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 S.W. 153, 106 Tenn. 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marks-v-bridges-tenn-1901.