Maxwell v. W. B. Thompson & Co.

143 So. 230, 175 La. 252, 1932 La. LEXIS 1827
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 20, 1932
DocketNo. 30619.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 143 So. 230 (Maxwell v. W. B. Thompson & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maxwell v. W. B. Thompson & Co., 143 So. 230, 175 La. 252, 1932 La. LEXIS 1827 (La. 1932).

Opinion

LAND, J.

Plaintiff is a cotton planter residing in Concordia parish in this state.-

Defendant W. B. Thompson & Co. is a commercial partnership, domiciled in the city of New Orleans, and formerly engaged in the business of factor and commission merchant.

During the years 1925, 1926, and 1927, plaintiff shipped to Thompson & Co. a total of 681 bales of cotton, which had not been accounted for up to the death of W. B. Thompson, head of the firm, on August 11, 1928.

Shortly thereafter plaintiff made a demand for the return of his cotton. Warehouse receipts for only 159 bales were turned over to him. He was informed by persons in charge of the affairs of the late firm of W. B. Thompson & Co. that they were unable to deliver the balance of the cotton, as warehouse receipts for 226 bales and 296 bales had been pledged by W. B. Thompson & Co. for indebtedness of the firm to the defendants Canal Bank & Trust Company and to the Hibernia Bank & Trust Company, respectively.

Plaintiff made demand upon the banks for the delivery to him of this cotton, valued at $90 per bale, and also of the warehouse receipts held by the banks. This demand was refused, and on September 17, 1928, the present suit was filed, accompanied by writs of sequestration, to recover the cotton or its value against W. B. Thompson & Co., as a partnership, against Mrs. Florence Thompson Fulton, as an individual member of the partnership, against the Hibernia Bank & Trust Company and Andrew J. McQuillan, as executors of W. B. Thompson, deceased, and against the Hibernia Bank & Trust Company and the Canal Bank & Trust Company, as pledgefes of the warehouse receipts by W. B. Thompson & Co.

The sole defense of Mrs. Florence Thompson Fulton is that she is not a member of the partnership of W. B. Thompson & Co.

The defense of the Hibernia Bank & Trust Company and Andrew J. McQuillan, executors of W. B. Thompson, deceased, is-that plaintiff authorized Thompson to carry the cotton in Thompson’s own name; to store it in public warehouses in the name of W. B. Thompson; to receive warehouse receipts in the name of W. B. Thompson, and that bills of lading evidencing the shipment of the cotton were made by plaintiff to Thompson or his firm, directly, and with authority to *255 the warehouses to issue receipts in Thompson’s name. And, finally, that plaintiff not only acquiesced in Thompson’s treating the cotton consigned by plaintiff as Thompson’s own cotton, but authorized him in writing so to do on repeated,occasions.

The defense of the Hibernia Bank & Trust Company and the Canal Bank & Trust Company is similar to that made by the executors of W. B. Thompson, deceased, with the additional defense that the banks accepted the warehouse receipts covering the cotton in good faith and for value in due course from W. B. Thompson & Co., and that, consequently, their pledge should be upheldl

Plaintiff charges that the pledge to the banks was and is invalid because W. B. Thompson & Co. had no title, and had no ability or authority to convey title, to or otherwise dispose of the cotton of plaintiff, nor to store it under negotiable warehouse receipts, nor was the possession or custody of such receipts ever intrusted to W. B. Thompson & Co. by plaintiff.

Plaintiff also charges that the pledge is invalid because defendant banks were charged with notice and put upon inquiry of the fact that the cotton and warehouse receipts therefor did not belong to W. B. Thompson & Co., but to plaintiff, or one of the customers of that firm.

Upon these issues the case went to trial in the lower court, and judgment was rendered in solido against all the defendants in the sum of $14,884.32, with 5 per cent, interest thereon from judicial demand, September 18, 1928, the judgment in so far as' the succession of W. B. Thompson is concerned to be payable in due course of administration.

Judgment was also rendered in solido in favor of plaintiff against all the defendants in the sum of $19,494.48, with 5 per cent, interest thereon from judicial demand, September 18, 1928, the judgment in so far as the succession of W. B. Thompson is concerned to be payable in due course of administration.

Judgment was further rendered for plaintiff against the defendants in solido for all costs, and the rights of the parties defendant among themselves, arising from the .judgment, or from any payments thereon, or in execution thereof, were reserved.

1. The testimony in the case is conflicting as to whether or not Thompson & Co. was authorized to store plaintiff’s cotton and obtain negotiable warehouse receipts in that firm’s name, and to use these receipts to secure loans of the Thompson Company. As the trial judge is the best judge of the credibility of the witnesses who appear before him, we feel that we should adopt on this question the following facts as found by him: “Plaintiff was not aware that his cotton had been so pledged until after Mr. Thompson’s death, and had never authorized that to be done. I am unable to give controlling effect to the testimony of Mr. Mc-Quillan and Mr. Harry Thompson on this point. Very plainly both of them were devoted to their dead chief, and intent on protecting his memory. It is highly improbable that the plaintiff, who had only business relations with Mr. W. B. Thompson, would have volunteered permission for the latter to use his cotton to secure loans of the Thompson Company, in which the plaintiff had no interest or concern, as they say he did. And since the plaintiff denies flatly and catego *257 rically that he ever gave such permission or knew of such use of his cotton, and considering the testimony of Mr. S. J. Maxwell, his brother, I must hold that on this question the preponderance of evidence favors the plaintiff’s case.”

In Lallande v. His Creditors, 42 La. Ann. 710, 7 So. 895, 896, the court said: “Under the Civil Code, a debtor may give in pledge whatever belongs to him, (Rev. Oivil Code, art. 3142,) but he cannot pledge for his own debt the property of another without the express or tacit consent of the owner; and, if the consent be tacit, it must be inferred from the circumstances so strong as to leave no doubt of the owner's intention; as if he was present at the making of the contract, or if ‘he himself delivered to the creditor the thing pawned.’ Id., art. 3146.”

See, also, Hadwin v. Fisk, 1 La. Ann. 74; Bonniot v. Fuentes, 10 La. Ann. 70; Young v. Scott & Cage, 25 La. Ann. 313; Holton & Winn v. Hubbard & Co. et al., 49 La. Ann. 739, 22 So. 338; Stetson, Avery & Co. v. Gurney, 17 La. 164; Miller v. Schneider & Zuberbier, 19 La. Ann. 300, 92 Am. Dec. 535; Stern Bros. v. Germania National.Bank, 34 La. Ann. 1120.

The Uniform Warehouse Receipts Act (Act No. 221 of 190S) prescribes:

“Section 40. — Who- May Negotiate a Receipt. — A negotiable receipt may be negotiated—
“(a.) By the owner thereof; or

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Bluebook (online)
143 So. 230, 175 La. 252, 1932 La. LEXIS 1827, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maxwell-v-w-b-thompson-co-la-1932.