Metropolitan Vacuum Cleaner Co. v. Douglas-Guardian Warehouse Corp.

208 F. Supp. 195, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3590
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 16, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 208 F. Supp. 195 (Metropolitan Vacuum Cleaner Co. v. Douglas-Guardian Warehouse Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Vacuum Cleaner Co. v. Douglas-Guardian Warehouse Corp., 208 F. Supp. 195, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3590 (S.D.N.Y. 1962).

Opinion

PALMIERI, District Judge.

Preliminary Statement

The plaintiff, a New York corporation, is a distributor of vacuum cleaners and sewing machines. The defendant operated a bonded warehouse at Clearwater, Florida, at the place of business of one Howard K. Ewing (Howard the Trader), who sold merchandise by means of auction sales which were regularly held and extensively advertised. Plaintiff stored its merchandise in defendant’s warehouse. By contract arrangement between plaintiff and defendant, plaintiff’s merehandise could be released only upon payment by check, and only up to a total amount of $500. The plaintiff was entitled to prompt remittance of the check, and to prompt notice of the release of his merchandise. The defendant had only one employee at the warehouse, a bonded representative named Timbs. His salary was paid by defendant, but defendant was reimbursed therefor by Ewing. In April and May 1957, Ewing experienced serious financial difficulties of which Timbs was largely aware. It was during this period that Timbs paid scant attention to the warehousing contract with plaintiff. Timbs permitted plaintiff’s goods to be withdrawn under circumstances which deprived plaintiff of prompt remittance of payment and of prompt notice of the release of his merchandise to Howard the Trader and, in effect, amounted to extensions of unauthorized credit to him. The net result was that plaintiff was left with dishonored and unpaid checks of Ewing, totalling $8,767.50 on which he recovered $2,-559.50 as the result of a creditors’ proceeding, leaving a difference of $6,208.00 which is the subject of the present litigation.

The issue of defendant’s alleged negligence in failing to advise plaintiff of Ewing’s financial posture in April and May, 1957, and in accepting checks when he had reason to believe their value was suspect, was much bruited at the trial and in the briefs. My view is that the defendant had no duty to evaluate Ewing’s credit or make financial reports to plaintiff. Defendant did, however, have the duty to comply with itg contract of baiI_ ment, and its failure to do so renders it Hable to answer for conversion and it is on tbis basis that I have rendered judgment in plaintiff’s favor.

FINDINGS OF FACT

l. Metropolitan Vacuum Cleaner Co., Inc. (Metropolitan), the plaintiff herein, is incorporated under the laws of the State of New York.

2. Douglas-Guardian Warehouse Corp0ration (Douglas-Guardian), the defendant herein, is a Louisiana corporation doing business in Florida.

3 The defendant has fi]ed a Certifi. cate with the gtate of New York, authorizing it to do business within the state ^ew York *

4. At all times mentioned , 4; , ^ alí in the com; complaint herein, Douglas-Guardian carried on the business of a warehouseman at various places in the UNited States including the Cith of Clearwater, Florida and was„ engaged in the business of storing for hire.

5. Plaintiff and defendant entered in-a contract whereby plaintiff agreed to store merchandise in defendant s warehouse and defendant was to deliver the merchandise to plaintiff s customer Howard Ewing (Howard the Trader) on certain terms and conditions,

6. The contract between the parties consists of the following: (a) Letter dated April 1, 1957 from plaintiff to defendant (Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 2); (b) Letter dated April 16, 1957 from defendant to plaintiff with enclosure (Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 3); (c) Articles of agreement incorporated by reference in defendant’s letter of April 16, 1957 (Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 4).

The April 1st letter states that “Howard, The Trader may pick up to $500.00 of our merchandise as needed, provided [197]*197he presents his check for same.” This was confirmed by the April 16th letter (Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 3) of the defendant:

“You are hereby authorized to deliver to Howard’s, upon its request, any of such merchandise having a total warehouse receipt value not exceeding $500.00 under the following provisions:
“When a Release is desired by Howard’s, you will prepare in quadruplicate our regular form of Order for Warehouse Release specifying thereon the type and quantity of merchandise to be released with the value thereof.
“An authorized individual of Howard’s will sign all copies of the Release, in the space provided, and return all copies to you together with Howard’s regular Company check, mayde payable to METROPOLITAN WHOLESALERS, INC., covering the total release value of the merchandise they desire to be delivered to them. The release valuation is to be based on the prices stated on the warehouse receipts at the time the merchandise was stored.
“When you are sure that the Release and the check are in order, you may deliver the merchandise covered by that Release to Howard’s.”

The employment contract between the defendant and its bonded representative in Clearwater, which defendant incorporated into this contract by reference in its letter of April 16, 1957, contains the following instruction to its representative, “(12) You are to exercise the same care in the preservation of the goods in storage as a reasonably careful owner of the same goods would exercise.”

7. In the early part of May, 1957, plaintiff’s customer, Ewing, was in financial difficulties and this fact was generally well known in the Clearwater section of Florida. On May 31st a committee of his employees took over the operation of the business and ran it until June 8th, when the creditors’ committee took over.

8. After Ewing’s insolvency became general knowledge, the defendant continued to release plaintiff’s merchandise. Eighteen (18) checks of plaintiff’s customer, Ewing, which were accepted by the defendant in payment for merchandise and forwarded to plaintiff, were returned for insufficient funds. These checks were dated from May 13, 1957 to June 5, 1957, and totalled $8,767.50.

9. Timbs, defendant’s bonded representative in Clearwater, who alone operated defendant’s warehouse, admitted releasing plaintiff’s merchandise, as a general course of conduct, without first obtaining a signed release therefor and/or a check. He did not understand that he was required to receive a check each time he released merchandise regardless of the amount. He testified that the account was “open” until he had released $500.00 in merchandise. It was only then that he demanded a check.

10. Timbs did not promptly forward the checks and releases to the plaintiff. Plaintiff submitted a chart in evidence showing the dates the checks were dated, received, deposited and returned by the bank. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 26). The defendant submitted a similar chart indicating the dates that its Tampa office received a copy of the release from Timbs and the dates a copy was returned to it by the plaintiff from New York. The plaintiff’s chart indicates that the plaintiff received the checks between four (4) and eleven (11) days after they were issued. The defendant’s chart indicates that its Tampa office received the releases between one (1) and nine (9) days before the plaintiff received the checks and releases. These charts do not contradict each other, but, on the contrary, tend to substantiate each other. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 26; Defendant’s Exhibit No. A).

Plaintiff also submitted in evidence deposit slips showing when the first fourteen (14) checks (Plaintiff’s Exhibits Nos.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 F. Supp. 195, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-vacuum-cleaner-co-v-douglas-guardian-warehouse-corp-nysd-1962.