Montana v. Fidelity & Deposit Co.

16 F. Supp. 489, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2052
CourtDistrict Court, D. Montana
DecidedSeptember 10, 1936
DocketNo. 917
StatusPublished

This text of 16 F. Supp. 489 (Montana v. Fidelity & Deposit Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Montana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montana v. Fidelity & Deposit Co., 16 F. Supp. 489, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2052 (D. Mont. 1936).

Opinion

PRAY, District Judge.

This is an action to recover the sum of $10,000, named as the penalty of a surety bond issued by the defendant corporation, a surety company. The complaint also seeks the reformation of said bond by changing the word “grain,” printed therein, to the word “beans.”

Counsel for plaintiffs have made a fair statement of the case which the court will adopt with some modification. From August, 1929, to July, 1931, the warehouse of Chatterton & Son at Billings, Montana, was operated as a branch house of the said firm, through its manager, R. J. Healow, for the storage of beans only. Each owner’s beans was stored separately and marked for identification so that the same beans could be returned to him. The bond was taken out through the home office of Chatterton & Son at Lansing, Michigan, and was received by the manager at Billings, [490]*490Montana, January, 1930, and the continuation certificate shortly after its date which was July, 1930. The bond on May 12, 1931, and the continuation certificate on July 21, 1931, were both transmitted to the commissioner of agriculture of the state of Montana. The defendant through its agents admit that the bond as issued and through its continuation certificate was in force from January 7, 1930, to July 1, 1931. It was during this period that the 1930 crop of beans was received and stored in the Chatterton warehouse.

The bond was written upon a printed form furnished by the commissioner of agriculture. On December 6, 1930, the defendant company, by an instrument in writing under seal, acknowledged that the bond was effective and that it was surety upon the bond. 39,897 sacks of beans of 100 pounds each were stored in the warehouse at Billings by 130 bean growers during the fall and winter of 1930. A warehouse receipt was issued by Chatterton & Son to each individual grower calling for delivery of the identical beans so stored to the holder of the receipt. That from September, 1930, to June, 1931, all but 12,000 sacks of said beans were shipped by Chatterton & Son from the Billings warehouse to a warehouse operated by said firm at Kansas City, Mo., and on or about July 13, 1931, the remaining 12,000 sacks were shipped by above firm from the Billings warehouse to their said warehouse at Kansas City, Mo. . That the identity of said beans so stored in said Billings warehouse was not preserved and the rights and title of the owners of the beans was not honored, but the beans were from the beginning treated by Chatterton & Son as their own, and when received in Kansas City were by Chatterton & Son sold and disposed of and the proceeds kept and not accounted for, all without the knowledge of any of the owners. That, when the beans were shipped from the Billings warehouse as aforesaid, they were shipped by Chatterton & Son with the intention of disposing of them and converting them, without the consent of the owners.

That none of the owners of the beans discovered that they had been shipped and so disposed of until a few days after July 13, 1931, after the last of the beans had been shipped from the Billings warehouse. That the owners thereupon endeavored to pursue their said beans but were able to ’find only about 10,000 sacks, all of which had beén hypothecated by Chatterton & Son and were encumbered, and all of which had been commingled and their identity could not be determined and they could not be recovered for the owners. That all marketable beans, in the nature of the business, are seed beans and there are no seed beans or bean seed as such, beans being ordinarily selected for planting from any good marketable beans of the owner. When the Billings warehouse was emptied of its beans on July 13, 1931, the warehouse was closed and Chatterton & Son ceased to do business. That immediately upon discovering the defalcation of said Chatterton & Son and the loss of said beans demand was made by the bean growers or their representative upon Chatterton & Son for the return of said beans and honoring of said warehouse receipts or an accounting for their value, which demand was not honored, and Chatterton & Son wholly failed and refused to account for any of said beans.

That, after giving credit for all advances made against such stored beans and all other charges against the same, the total value of all the various lots of beans so converted by Chatterton & Son, as of the date of conversion, that is to say, the date of shipment of said beans from said Billings warehouse, was the sum of $65,843.-57, which represents the total loss of the said bean growers by reason of the said wrongful acts of said Chatterton & Son in appropriating and converting said beans and failing to perform their legal duty as a warehouseman and bailee. That the total value of all said stored beans as of the date of the closing of said warehouse at Billings in July, 1931, at the market price then prevailing, excluding all those lots of beans against which there had been advanced as much or more than the then prevailing market price, after allowing credit for all advances made against them and allowing all other proper credits, was the sum of $37,260.76. The total amount recovered on behalf of the bean owners and warehouse receipt holders, recovered from Chatterton & Son from the remaining equity in 10,000 sacks of beans left unsold, cash, accounts, bills receivable and other assets, is the sum of $26,400, against which is chargeable approximately $3,000 for expenses incurred in pursuit of the beans and making said recoveries, leaving a net credit against the said losses above indicated, in the sum of $23,400. • That the net loss remaining to the beán owners and suffered by them, by reason-of the defalcation of [491]*491the said Chatterton & Son, reckoned upon any legal theory, is far in excess of $10,-000, the amount of said bond. That said loss was suffered and said cause of action accrued and the defendant became liable for the penalty of said bond when the warehouse at Billings was closed in July, 1931, whereby the said breach occurred, and the defendant has been liable for the payment thereon, under its bond, since July, 1931, and the same is subject to interest accordingly. That demand was promptly made upon defendant to pay and discharge its said obligation under said bond, and the same has been refused.

That all of the assets of Chatterton & Son and of its successor, Chatterton & Son, Inc., that were available and that could be reached, were paid over to the said bean owners as aforesaid, and the assets of said companies have become exhausted. That prior to the closing of said warehouse in July, 1931, Chatterton & Son went into receivership and said Chatterton & Son became and is dissolved by decree of dissolution of the district court in the state of Michigan, and since has not been an existing corporation. That a creditor’s claim was filed on behalf of said bean growers with the receiver of the assets of said Chatterton & Son, but, that no recovery has been had thereon and there are no longer any assets available and no recovery can be had. That the said Chatterton & Son, Inc., delivered over all of its assets, as aforesaid, to the said bean growers, and thereafter ceased to do business and has since not been a going concern. That all recourse against either Chatterton & Son or Chatterton & Son, Inc., on behalf of said bean growers, has been exhausted.

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Bluebook (online)
16 F. Supp. 489, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2052, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montana-v-fidelity-deposit-co-mtd-1936.