New England National Bank v. Northwestern National Bank

71 S.W. 191, 171 Mo. 307, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 246
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 24, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 71 S.W. 191 (New England National Bank v. Northwestern National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New England National Bank v. Northwestern National Bank, 71 S.W. 191, 171 Mo. 307, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 246 (Mo. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

MARSHALL, J.

This is a bill in equity by the plaintiff as a stakeholder to require the defendants to interplead for the sum of $14,971.03, in its hands, resulting from the sale of 403 head of cattle, which were consigned to it by the defendants, to be sold by it to the best advantage, and the proceeds to be held by it pending an amicable settlement among the defendants of their respective claims. They were unable to agree and therefore the plaintiff filed this bill of interpleader to have the claimants litigate their rights.

The defendants interpleaded for the fund. Pending the determination of the case the parties agreed, that instead of paying-the money into court, the plaintiff might [313]*313retain the fund, paying interest thereon. The trial court adjudged the fund to the Third National Bank of Springfield, Massachusetts, and the other defendant banks and Elmore & Cooper appealed.

The abstract of the record embraces five hundred and twenty-five printed pages. The briefs of counsel aggregate two hundred and seventeen pages. It is manifestly impossible, therefore, within the limits proper to be observed in any opinion, to give even an outline of the testimony, documentary evidence, and circumstances, adduced upon the trial. Time and space admit only of a short, clear statement of the ultimate facts disclosed by the record to serve as a basis for the principles of law to be discussed and decided.

Ultimate facts.

Prior to October 3, 1898, Grant G. Gillett, living at Woodbine, Dickinson county, Kansas, was a large stock dealer. Charles H. Baumbaugh, of the same place, was his brother-in-law and for some time had been employed by him as clerk, at a salary of fifty dollars per month. The A. J. Gillespie Commission Company was a corporation, located at Kansas City, Kansas, and engaged in the business of dealing in cattle, and buying and selling notes, secured by chattel mortgages on cattle. Gillett was a stockholder, but not an officer, in the company.

On October 3,1898, E. R. Clark, of Marion county, Kansas, was the owner of, and had on pasturage in Chase county, four hundred and sixteen head of cattle, four years old, called “Westerns” and weighing 1,100 pounds, and branded “ J. M.” or “o,” the latter mark being called, ‘ ‘ circle dot. ’ ’ Clark had mortgaged these cattle to Elmore & Cooper for about fifteen thousand dollars.

On October 3,1898, the Gillespie Commission Company, at the request of Gillett, bought, from Elmore & Cooper, the Clark mortgage on said cattle, and carried it as “bills receivable” until October 5th, when it was paid by the proceeds of the “Baumbaugh” mortgage hereinafter described.

[314]*314On October 4,1898, Gillett and Baumbaugb went to tbe office of tbe Gillespie Commission Company, in Kansas City, Kansas, for the purpose of executing a mortgage on the cattle, covered by tbe Clark mortgage. Gillett did not want to make tbe mortgage himself for fear, be said, of injuring bis credit. So be arranged with Baumbaugb, that be (Gillett) would give Baumbaugb a bill of sale for tbe 416 bead of cattle, owned by Clark, and Baumbaugb should execute a mortgage on them to tbe Gillespie Commission Company, and that Gillett should get tbe proceeds of tbe mortgage and manage tbe whole matter, and Baumbaugb should have a half interest in the profits realized. , Instead of making tbe mortgage on tbe 416 Clark cattle alone, it was agreed that tbe mortgage should be made to cover six hundred bead of cattle, and that Gillett should go out and buy 184 more cattle and add them to tbe Clark 416 cattle, thus filling tbe complement of six hundred. Thereupon Gillett executed to Baumbaugb tbe following bill of sale:

BILL OP SALE.
“Kansas City, October 4, 1898.
“State of Kansas, County of Dickinson, ss.
“This certifies that I have this day sold, assigned and agreed to deliver to Charles H. Baumbaugb, eighty-four native four-year-old steers branded T on tbe left loin; one hundred native four-year-old steers, branded C on tbe left hip; and four hundred and sixteen western four-year-old steers branded J. M. or o on left side. Tbe above cattle are all free, clear and unencumbered. Also 20,000 bushels of com now in crib at Lebanon, Kansas. Tbe consideration paid for tbe above-named cattle and corn is $24,795.99 which includes $300 commission and $495.99 interest,
“G. G. Gillett.”,

Thereupon on tbe same day, Baumbaugb executed a chattel mortgage to tbe Gillespie Commission Company to secure tbe notes aggregating $24,795.99, payable at ninety days. Tbe description of the property [315]*315in the mortgage is as follows: “The following steers: eighty-four natives branded T on left loin, four years old and weight 1,150 pounds, also one hundred natives branded C on left hip, four years old and weight 1,200 pounds, also four hundred and sixteen westerns branded © or J. M., four years old and weight 1,100 pounds, also twenty thousand bushels of corn. Said cattle are to be fed on the owner’s farm, about one mile north of Herrington, Kansas. Said corn is now in crib at Lebanon, Kansas, and is to be shipped to Herrington, Kansas. When said stock is marked to be consigned for sale to A. J. Gillespie Com. Co., Kansas City Stock Yards, and proceeds applied on notes.”

At the time of the execution of the bill of sale and of the mortgage, neither Gillett nor Baumbaugh owned any of the cattle described in those documents. Gillett had an option to buy the Clark 416 head of cattle for $40 a head, but he had not purchased them or paid a farthing thereon. Neither Gillett nor Baumbaugh then owned or had in mind any cattle marked “ T & C ”, nor were there any cattle answering such a description anywhere in existence.

Upon the execution of the notes and mortgage by Baumbaugh they were turned over to Gillett, and by him turned over to the Gillespie Commission Company, and that company on the same day sold the notes and mortgage to the Hocker, Arnold, Woodson Brokerage Company, and after taking out $495.99 for interest and $300 for commissions, passed the balance of the proceeds amounting to $24,000 to the credit of Gillett upon the books of the company. This credit was wiped out by a draft on the company by Gillett, on October 5, 1898, for $16,000 (which was evidently intended to cover what the company had paid Elmore & Cooper for the Clark mortgage on October 3), and by $8,000 cash paid to Gillett on October 10,1898.

Baumbaugh paid Gillett nothing for the cattle, and received nothing out of the proceeds of the notes and mortgages. He acted in the matter solely to oblige Gillett, and upon his promise that he should share in the [316]*316profits. The bill of sale recites that Gillett “agreed to deliver,” the cattle to Baumbaugh, but they were never intended to be delivered and in fact never were delivered at any time to Baumbaugh, but the agreement was that Gillett should have the possession of them, should have his men care for them, should feed them, should market them and should receive the proceeds of their sale.

At the time the mortgage was assigned to the Gillespie Commission Company, that company knew neither Gillett nor Baumbaugh owned or had in their possession any of the cattle described in the mortgage, but the company understood that cattle were to be bought to fill the description in the mortgage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 S.W. 191, 171 Mo. 307, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-england-national-bank-v-northwestern-national-bank-moctapp-1902.