Pegram v. Carson

10 Bosw. 505
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedApril 25, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 10 Bosw. 505 (Pegram v. Carson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pegram v. Carson, 10 Bosw. 505 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1863).

Opinions

By the Court—Robertson, J.

The correspondence between the plaintiff and his agents, (Starling, McOulloh & Co.,) particularly his letter of the 11th of August, directing them “ to sell to the best possible advantage on arrival,” fully establishes their authority to sell; thus giving them at least one of the powers mentioned in the third section [509]*509of the New York factors’ act. (3 R. S., 76, 5th ed. ; N. Y. Sess. Laws of 1830, p. 203.) Whether any private restric tions as to price, time, mode, or any other qualifications of the power affect it under that statute, will, if necessary, be considered hereafter. ,

The absoluteness of the control of such agents over the merchandise in question is established by the course of dealing between them and the plaintiff; by their constantly making advances beyond the value of any property of his in their possession; relying upon and employing consignments, as they arrived, to reimburse themselves; and by their constant delivery of other articles similarly consigned to them to persons to whom they sold them. Whether the deposit by them of the corn in question, with a storekeeper of their own selection, deprived them in law of that control or possession, will also be considered hereafter.

A custom and usage in regard to factors taking receipts in their own name from a storekeeper with whom they have deposited goods, as well as the faith reposed in such receipts, is established by the testimony of two grain dealers, (Dows and Herrick,) as well as one of the defendants, (Carson.) Herrick testified that they took “no other vouchers but the receipts; ” Dows, that “ it is customary to advance money on the warehouse receipt.” The defendant testified as to the general custom, and the storekeeper with whom the cargoes were stored that they required orders from the original storer. Upon these points there is no conflict of evidence.

Actual custody of .the merchandise advanced upon, or possession of documentary evidence of a right of possession or title to it, is material under the statute in question. It is, therefore, proper to state what may, from the foregoing conclusions, and the evidence in the cause, be considered to be undisputed facts, having a bearing upon a right of the defendants to retain such possession in addition to those considered to be so by the learned Judge on the trial. They are: (1st.) The plaintiff’s forwarding to his agents [510]*510bills of lading of the goods, which made them deliverable to the latter at the Atlantic docks. (2d.) His authority to them to sell. (3d.) Their sale and delivery of some of such goods without storing. (4th.) Their practice of advances to the plaintiff on the faith of future consignments. (5th.) The usage of factors to deposit goods so consigned to them, in their own names and subject to their own orders exclusively, and lastly, the ability of the defendants to take, and their actual taking, possession of the corn, without interruption, on their surrender to the storekeepers employed by the plaintiff’s agents, of the receipts of the former, indorsed to the defendants by the latter.

The only facts considered as material and undisputed on the trial by the learned Judge in his charges were: First, The plaintiff’s ownership of the merchandise in controversy, and his consignment of it to Starling, McOulloh and Oo., his factors; and, Secondly, The obtaining advances by the latter upon it, by depositing the receipts, which they had taken in their own name from the storekeeper with whom they had stored the cargoes. The only questions submitted to the Jury were, in substance: First, Did the defendants, on the faith of the receipts, advance any money to the plaintiff’s factors? Secondly, Was such firm intrusted with such receipts by the plaintiff within the meaning of the before mentioned “ Factor’s Act,” (2 R. S., 76, 5th e'd.;) and, Thirdly, Had the defendants reason to believe, from the facts and circumstances attending the transaction, or were they such as to induce a man of ordinary prudence to believe that some person other than the plaintiff’s factors (Starling, McOulloh & Oo.) owned the goods ? He altogether withdrew from the consideration of the Jury the question whether the defendants made their advances on the faith of the possession of the goods themselves; but instructed them that the defendants were chargeable with notice or knowledge of the want of ownership by the factors, if they should answer the third question in the affirmative.

By withdrawing the question of possession of the goods [511]*511from the Jury, the learned Judge evidently held that there was no evidence of such possession as was required by the statute in question, and, by permitting the Jury to determine notice of want of ownership by the factors, that such notice was fatal to the defendants’ claim for advances. If such notice was material, the right to infer it from circumstances was probably correct. (Navulshaw v. Brownrigg, 2 De G., M. & G., 441.) But such instructions would be erroneous if the factors, (Starling, MeOulloh & Go.,) at the time of the advances, had such possession of the goods as the statute contemplated, and the advances were made on the faith; not of their absolute ownership of the goods, but of merely a right to dispose of such ownership. In such case, knowledge of want of ownership alone, would not be sufficient.

The instruction in regard to the possession of the merchandise in question was undoubtedly given through deference to the doctrine laid down in Bonito v. Mosquera, (2 Bosw., 201,) decided at a General Term of this Gourt. The governing principle of that case, however, has since been overturned by the more recent case, decided by the Court of Appeals, of Cartwright v. Wilmerding, (24 N. Y. R., 521.) In the first mentioned case, some of the defendants were consignees of goods from abroad, with authority to sell them. Such goods had been stored in a warehouse of the United States government, and no duties had been paid upon them. And although such defendants had in their possession, besides the bill of lading, the receipt of the warehouse keeper, and a Custom House license to withdraw the goods on paying the duties, they were held not to have such possession of the goods or to hold such documents of title as, under the statute, to give the other defendants, to whom they had pledged the goods for advances, any lien thereon. To sustain that view, it was further held, that the custody of the goods by the United States officers, as security for duties, reduced the consignees’ possession, or their right to it, by virtue of the bill of lading, to one merely constructive, as contrasted with [512]*512an actual one assumed to be intended by the statute, and also prevented the documents held by them from being intrusted to them as factors, as required therein. Both these principles were overruled in the last mentioned case in the Court of Appeals. The learned Judge Avho delivered the opinion of that Court in that case held, that what he termed “ possession in law” Avas sufficient to satisfy the requisition of the statute, and that the mere detention of the goods by the United States officers for duties did not take such possession away from the factors. On that point, starting with the self-evident proposition, that the “ possession in law of the goods was in the factor, unless it was in some one else,” he argued that “the legal possession must be either in the person who placed them in the warehouse or in the keeper of it; that the latter is to be

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Bluebook (online)
10 Bosw. 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pegram-v-carson-nysuperctnyc-1863.