Peoples Savings Bank & Trust Co. v. Klempner Bros.

231 S.W. 244, 191 Ky. 605, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 378
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 29, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 231 S.W. 244 (Peoples Savings Bank & Trust Co. v. Klempner Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peoples Savings Bank & Trust Co. v. Klempner Bros., 231 S.W. 244, 191 Ky. 605, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 378 (Ky. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Turner, Commissioner

Reversing on original and affirming on cross appeal.

On and prior to the 5th of September, 1918, Joseph Schetzer was doing business at Memphis, Tenn., in the name of -Memphis Iron and Metal Co., and during the same period Klempner Brothers uf Louisville, Ky., were engaged in business -at that place.

Previous to that time there had been several business transactions between them which resulted as of that date in an indebtedness by Schetzer to Klempner Brothers of something over one thousand dollars, and, as alleged, Klempner Brothers bought from Schetzer two carloads of merchandise to be shipped to them and applied upon such indebtedness.

On the first of November Schetzer shipped from Memphis one -carload of scrap iron and one carload of Manchester bagging, -consigned to Klempner Brothers at Louisville. The bills of lading for.these two carloads of merchandise show Klempner Brothers to- be the consignees and are what are known as- straight -or nonnegotiable bills of lading.

Although Klempner Brothers were designated as consignees in the bills of lading, on the day of shipment Schetzer, still being in possession of the bills of lading, went to appellant bank at Memphis and there drew his draft on Klempner Brothers at Louisville for $1,400.00, apparently what he conceived to be the value of the two carloads of merchandise, and attached to the draft the two bills of lading and then sold the draft with the two bills to the appellant bank, which placed the face value thereof, $1,400.00, to Schetzer’s credit in the bank.

The draft with the two bills of lading attached was forwarded in the usual course to Louisville and reached there on the 5th of November, and Klempner Brothers were so notified on that day by the Louisville 'bank, and were again called up by phone by officers of the bank [607]*607on November 6th; and on that day one of the members of the firm went to the bank, inspected the draft and bills of lading and declined to pay same, assigning as. a reason that the weights given in the bills were not proper. The draft was protested for non-payment, and about ten o’clock of that day one of the carloads of merchandise shipped from Memphis on the first of November was placed on a siding or switch in the yard of Klempner Brothers’ place of business., and the other car reached there a few days later, and, in some way not explained in the record, Klempner Brothers, without being in possession of the bills of lading, got possession of and appropriated to their own use the contents of the two cars.

Subsequently, on the 22nd of November, while Schetzer was in Louisville, the draft remaining unpaid, Klempner Brothers and Schetzer had a full settlement, which showed Klempner Brothers indebted to Schetzer in the sum of $698.04, which they that day paid to him by cheek.

This is an action by the Memphis bank against Klempner Brothers on the draft, and the defense, in substance, is that on the 5th of September, 1918, while Schetzer was indebted to them, appellees bought from him two carloads of merchandise to be shipped'to them at Louisville, and that at the time by agreement between them and Schetzer the two cars of merchandise were to be applied on the indebtedness of Schetzer, and that the two carloads of merchandise so shipped by Schetzer on November 1, 1918, were the two carloads of merchandise so purchased by them, and to be so applied, and were the same two carloads of merchandise represented by the two bills of lading attached to the draft upon which the plaintiff sued; and it is their theory that as they had previously purchased from .Schetzer this identical merchandise to be applied to the payment of their debt, when Schetzer delivered the same to the carrier at Memphis consigned to them at Louisville, they became the owners of the merchandise and Schetzer no longer had any interest therein, and the bills of lading being non-negotiable, the plaintiff bank acquired no right or interest in the property represented by the bills of lading.

The lower court directed a verdict for the plaintiff for the value of the carload of Manchester bagging ap[608]*608parently because the evidence showed the two carloads of merchandise contracted for by appellees to be applied on their debt were to be scrap iron, but directed a verdict for the defendant for the value of the one carload of scrap iron, and from the judgment on that verdict the. plaintiff has a appealed and the defendant prosecutes a cross appeal.

Going to' the heart of the controversy and brushing aside all collateral questions, the case must be determined upon the question whether the title to the merchandise in the two cars passed to Klempner Brothers upon their consignment to them by Schetzer on November 1st; for if the title passed to them notwithstanding they had never been in possession of the bills of lading, then the assignment of the bills of lading by Schetzer to the bank, and the attaching of them to the draft sold by Schetzer to the bank, gave to the bank no interest or title which Schetzer did not have. But if, on the contrary, the retention by Schetzer of the bills of lading, which represented the merchandise in the two cars, had the effect of retaining in him the title to the merchandise, then his .assignment of the two bills of lading to the bank, attached as they were to the draft, operated as a pledge of the merchandise to the bank to secure payment of the draft, although the bills of lading were non-negotiable.

So that the whole question is, was the title to the merchandise in the cars in Klempner Brothers at the time Schetzer assigned the bills of lading to the bank, or did their retention by Schetzer retain the title in him?

In discussing this question we shall assume for the sake of argument that the one carload of scrap' iron shipped on the first of November was part of the merchandise alleged to have been previously purchased by Klempner Brothers from Schetzer to- be applied upon Schetzer’s indebtedness to them, although that question is in issue, and it is claimed by appellant that there is no evidence to sustain it.

¡It is the rule that possession of personal property must be delivered either actually or symbolically before the title passes, and here the question is whether the possession of the carrier was the possession of the consignees, although the bills of lading, which are the evidence of title, were never delivered to them but were [609]*609retained by the shipper and pledged by him on the same day the shipment was made.

Presumptively the possession of the carrier is the possession of the consignee, but that is only a presumption and may be rebutted, and it is the claim of appellant here that it is. positively and conclusively rebutted by the fact that the shipper, instead of sending the bills of lading to the consignees, not only retained them but pledged them, and thereby pledged the property which they represented to the bank to secure the payment of the draft; while, on the other hand, the appellees claim that they having previously purchased the merchandise under an agreement that it was to be applied to an existing indebtedness of the shipper, not only took upon its consignment to them the title, but the possession of the carrier was their possession.

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Related

Jones v. Commonwealth
281 S.W. 164 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1926)
Peoples Savings Bank & Trust Co. v. Jos. Joseph Bros.
16 Ohio App. 45 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
231 S.W. 244, 191 Ky. 605, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-savings-bank-trust-co-v-klempner-bros-kyctapp-1921.