Philadelphia Warehouse Co. v. Seeman

7 F.2d 999, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3653
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 11, 1925
Docket220
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 7 F.2d 999 (Philadelphia Warehouse Co. v. Seeman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philadelphia Warehouse Co. v. Seeman, 7 F.2d 999, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3653 (2d Cir. 1925).

Opinion

MANTON, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff in error is a Pennsylvania corporation doing a warehouse business in that state, and the defendants in error are copartners engaged in the wholesale grocery business in Now York state. The action is brought to recover $8,000 for the conversion of eases of salmon, title to which was in the plaintiff in error under a negotiable railroad bill of lading indorsed to it by the pledgor, Cocoaro & Go., a partnership, in New York City, on *1000 November 18, 1919. ■ They 'were pledged as security for an advance .of credit in the sum of $5,900 to be made by the plaintiff in error under the terms of a pledge agreement, to be held as security also for other advances of credit, prior and subsequent. The answer, which was sustained by the jury’s verdict below, was that the loan to A. J. Cocearo & Co. was usurious, and that the defendants in error purchased the salmon in good faith and for a valuable consideration. A. J. Cocearo & Co. became bankrupts.

A note for $5,900, dated November 18, 1919, payable January 20, 1920, was issued and delivered to the plaintiff in error. This note was sold in Philadelphia, Pa., by a firm of note brokers on November 19,1920, under a written order from A. J. Cocearo & Co. The net proceeds of this sale, $5,83420, represented by a cashier’s cheek to the order of the plaintiff in error, was received by it from the note brokers and thereafter indorsed and delivered by it to the order of the First National Bank of Philadelphia. This bank at once remitted to A. J. Cocearo & Co. in New York City, at their request, by a transfer of such funds to the Irving National Bank. The business of the’plaintiff in error for fully half a century had been to loan its credit by delivering its promissory note to a merchant, who pledged with it merchandise to insure payment of the merchant’s note at maturity. The pledgor received a note, which could readily be turned into cash by its sale through note brokers through various banks throughout the country. Thus, in this way plaintiff in error advanced its credit upon merchandise deposited with it as collateral to an agreed percentage of the market value of such merchandise. This was determined by the plaintiff in error’s inspection and appraisal.

The charge for issuing its promissory note ’ against the pledge of the merchandise in a public warehouse was 3 per cent, per annum upon the face amount of its notes so issued. Beyond this charge, no other remuneration or commission was directly payable to it, but the pledgor or borrower would pay a commission to a note broker in consideration for the sale by him as the agent of the borrower. Its practice was to deliver to the borrower the identical check received from the broker. It was the policy to sell through brokers, because this was a business in itself, and is now a recognized method of disposing of commercial paper throughout the country. This method of doing business typified the transaction involved in this litigation. The document used was a printed pledge agreement, which read in part as follows:

“Having deposited with, and confided to the management, custody, and charge of, the Philadephia Warehouse Company the property belonging to us described in the foregoing invoice, and that company having advanced its credit to us upon security of said property and upon our warranties herein recited, by delivery to us of its promissory note for five thousand nine hundred dollars, dated November 18, 1919, payable January 20, 1920, receiving thirty and 48/100 dollars as commission for its responsibility and services, as above and advance of its credit: Now, in consideration of said advance, we do hereby promise and agree to and with the said company that we will pay to it, at its .office in the city of Philadelphia, at or before the maturity of its said promissory note, five thousand nine hundred dollars, together with all charges for storage, insurance, and other necessary expenses, including counsel fees, on account of the said property so confided to its management, custody, and charge. * * *
“3. The property pledged hereunder, together with any heretofore or hereafter pledged by the undersigned to the said company to secure this or any other liability, general or special, shall constitute a general continuing collateral security for all obligations or liabilities of the undersigned to the said company now existing or hereafter created, contingent, absolute, liquidated, or unliquidated, and the said company’s right, title, and interest therein shall be prior to all liens or claims thereon, or on the proceeds thereof. And if any property b6 consigned or delivered to the said company by the undersigned, either in substitution for property withdrawn or as additional security, such substituted or added collateral shall be subject to all the terms and conditions of this contract, including the maintenance of whatever margin may be stipulated for in case of such property.”

The notes were delivered as above indicated and the money paid. When the salmon was pledged under this agreement at the request of A. J. Cocearo & Co., the plaintiff in error instructed the Yorke Warehouse & Storage Company, Inc., of New York City, to secure the eases of salmon from the railroad and store the same in one ..of its warehouses for the security of the plaintiff in error. Thereafter the plaintiff in error received from a warehouse'a nonnegotiable warehouse receipt for *1001 the salmon and between February 25 and March 26, 1920, the defendants in error and their assignors removed the cases of salmon from the warehouse under an order issued by Coccaro on February 8, 1920. This appropriation was made possible through the fact, which was unknown to tho plaintiff in error, that the Yorke Warehouse was owned by Coccaro through stock ownership, and that its employees would do their bidding pursuant to instructions. Coccaro asked for extensions of time to pay the note of $5,-900, and this was granted. The procedure each time followed its regular method of business dealing, which is referred to above.

The bankruptcy of A. J. Coccaro & Co. occurred prior to the last advance. The firm was indebted for its advances of money loaned, and these credits form the basis of this suit. The defense of usury is based upon the claim that this was not a loan of credit, but a mere sham and a device for which the forms used by the plaintiff in error were a mere eover, and that in fact the actual agreement between the plaintiff in error and Coccaro was for loaning them moneys from time to time upon merchandise in warehouses as security, and that Coccaro did pay one-half per eent. per month, which was the market rate for money, one-fourth per cent, per month to the plaintiff in error'for making up its 3 por cent., and one-sixteenth per cent, per month to the note brokers, all of which amounted to more than 6 per cent., the legal rate of interest chargeable in New York. The claim is that the contract is governed by tho laws of New York and is usurious. The court submitted the question of usurious charge to the jury, and it found for the defendants in error.

The plaintiff in error’s contracts and method of transacting its business has met with the .approval of the highest court in Pennsylvania. Righter & Sowgill v. Philadelphia Warehouse Co., 99 Pa. 289.

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Bluebook (online)
7 F.2d 999, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-warehouse-co-v-seeman-ca2-1925.