Philadelphia Warehouse Co. v. Winchester

156 F. 600, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5357
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedSeptember 5, 1907
DocketNo. 262
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 156 F. 600 (Philadelphia Warehouse Co. v. Winchester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware 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. Winchester, 156 F. 600, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5357 (D. Del. 1907).

Opinion

BRADFORD, District Judge.

The Philadelphia Warehouse Com-. pany filed a bill in this court March 1, 1905, against James P. Winchester and Howard T. Wallace, receivers of the Diamond State Steel Company and also the Diamond State Steel Company, alleging that certain personal property of the latter company had been pledged to the complainant to secure the repayment of moneys loaned or advanced or to be loaned or advanced by it to the Diamond State Steel Company, and praying, among other things, as follows:

“3; That defendants pay to complainant the moneys due upon complainant’s advances to the Diamond State Steel Company, including principal, interest, costs, charges, commissions, fees and expenses, to which complainant is entitled under its several pledge contracts, leases or other agreements with the Diamond State Steel Company, and thereby redeem the property in complainant’s possession, pledged to it by the Diamond Sta te Steel Company; or in default'of such payment that complainant be permitted to pursue its remedies under its several pledge contracts or agreements without interference or hindrance on the part of defendants or of any other persons; accounting to the receivers of the Diamond State Steel Company or to such other party or [602]*602parties as may be entitled to receive the same, for the surplus of material, or of cash, or of both, remaining in its hands after the liquidation of its claims as aforesaid.”

Answer and replication having been put in, the case was at issue April 8, 1905. Subsequently, June 5, 1905, all the parties entered into a stipulation for a surrender by the complainant to the receivers of certain premises leased to the former by the Diamond State Steel Company on which the property alleged by the former to be subject to a lien in its favor by reason of a pledge was situated, and for the sale of such property by the receivers and the deposit and retention-of the proceeds of sale, within certain limits and subject to modification by the court as to amount, as a special fund to abide the determination of this case. The stipulation contained the following provision :

“It is understood and agreed that nothing herein contained shall affect or impair the rights of any party hereto and that in surrendering possession of the merchandise covered by this agreement to Messrs. James P. Winchester and Howard T. Wallace as receivers, the Philadelphia Warehouse Company is surrendering the same to be held by the said receivers as under a special trust or appointment and is not, as pledgee of the said merchandise, redelivering it, or surrendering it, to the pledgor thereof, or the legal representatives of the pledgor thereof, and'is not surrendering or relinquishing any of the rights secured to it under its general contract, under its several pledge contracts, under its several leases, or under any of the other contracts or agreements or writings which it holds and to which the Diamond State Steel Company is a party.”

The court by a decretal order June 10, 1905, approved the above mentioned stipulation, directed it to be filed, and declared:

“That the Philadelphia Warehouse Company is authorized to surrender the-leased premises and to deliver the merchandise referred to in the.said stipulation; and that James P. Winchester and Howard T. Wallace, receivers of the Diamond State Steel Company are authorized to receive the same, as a special trust, to be administered in accordance with the agreement set forth-in the said stipulation; and that the effect of the said stipulation and of this decree confirming the same and of proceedings by any of the parties hereafter taken in accordance with the said stipulation shall not affect or impair the-rights of any of the parties to this present cause, but that the proceeds of sales made under the said stipulation shall be held to await the determination of' this cause, and the later order of the court.”

The property on which a lien was claimed by the complainant has since been sold, the proceeds of sale are within the control and subject to the disposition of the court, the evidence has been taken and returned by the examiner, and the case is ripe for final adjudication. The complainant is a corporation of Pennsylvania and its business is to advance cash or give credit to manufacturing and other establishments on -the security of a pledge of merchantable commodities. It has no public warehouse; and when it is impracticable to store-the merchandise, intended to be pledged, in such a warehouse and receive warehouse receipts, the complainant is in the habit of securing storage room for such merchandise at the plant or establishment of the borrower, taking and retaining possession of such merchandise by means of a lease of the buildings or premises containing it, placing and retaining in charge thereof a custodian in the employ of the com[603]*603plainant, and marking the leased premises in order that the public may not be misled or deceived, with respect to the property thereon. The warehouse company and the steel company entered into a contract under seal February 13, 1903, in and by which the former agreed to make advances to the latter on the security of merchandise manufactured by the latter and of raw material or other personal property used in the manufacture of the finished product at its plant in Wilmington in this district. The contract, among other things, provided as follows:

“Tlie advances will be made and will be payable at the office ojC the warehouse company in the city of Philadelphia. The steel company will lease to the warehouse company several buildings, suitable for storage of the commodities upon which the advances are to be made, also portions of the land belonging to the steel company suitable for storage yards for the same purpose. The warehouse company will employ and place in charge of these leased premises a custodian who shall furnish bond in the amount of one hundred thousand ($100,000) dollars, with security satisfactory to the warehouse company, conditioned for the faithful discharge of the duties of his appointment, and he shall at all times maintain exclusive possession of the leased premises, and their contents, for the warehouse company. Contracts of pledge will from time to time be executed as advances are made, but the execution of such contracts shall not abrogate or impair the legal effect of the pledging of the entire contents of the leased premises, or of the entire stock of merchandise or goods delivered to the custodian of the warehouse company, or affect the right of the warehouse company to maintain and uphold its legal possession of all goods on the leased premises by its duly appointed custodian.”

Pursuant to this contract and on the same date the steel company executed under seal four leases to the warehouse company for as many portions of the premises occupied by the steel company, and a fifth lease February 20, 1903, for another portion of said premises, each of the leases, aside from the description of the land demised and the conclusion and subject to variations in the amount of storage charges, and the difference in the date of the last lease, being as follows:

“This agreement, made tho 13th day oC February, 3903, between the Diamond State Steel Company, a corporation existing under the laws of the state of Delaware, of the first part, and the Philadelphia Warehouse Company, a corporation existing under tho laws of the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, of the second part, witnesseth:

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Bluebook (online)
156 F. 600, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-warehouse-co-v-winchester-ded-1907.