Rose City Bottling Works v. Godchaux Sugars, Inc.

236 S.W. 825, 151 Ark. 269, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 239
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 16, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 236 S.W. 825 (Rose City Bottling Works v. Godchaux Sugars, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rose City Bottling Works v. Godchaux Sugars, Inc., 236 S.W. 825, 151 Ark. 269, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 239 (Ark. 1922).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

Appellee was, at the time when the transactions now under review took place, a foreign corporation with its principal place of business in the State of Louisiana, engaged in the refining of sugar and selling it at wholesale. On or about April 28, 1920, it accepted, through Henry Leigh, a merchandise broker in Little Rock, an order from appellant Rose City Bottling Works for 100,000 pounds of sugar at the price of 25 cents per pound, to be delivered in July, 1920. The order for the sugar was taken from said appellant by Leigh in conformity with ordinary trade custom pursued by merchandise brokers and was submitted to appellee at its place of business in the city of New Orleans and accepted. Immediately thereafter appellee shipped the sugar in two carload lots of 500 sacks each to its own order, and attached the bills of lading to a draft drawn on said appellant for collection through ordinary bankings channels. Leigh was not the agent of either of the parties to the purchase further than such agency for both parties as arises from the fact that as a merchandise broker he accepted the order from the purchaser and forwarded it to the seller for acceptance. When the consignment of sugar reached Little' Rock, the Bottling Works was unable to pay the draft, and negotiations at once arose between the parties looking to some adjustment whereby the delivery could be made.. Leigh was then authorized by appellee to act as its agent in the adjustment, and an arrangement was made as per written contract, which, after reciting the. foregoing facts, contained the following stipulation:

“The bottling company agrees to pay the freight and all demurrage charges on said cars at once. Said sugar shall be unloaded and placed in storage with Leigh at the expense of the bottling company, storage charges to be five cents per sack per month or fraction thereof, from date of unloading until sugar is removed from Leigh warehouse. The bottling company will pay for said sugar twenty-five (25) cents per pound in addition to freight, demurrage and storage charges above stipulated for, and the discount of two per cent, provided in the original contract is eliminated. And in addition thereto shall be paid Godchaux interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum until the said sugar is paid for. The bottling company shall have sixty days from the date hereof within which to make payment, and within such time may make partial salts of said sugar, the proceeds of such sales to be delivered to Leigh in certified checks or New York or New Orleans exchange, payable to Godchaux. At the end of sixty days from date hereof, the balance remaining, if any, shall be paid by the bottling company in certified checks or New York or New Orleans exchange to the order of Godchaux and delivered to Leigh. No sugar shad be released until Leigh’s storage is paid. The bottling company is to furnish a bond with sureties to be approved by Leigh in the sum of ten thousand dollars, conditioned upon the faithful performance hereof.”

The bond recited in the stipulation was also executed with appellants Weinman, Harper, Booker and Putney as sureties.

Upon the execution of this contract and the bond pursuant thereto, the two cars of sugar were transferred to the tracks at Leigh’s warehouse and there unloaded and remained there at the time of the commencement of this action. The bottling company failed to make any sales of the sugar or to pay any part of the price, and after the expiration of sixty days from the date of the contract appellee instituted this action in the chancery court of Pulaski' County against fall of the appellants, praying for judgment against the Bottling Works for the price of the sugar and that a lien on that commodity be decreed and the same sold and the proceeds credited on the said judgment; also for a judgment against the sureties on the bond for the sum of $10,000. Appellants demurred to the complaint on the ground that the chancery court had no jurisdiction, and also moved that the cause be transferred to the circuit court. The demurrer and the motion were each • overruled. There was a trial of the cause on the pleadings, the documentary and oral testimony, and th’e decree was in favor of appellee, awarding all the relief prayed for in the complaint. The sugar had declined in price to a considerable extent, and it was sold under order of the court and the proceeds applied on the decree in favor of the appellee. The decree against the Bottling Works, after crediting on the debt the price of the sugar, was for the sum of $18,367.06, and the decree against the sureties was for the sum of $10,000 with interest.

The first contention is that there were no grounds claimed for equitable relief, and that the cause should have been transferred to the law court. Appellee asserted a lien on the sugar held by Leigh under the contract in the nature of a pledge, and this gave jurisdiction to a court of equity to grant relief. Under the contract the deposit of the sugar in the hands of Leigh was for the benefit of the appellee as security for the payment of the price as well as for appellant Bottling Works as purchaser, and this constituted an equitable lien in favor of appellee, and the remedy fell within the jurisdiction of the chancery court. Thornton v. Findley, 97 Ark. 43; Ark. Cypress Shingle Co. v. Meto Valley Ry. Co., 97 Ark. 534; Lee Wilson Co. v. Crittenden County Bank & Trust Co., 98 Ark. 379; Mattar v. Wathen, 99 Ark. 329. It is not essential that the title should have absolutely passed from the seller to the purchaser by delivery of tbe goods in order to create such a lien as a court of equity would enforce. Tbe contract, as before stated, conferred rights upon all parties which a court of equity would enforce. It is therefore unnecessary to consider whether the title had actually passed before the execution of the contract. Having rightfully acquired jurisdiction of part of the subject-matter on equitable grounds, it was proper for the court to retain its jurisdiction for the purpose of granting all appropriate and complete relief. This upon familiar principles too well settled for it to be necessary to cite authorities in support of them.

It is next contended that the transaction involved in the contract was intrastate in it character, and that, since appellee is a foreign corporation and has never complied with' the laws of this State so as to authorize it to do business here, it should be repelled from the court and denied relief. The position of appellants in this phase of the case is that at the time the contract for the storage of the sugar was entered into between the parties appellee was here acting through Leigh, its agent, and in possession, as holder of the bills of lading, of the sugar which had been consigned to the shipper’s order; that the transaction was entirely intrastate in its character and constituted doing business in this State in violation of our laws. Counsel contend, in other words, that, as the bottling company had never signed a written order for the sugar, it was never bound by any contract until it executed the contract hereinbefore referred to for the storage of the sugar. They say that this was the first binding obligation between the parties, and that it occurred between them when appellee, as the vendor, was here with the goods and making a disposition of them which was wholly intrastate in its operation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 S.W. 825, 151 Ark. 269, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rose-city-bottling-works-v-godchaux-sugars-inc-ark-1922.