Sargent v. Sarival Storage Co.

236 P. 468, 28 Ariz. 152, 1925 Ariz. LEXIS 241
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMay 22, 1925
DocketCivil No. 2197.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 236 P. 468 (Sargent v. Sarival Storage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sargent v. Sarival Storage Co., 236 P. 468, 28 Ariz. 152, 1925 Ariz. LEXIS 241 (Ark. 1925).

Opinion

*154 LOCKWOOD, J.

In the spring of 1920 one E. R. Turman rented forty (40) acres of land from-Y. O. Sargent, hereinafter called plaintiff, situated south of Mesa, Arizona. By the terms of .the lease it was provided that the rent should be secured “by a crop mortgage on the crop to be raised on the premises during the season of 1920,” and, on the same date, Turman executed and delivered to plaintiff a note and mortgage in compliance with said provision in the lease. This mortgage was duly recorded on the twenty-second day of March. None of the crops covered by the mortgage were in existence, nor had they even been, planted at the time it was given. Turman the same year had rented three other ranches from different parties, and during the season of 1920 farmed and cropped them all to cotton. About sixty-five (65) bales of cotton were raised on the four places, and when the cotton was picked sixteen (16) of the bales were delivered to the Attaway-Phelps Gin at Gilbert, twenty-three (23) to the same company at Mesa, five (5) to the Arizona Cotton Ginning & Manufacturing Company at Mesa, and twenty-one (21) bales to the Sarival Storage Company, hereinafter called the company, at Mesa; seventeen (17) of these last-mentioned bales are the only ones involved in this controversy.

Negotiable warehouse receipts for the cotton were issued by the different companies with whom it was left; part of them to Turman and part to Turman and Jackson — the latter being a partner of Turman. It was necessary for the partners to raise funds for the picking and ginning of the cotton, and they were compelled to borrow money for that purpose, giving the negotiable warehouse receipts in most cases as security. The greater portion of this money was secured from the First National Bank of Mesa, hereinafter called the bank, and some forty-two (42) ware *155 house receipts were duly transferred to it as security; all being so pledged before December 15th, 1920. During the fall and winter of 1920-21 the cotton situation was very bad, and the banks of the Salt River Valley, which had been carrying the farmers on the security of their cotton, were compelled to secure assistance through the Los Angeles Clearing House. This was done by rediscounting the notes given by the cotton-growers, and transferring the collateral receipts. Among these transactions were included the forty-two (42) receipts assigned by Turman to the bank as above. John H. Ramboz was trustee for the clearing-house and the assignments were made in his name all before July 1, 1921. In December and January, 1921, the bank, by direction of Ramboz, sold twelve (12) bales of the cotton involved in this action to Peek and Fleming. In order to obtain delivery of three (3) of these bales the bank was compelled to deposit with the company a cashier’s check for Four Hundred Fifty Dollars ($450) to indemnify it, as the litigation of which this proceeding is the termination had already begun.

In September, 1921, plaintiff brought action in replevin against the company and levied upon seventeen (17) bales of cotton which had been placed with the company by Turman, and for which warehouse receipts had been issued to him and were then outstanding. The sheriff’s return on the writ of replevin was regular in form, showing the usual procedure under the writ, but it appeared from oral evidence at the trial that the cotton was not actually taken into possession by the sheriff, but was left with the company in its warehouse, with the notification not to allow it to be moved.

In October, 1921, plaintiff brought suit against Turman to foreclose the crop mortgage above referred to. Turman alone was made a defendant to the action, and he alone was served and appeared. The com *156 plaint asked for a foreclosure against the cotton grown on the premises of Sargent, but did not describe it or its location with particularity. A judgment of foreclosure was rendered however, covering the seventeen (17) bales of cotton involved in this action, describing them by the number of the warehouse receipts, on the seventeenth day of December, 1921. Execution was issued for the satisfaction of the judgment on the fifth day of January, 1922, and on the seventeenth day of January the property was sold under the execution. The three (3) bales which had already been taken by the bank, and for which a check had been deposited, as aforesaid, were bought by one John Cummard. Plaintiff purchased the remaining fourteen (14).

Immediately after the sale, Sargent, without permission of the company, took possession of the fourteen (14) bales and hauled them to the yard of the Arizona Cotton Ginning & Manufacturing Company, receiving from it warehouse receipts for the cotton. He sold it shortly after to J. G. and Yinton Hammels, copartners as Hammels & Son, and delivered the warehouse receipts to them. Up to this time the company had filed no answer in the replevin action, but on the twenty-first day of January it answered and requested that the bank, Eamboz and Peek and Fleming be brought in as parties. The Arizona Cotton Ginning & Manufacturing Company was also made a party, and by consent of counsel the replevin suit and an interpleader filed by the last-named company were consolidated and tried before the court sitting without a jux'y. The court rendered a judgment awarding nine (9) bales of cotton to Peek and Fleming’, five (5) to Eamboz and three (3) to the First National Bank. After the usual motions for new trial were made and denied, Sargent and Hammels & Soxx appealed to this court.

It will be seen from the foregoing statement of facts that the various parties to these actions may *157 be divided into three groups, according to their interest in the litigation. The Sarival Storage Company and the Arizona Cotton Ginning & Manufacturing Company are interested only as stakeholders. If they can be properly protected so far as their outstanding warehouse receipts are concerned, it is a matter of practical indifference to them as to who ultimately secures the cotton. The interest of plaintiff Sargent and Hammets & Son are the same. If the first fails, the second must necessarily do so. The First National Bank of Mesa, John H. Ramboz, and Peek and Fleming, are in the same situation. If plaintiff recovers, they lose; if he loses, they succeed. The real dispute is therefore between Sargent’s rights on the one hand as mortgagee of Turman, and the bank’s interest on the other as pledgee of the warehouse receipts issued to Turman.

The first and, indeed, the principal controverted issue of fact is as to the identity of the seventeen (17) bales of cotton. Laying aside for the moment questions of procedure, if it was not grown on the Sargent premises, then Sargent’s mortgage, of course, did not cover it. It could not be sold legally under the mortgage foreclosure, and Sargent, by purchasing it at such sale, had no title to transfer to Hammels.

On this issue we are again in the situation which has so often come before us. The trial court made no findings of fact. We are therefore, as we have stated repeatedly, bound to assume that it made every finding of fact in favor of the successful litigant which was necessary to support the judgment, and, if there is any reasonable evidence in' the record to support such finding, that it did so correctly.

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Bluebook (online)
236 P. 468, 28 Ariz. 152, 1925 Ariz. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sargent-v-sarival-storage-co-ariz-1925.