Scharff v. Meyer

34 S.W. 858, 133 Mo. 428, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 142
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 17, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 34 S.W. 858 (Scharff v. Meyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scharff v. Meyer, 34 S.W. 858, 133 Mo. 428, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 142 (Mo. 1896).

Opinion

Burgess, J.

This is an action by attachment. Under the writ, six hundred and nineteen barrels of sugar were seized as the property of defendants. The sugar was sold under order of the court, and the proceeds arising from said sale paid into court. The Union National Bank, of New Orleans, interpleaded, claiming the fund. The controversy is between the plaintiffs as attaching creditors, who seized the sugar by attachment as the property of Y. & A. Meyer & Company while on the vessel upon which it was shipped, and the interpleader who claims the fund under assignment of the drafts, and transfer of the bills of lading for the sugar. The trial was had. before the court, who found for the interpleader, and plaintiffs appealed.

No question is made with respect of the pleadings, or the admission or exclusion of evidence. The facts are about as follows:

Defendants, who were merchants at the city of New Orleans, having through their broker theretofore [436]*436sold fourteen different lots of sugar, to as many different purchasers in the city of St. Louis, on the thirtieth day. of November, 1890, shipped it to them in compliance with their contracts. The carrier issued to defendants bills of lading in which they were named as the shippers, and the several purchasers named as consignees.

Defendants then drew a separate draft on each of the consignees for the value of the sugar shipped to them. The drafts were drawn payable to defendants’ order, and were indorsed by them. To each draft was attached the corresponding bill of lading, and on the first of December, 1890, all the drafts with the bills of lading attached, were transferred and delivered to the interpleader for their full face value, and the full aggregate value of all the sugar, being about $10,000. On presentation of the drafts to the respective drawees payment was refused, and they were not paid. The drafts are in the ordinary form of bills of exchange. They are all dated at New Orleans, December 1, 1890, are drawn by Y. & A. Meyer & Company. The bills of lading were not indorsed.

The bills of lading are dated at Cora Plantation, Louisiana, November 30, 1890, and it is recited on the face of each of them that the shipment is for account of Y. & A. M. & Company. They are all in the following form:

“Received in good order from Cora Plantation on board the steamer City of St. Louis * *• * to be delivered without delay, unless unavoidably prevented, on the levee at St. Louis unto consignee as below
[437]*437“Freight at 15c per 100 lbs.
MARKS. ARTICLES. CONSIGNEE. WHOSE ACCOUNT. WEIGHTS.
Nina Y. C., No. 15. Fifty-three barrels Y. C. sugar. Fink &Nasse, St. Louis. Y. & A. M. & Company. • 17,339.
There are fourteen of the bills of lading, each naming as consignee one of the concerns against whom the drafts were drawn.
Along with each of the bills of lading is a certificate dated at Cora Plantation, November 29, 1890, showing the weight of each barrel, and the gross weight and net weight of each lot. There was also pinned to each of the bills of lading a slip of paper on which were written the words: “Allow parties to have B-L and examine goods.”

It appears that on the first of December Adolph Meyer, a member of the firm of Y. & A. Meyer & Company, took these fourteen drafts, with the bills of lading and other papers attached, into the Union National Bank and requested a discount; that Chalaron, the cashier, accepted them at the current rate of discount for St. Louis exchange, one fourth of one per cent (or $24.29 in the aggregate), and caused the net proceeds, $9,719.91, to be placed to the credit of Meyer & Company in their account current; that the bank paid cheeks of Meyer & Company on their account current to the amount that day of $39,772.21, the next day $70,277.27, and each succeeding day for greater or less sums; that from the day when the fourteen drafts above mentioned were delivered to the bank up to and including the day when they were dishonored at St. Louis and the Union National Bank [438]*438was notified, the defendants had on deposit in the bank and to their credit more than enough money to pay all these drafts; that after that time there were, up to December 25, of that year, daily balances to defendants’ credit, on most days more than sufficient, though on six of those days not sufficient, to pay all the drafts.

When the deposition of Mr. Chalaron, was taken on February 5, 1891, there was still more than enough money on deposit to the credit of the defendants to pay all the drafts; that this discount was made in the usual and ordinary course of business, and on the faith of the bills of lading and certificates of weight, and noton the personal credit of Meyer & Company; that the transaction was an out and out purchase, and that the drafts were not taken for collection for account of Meyer & Company.

It also appears that the drafts were received by the St. Louis National Bank, from the Union National Bank and with the other papers attached presented to the several drawees for payment, and payment refused.

The contracts in pursuance of which the shipments were made, are all dated at St. Louis and call for Y. C. (yellow clarified). Their terms are as follows:

“1. F. Mitchell & Bro.: Price 5 cents delivered on the levee here; to be drawn for, bill of lading attached; sugar to be received before payment of draft.
“2. Wulfing, Dieckriede & Co.: Price 5 cents delivered here; to be drawn for subject to examination of sugar before payment.
“3. Adolph Moll: Price 5 1-8 delivered here on the levee by next Saturday’s boat from New Orleans.
[439]*439“4. O. H. Peckham Candy Co.: Price 5 cents delivered here; to be drawn for bill of lading attached; bill of lading to be surrendered by bank so sugar may be received in the usual way.
■ “5. Goebel, Wetterau & Co.: Price 4 7-8 sold at plantation; to be shipped Anchor Line and insured; to be drawn for bill of lading attached; sugar to be examined and received in the usual way before payment.
“6. Dodge & Seward: Price 4 7-8, f. o. b. plantation ; ship Anchor Line and insure; to be drawn for bill of lading attached; subject to approval before payment.
“7. Alkire Grocery Co.: Price 4 7-8 f. o. b. plantation ; ship Anchor Line and insure; to be drawn for bill of lading attached; sugar to be accepted before payment of draft.
“8. Seudder, Miltenberger, Reinhart & Co.: Price 4 7-8, f. o. b. plantation; ship Anchor Line; no insurance; to be drawn for bill of lading attached; sugar to be accepted before payment.
“9. Gildehaus, Wulfing & Co.: Price 4 7-8, f. o. b. plantation; ship Anchor Line and insure; to be drawn for subject to approval of goods before payment.
“10. Greely-Burnham Grocer Co.: Price 4 7-8 sold at plantation; ship Anchor Line and insure to be drawn for bill of lading attached; bill of lading to be surrendered by bank so the sugar may be receiyed in the usual way.
“11. J. H.

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Bluebook (online)
34 S.W. 858, 133 Mo. 428, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scharff-v-meyer-mo-1896.