Security Trust Co. v. Long

16 S.W.2d 82, 321 Mo. 1229, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 678
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 2, 1929
StatusPublished

This text of 16 S.W.2d 82 (Security Trust Co. v. Long) 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
Security Trust Co. v. Long, 16 S.W.2d 82, 321 Mo. 1229, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 678 (Mo. 1929).

Opinions

This is an action in trover for the conversion of five Columbia automobiles. It was originally filed by the Columbia Motors Company, a corporation, but as that corporation was adjudicated a bankrupt, its trustee was substituted as party plaintiff. An order of the bankruptcy court authorized the prosecution of the action by the trustee. The petition, as originally filed, comprised two counts, one for conversion and the other for negligence. Upon motion, the trial court ordered an election and plaintiff elected to stand on the conversion count. The jury returned a verdict assessing damages, including interest, in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $9853.75, of which $7500 represented the value of the automobiles and $2353.75 interest. Judgment was accordingly entered, and defendant appealed.

Defendant neither offered nor introduced evidence. The evidence submitted by plaintiff warrants the finding that the Columbia Motors Company, an automobile manufacturer, shipped and consigned to itself to St. Louis, by shipper's order bill of lading, five Columbia automobiles, with the notation thereon, notify Advance Motors Company. The bill of lading was forwarded to a bank, draft attached, to be delivered to Advance Motors Company upon payment of draft. The shipment arrived at St. Louis June 9, 1920, but as the Advance Motors Company was unable to pay the draft and thus failed to obtain the right to the consignment, the C. E.I. Railroad, in the possession of which the consignment had remained, on July 20, 1920, under authority of the bill of lading, delivered the automobiles to defendant, a licensed warehouseman, with whom the railroad had been having similar transactions for four or five years previously. Defendant was authorized by the circuit court upon giving bond, in pursuance to the statutes applicable, to do a warehouse business at 828-834 Gratiot Street and 810-812 South Ninth Street in the city of St. Louis, which license was granted in 1904 and was in force on July 20, 1920. Section 5 of the bill of lading provided that, if the property was not removed by the party entitled to receive it within forty-eight hours, the carrier may retain custody of the property as warehouseman, or it may be removed to and stored in a public or licensed warehouse. Plaintiff's additional abstract of the record tends to show that the automobiles were stored with defendant under *Page 1234 Section 5 of the bill of lading. Plaintiff's exhibit tends to show that the automobiles were stored with defendant as a warehouseman, as defined in the Uniform Warehouse Receipts Act of the State of Missouri, at 1605 South Twelfth Street, and received in storage from "C. E.I. To whom it may concern." The evidence tends to show that the automobiles were delivered to defendant at his licensed warehouse. There is no controversy as to the facts that in 1904 defendant was licensed to transact business as a warehouseman at the locations mentioned, and it was admitted at the trial that defendant never obtained a warehouse license for any other place.

The places of storage and the conditions under which the automobiles were stored at 1605 South Twelfth Street and on Geyer Avenue later are respectively shown by the evidence of Richard Hart, treasurer of the Advance Motors Company, reading:

"Just a frame building and it was in a very bad state of repair; the roof leaked and there were several places in the walls that could easily be seen through. The roof sagged in places and it had been partially destroyed by fire and propped up in two or three different places. There was a large accumulation of dust and manure on the floor of the place, so that the cushion of one of the cars that was down on the floor was completely covered with this dust and manure. And one of the steel wheels of the roadster was in the same condition. The tops of some of the touring cars were down and rain had come in on the upholstering and damaged it, and the tires were flat. Two wheels were off of the cars entirely. Some of the roller bearings were gone. And the cars had been frozen so that the radiators leaked. And some of the blocks were cracked and the freeze-out plugs blown out of the motors. They were scratched up and the finish was in a very bad condition.

"Q. Now, then, did you visit the Geyer Avenue place where those automobiles were later stored? A. I did.

"Q. Will you please describe to the jury what kind of a building that is and what condition you found the automobiles in there? A. That is a one-story brick building and the roof to this building leaked. It was leaking at the time that we were there and made the inspection, and the water was at that time dripping down on the roadster and on the coupe and on the back seat of one of the touring cars that had the top down. And there was water all over the floor."

Although defendant offered no evidence, his attorney made an opening statement to the jury in which he assigned as the reason for storing the automobiles in the stable and on Geyer Avenue the jammed to overflowing condition of the bonded warehouse. Other pertinent facts, if any, will appear in the course of the opinion.

I. The action is based on and arises out of a contract of bailment. Consequently it is not claimed that the original taking was tortious, *Page 1235 but it is said that defendant violated the contract of bailment, first, by storing the automobiles in other than a licensed warehouse, and, second, by misusing and abusing theBailment: cars by storing them in unwarranted and hazardousConversion. places.

The evidence tends to show that the automobiles were stored with defendant under the bill of lading, which provided for their storage in a public or licensed warehouse. Defendant was in possession of and operated such a warehouse, where he was authorized as a warehouseman to do business only, and the automobiles were delivered to him at his warehouse. In accepting the automobiles for storage, he impliedly agreed to place them there, but instead of so doing, he stored them first in an old frame stable, and second in a one-story brick building, neither of which places was suitable for the storage of automobiles. We think that in taking and accepting the automobiles for storage defendant impliedly, if not expressly, agreed to store them in a licensed warehouse, and that such agreement was within the contemplation of the parties. Their storage at any other place or in any other building than a licensed warehouse was a violation of the agreement, and subjected defendant to liability for conversion. When defendant stored the automobiles in the frame stable, which was not a licensed warehouse, he exceeded his authority, as much so as did the bailee of the horse when he drove beyond the limits of his contract of hiring. The storage in the frame stable probably deprived plaintiff of the benefit of the storage bond, to which benefit such storage in a licensed warehouse would have attached. The fact that his licensed warehouse was stored with other property to its capacity did not justify the storage of the automobiles in unwarranted structures. If he was unable to carry out the terms of the bailment, he should have refused to accept them. The fact that the receipt showed that the goods were stored at 1605 South Twelfth Street, that is, in a stable as the evidence later shows, cannot be urged to defeat plaintiff's claim, for various reasons. First, the receipt is addressed to "C. E.I. To whom it mayReceipt.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.W.2d 82, 321 Mo. 1229, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/security-trust-co-v-long-mo-1929.