St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co. v. Citizens' Bank

112 S.W. 154, 87 Ark. 26, 1908 Ark. LEXIS 10
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 29, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 112 S.W. 154 (St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co. v. Citizens' Bank) 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
St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co. v. Citizens' Bank, 112 S.W. 154, 87 Ark. 26, 1908 Ark. LEXIS 10 (Ark. 1908).

Opinion

Hiuu, C. J.

This is another chapter in the financial career of the Alphin-Lake Cotton Company. It is an action brought by the Citizens’ Bank of Little Rock to recover of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company the value of cotton delivered by it to the cotton company without a .surrender of the bills of lading representing said bales. There are 13 counts in the complaint, the first twelve counts for 62 bales and the 13th count for 12 bales. The latter will be considered separately, as it presents a different question.

The transactions involving the loss to the bank of the 62 bales of cotton set forth in the 12 counts were as follows: Various shipments of cotton were made to the Alphin-Lake Cotton Company in the same method as those described in Ark. So. Ry. Co. v. German Nat. Bank, 77 Ark. 482; that is to say, the shipper delivered the cotton to the railroad company and took a bill of lading consigned to shipper’s order. Usually it was in care of the compress company in Little Rock, with directions to notify the Alphin-Lake Cotton Company. In all cases the cotton was delivered to the compress company. The bills of lading for said cotton had been attached to drafts drawn upon the AlphinLake Cotton Company by the shipper, and these drafts were paid by the bank, and the amount thereof charged to the Alphin-Lake Cotton Company, and the bills of lading held by the bank as security for the advance thus made to the Alphin-Lake Cotton Company.

The method pursued by the railroad companies, the compress companies and banks in Rittle Rock in handling cotton, through which was made possible the success of the schemes of the Alphin-Rake Cotton Company, was fully stated in Cititzens’ Bank v. Ark. Comp. Co., 80 Ark. 601. The evidence in this case as to the cotton customs is the same as in that case. The bank intrusted the Alphin-Rake Cotton Company with the bills of lading whenever the cotton company desired to replace them with compress receipts (or other bills of lading for outgoing cotton) ; and in lieu of the bills of lading thus intrusted to the cotton company would be returned compress receipts, or, in some instances where compress receipts were not returned for all of the cotton called for in the bill of lading, there would be an indorsement made upon the bill of lading by the compress company that certain bales of cotton had been received on transfer receipt, 'the number of which was given, and the bill of lading would be returned and stand good for the balés not called for by the warehouse receipt. For instance, a bill of lading for forty bales contained an indorsement showing that for 34 of the bales transfer receipts had been issued, which would leave the bill of lading to stand for the six bales for which compress receipts were not issued. In some way, not explained in the evidence, the cotton company got the railroad company to ship out cotton that was represented by these remnants of the bills of lading, and in three instances where there had been no credit upon the bills of lading.

The bank sued for the thirteen bales represented by the three uncredited bills of lading and for 49 bales represented by bills of lading", upon which credits had been indorsed 'reducing them to that number of bales, which bills originally called for many more bales than the 49, which were the remnants. There can be no doubt of the right of the bank to recover for the thirteen bales of cotton for which it held bills of lading, and which it had not temporarily surrendered for exchange for warehouse receipts, as the decision in Arkansas Southern Ry. Co. v. German Nat. Bank, 77 Ark. 482, settles every possible phase of the controversy over them. (See also Arkansas Southern Ry. Co. v German Nat. Bank, 207 U. S. 270, where an interesting review of that case may be found).

There can be no distinction worked out between the actions based on the remnants of the bills of lading and those based on the bills of lading as originally received by the bank. The compress company became the agent of the railroad company for the purpose of taking up its bills of lading and issuing therefor warehouse receipts. Where all of the cotton had not been received by the compress company when the bill of lading was presented to it, or for some other reason, the compress company only issued its receipts for a part of the cotton called for in the bill of lading, and it then indorsed upon the bill of lading a credit for the amount which had been taken up by these receipts, and left the bill of lading outstanding for the bales not called for by the receipt, and this bill of lading was returned to the bank in that condition and held by it as security for the bales of cotton for which it did not get warehouse receipts, and warehouse receipts took the place of the balance originally called for by the bill of lading, and were noted on the bill of lading. When the cotton company received a bill of lading from the bank for the purpose of getting compress receipts in lieu thereof, it was acting as agent for the bank; and, had this loss occurred through its conduct while so acting for the bank, then the bank could not recover herein. But such is not the case. ' For, in every instance where the cotton company was intrusted with the bill of lading, the same was returned, or compress receipts for the bales called for in it in lieu thereof, or, where credits were made, compress receipts were returned for the amount thus credited; and these matters were checked up by the bank every day, and no shortage was found in this respect. Therefore, it is clear that the limited agency of the cotton company for the bank did not cause the loss herein sued upon.

It was also shown that, of the 62 bales -that were shipped out by the railroad company without the surrender of bills of lading, the proceeds of 46 of them went to the Citizens’ Bank, the plaintiff in this case. In each of these instances, however, the proceeds went to the bank through collecting a draft attached to an outgoing bill of lading, wjhicli bill of lading 'had been obtained by the surrender of a warehouse receipt which had been taken out of the bank for the purpose of being exchanged for the said outgoing bill of lading, and' the draft was placed to the credit of the cotton company when drawn by the cotton company with said outgoing bill of lading attached; and in this way the bank paid twice for one bale of cotton and received the proceeds thereof from it when the draft attached to the outgoing bill of lading was paid, but left it unpaid for its first advancement when it paid the draft attached to the incoming bill of lading.

There was nothing in the evidence that showed that the bank knew that the cotton was being thus manipulated. So far as the 62 bales of cotton, represented by the unsurrendered bills of lading and the remnants of bills of lading, are concerned, there are no. facts to take the case without the principles governing in Arkansas Southern Ry. Co. v. German Nat. Bank, 77 Ark. 482, supra, and to this extent the judgment is affirmed.

The facts in regard to the 12 bales of cotton are as follows u The compress company was in the habit of issuing one receipt for several bales of cotton, instead of issuing separate receipts for each bale of cotton, and would issue a receipt for as many bales as would be called for by the bill of lading. In shipping out cotton, it was necessary, under the custom then prevailing, to get a turnout order.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 S.W. 154, 87 Ark. 26, 1908 Ark. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-iron-mountain-southern-railway-co-v-citizens-bank-ark-1908.