Standard Bonded Warehouse Co. v. Cooper & Griffin, Inc.

30 F.2d 842, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1008
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 26, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 30 F.2d 842 (Standard Bonded Warehouse Co. v. Cooper & Griffin, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Bonded Warehouse Co. v. Cooper & Griffin, Inc., 30 F.2d 842, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1008 (W.D.N.C. 1929).

Opinion

Findings of Fact.

HAYES, District Judge.

(1) That at the time of the institution of this action Cooper & Griffin, Inc., was indebted to the plaintiff for storage charges on cotton, which had been released prior to the bringing of this action, in the sum of $3,485.49.

(2) That at the time of the institution of this action Cooper & Griffin, Ine., had on storage with the plaintiff in its warehouse 97 bales of cotton.

(3) That at the said time there had been issued by the plaintiff to Cooper & Griffin, Inc., negotiable warehouse receipts for the said 97 bales of cotton, and the said receipts had been transferred by Cooper & Griffin, Inc., to the American Trust Company as collateral security for the payment of a note, copy of which is attached hereto, marked exhibit A, and made a part hereof, all of the said warehouse receipts being identical, except for the description of the cotton repre[843]*843sented and the date. A copy of one of said warehouse receipts is hereto attached, marked Exhibit B, and by reference made a part hereof.

(4) That the defendant, Cooper So Griffin, Inc., is and was a nonresident corporation of the state of North Carolina, having been duly chartered, organized, and doing business under and by virtue of the laws of the state of South Carolina, and having a branch, office in the city of Charlotte, state of North Carolina, and was engaged in tho business of buying and selling cotton.

(5) That in the United States District Court of America, in and for the Western District of South Carolina, in equity, in an action therein instituted by the Erlangen Cotton Mills Company, complainant, against tho said Cooper So Griffin, Inc., defendant, D. E. McCuen and George P. Robinson were appointed receivers of Cooper & Griffin, Inc., upon a bill of equity filed by the said complainant in their behalf, and in behalf of all other creditors, which appointment was made by his honor, H. H. Watkins, United States District Judge in and for the Western District of South Carolina, on the 23d day of August, 1928, a copy of which order is filed in the above-entitled action, and is hereby referred to, and the said receivers duly qualified as such.

The foregoing facts are agreed to and the court finds the following additional facts:

(6) The court finds that the transcript of the record certified to this court by the clerk of the superior court of Mecklenburg county, N. C., is correct, and embodies in its findings of fact all fads which are disclosed by that record, from which it appears, among other things, that the summons was issued on the 5th day of September, 1928, and the complaint was filed on t.ha,t date. The restraining order was signed by Hon. W. P. Harding, judge of the superior court, resident judge of the Fourteenth judicial district of North Carolina, having jurisdiction to grant the order; that the summons, restraining order, and the attachment papers were served by the sheriff of Mecklenburg county of the American Trust Company, Cooper So Griffin, Inc., and tho Standard Bonded Warehouse Company on September 5,1928, and that tho notice of levy on the warehouse certificates was served by the American Trust Company, the holder of the certificates, on September 12,1928.

(7) That the sheriff served tho summons, restraining order, and the attachment papers on the American Trust Company and Cooper & Griffin, Inc., first, and then served the same papers on tho Standard Bonded Warehouse Company, at which time ho made levy on the cotton, as shown hv his return.

(8) The sheriff did not actually take the cotton into his physical possession, but the manager in charge of the Standard Bonded Warehouse told him that he had tho 97 bales of cotton there in the warehouse, and agreed to hold it there subject to tho order of tho sheriff and the court, and the sheriff did not see tho cotton, or do anything’ else with respect to identifying it or taking it into his actual custody.

(9) On September 5, .1928, tho Amorte,m Trust Company had the original warehouse receipts for 97 bales of cotton belonging to the defendant, which were in storage in the warehouse of the plaintiff, hut between that date and September 12 the American Trust-Company sold 48 hales of cotton and applied the said proceeds as a credit on the note, Exhibit A, which constituted a credit of $3,805.-48 on September 8, 1928, and the remainder of the cotton, with the exception of 12 bales, which is still in storage, was sold by consent of the parties, and the proceeds held by the American Trust Company to abide final judgment of this court, after discharging- the liability of Cooper So Griffin, Inc., to the American Trust Company, that may be determined by provisions contained in Exhibit A.

(10) ' That the American Trust Company, after paying the amount of the note, Exhibit A, still retains $2,495.75, but it claims that by the provision set out in the note, Exhibit A, it has a rig-ht to apply said proceeds in payment of any liability of Cooper So Griffin. Inc., to it, and that it is surety for Cooper & Griffin, Inc., to the Southern Railway Company for freight charges in the penal sum of $2,000, and that Cooper So Griffin, Inc.,’ has failed to pay said sum, and that it has been called on to pay the amount of its said bond; but the court does not now pass on the right of the American Trust! Company to retain said $2,000, and leaves that question for later determination.

(11) The storage charges now due on tho 12 bales of cotton in the warehouse of plaintiff is $38.75, and tho plaintiff is entitled to 25 cents per month per hale for storage charges, so long as the cotton remains in its warehouse.

(12) That J. M. Vanhoy is secretary-treasurer of the Standard Bonded Warehouse Company, and saw in tho newspaper an account of the appointment of the receivers by the United States District Court in South Carolina for the defendant Cooper So Grif[844]*844fin, Inc., some two weeks before the issuance of the summons, restraining order, and at-' taehment papers in this cause, but had no other knowledge of such appointment, and commenced this proceeding as the result of what occurred in South Carolina.

(13) The defendant, Cooper & Griffin, Inc., served notice of a motion to remove this cause from the superior court of North Carolina to the United States District Court for the Western District of North Carolina, to be heard September 13,-1928, on the ground that the amount in controversy exceeded $3,000, that plaintiff was a citizen of North Carolina and the defendant a citizen of South Carolina. and the order of removal was made September 13, 1928, and the order to show cause why the injunction should not be made permanent was returnable before the superior court judge on September 14, 1928.

(14) The court finds the sale and disposition of the proceeds of the cotton by the American Trust Company to be as set forth in the statement filed by Mr. Davenport, which is marked Exhibit D.

(15) In the course of plaintiff’s evidence, defendant handed the court the two motions, referred to as Exhibits E 'and P, but the-attorney for the defendant stated he had some motions to dissolve the restraining order and dismiss the attachment about the time the case was called for trial.

(16) That the bill in equity and the answer in the ease of Erlanger Cotton Mills Co. v. Cooper &

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30 F.2d 842, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1008, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-bonded-warehouse-co-v-cooper-griffin-inc-ncwd-1929.