Sugarland Industries v. Old Colony Trust Co.

6 F.2d 203, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 1996
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 27, 1925
DocketNos. 4306, 4371
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 6 F.2d 203 (Sugarland Industries v. Old Colony Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sugarland Industries v. Old Colony Trust Co., 6 F.2d 203, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 1996 (5th Cir. 1925).

Opinion

WALKER, Circuit Judge.

This suit was' brought by the appellee, Old Colony Trust Company (herein called plaintiff), to enforce its asserted rights- under eight trust receipts, all of the same date, July 23, 1920, executed by the Sugarland Industries, which is herein called the defendant. The terms of the trust receipts and the circumstances under which they were issued are shown by the following statement:

On March 10, 1920, E. R. Sherburne Company entered into a written contract with W. T. Eldridge and S. E. Kemper, whereby Sherburne Company agreed to furnish, f. o. b. cars at Sugarland, Tex., at the' market price, 300,000 bags of Cuban or Porto Rican raw sugars, 50,000 bags monthly commencing about June 1, 1920, and Eldridge & Kemper agreed to advance 80 per cent, of such price, pay all freight, insurance, and other expenses, refine the sugar for a specified toll charge, sell it, reimburse themselves for their outlays, with interest at a stated rate, and pay the balance, if any, less the amount of the refining tolls to Sherburne Company. Eldridge & Kemper assigned to defendant their interest under that contract. On April 16, 1920, Sherburne Company in writing requested plaintiff to open by mail a documentary credit on New York for $893,727.66 in favor of G. H. Finley & Co., available by sight drafts, for 95 per cent, of the invoice value of 16,500 bags of described Cuban sugar; the application setting out the documents required. Accompanying that application was a written instrument, addressed to plaintiff and signed by Sherburne Company, which contained the following:

“We hereby recognize and admit your ownership in and rights to the possession and disposal of all goods, and the proceeds thereof, for which you may come under any engagements in virtue of said credit, as also to the possession of all bills of lading for and policies of insurance on such goods, until such time as any indebtedness or liability at any time existing as against us in favor of yourselves under said credit, or otherwise, or incurred by you as charges or expenses in respect of any shipments, shall have been fully paid; and any such proceeds coming into the possession of yourselves are to be applied against the acceptances .under said credit or against any other indebtedness of ours to you at any time existing, including all expenses incurred by either and commissions of sale and guaranty. Goods imported under said credit shall be paid for or approved security lodged with you before surrender of documents in respect thereof, and in the event you may hereafter intrust any of said goods to us for the purpose of sale or otherwise, we consent that the right of repossession may be exercised at your discretion. Any goods imported under any other credit now or hereafter issued by you for our account, or their proceeds, whether draft against the same shall have been paid or not, or whether the same shall have been delivered to us or not, may be held by you as general collateral security for our account upon the terms and conditions herein named.”

That application was granted, and pursuant thereto plaintiff, which then was informed of the above-mentioned contract between Sherburne Company and defendant, issued its letter of credit in favor of G. H. Finley & Co. for the amount stated in the application; the letter of credit specifying the documents to be attached to drafts drawn under the letter of credit. Sherburne Company used that letter of credit to buy 16,375 bags of raw Cuban sugar, which was shipped from Cuba on May 7th on the steamship Olinda, destined to Galveston, at which place it arrived on May 14th. Plaintiff paid a draft for $851,000, drawn by G. H. Finlay & Co. under that letter of credit, and received the consular invoices and bills of lading for the sugar mentioned. On May 18 plaintiff drew its sight draft on defendant for $680,800, its letter of that date stating: “As per the •terms of your contract with E. R. Sherburne Company, we will draw our sight draft on you for $680,800 through the Guaranty Trust Company of New York on May 24th, this amount being 80 per cent, of the amount of draft, namely, $851,000 accepted by us against the above-mentioned shipment.” On the same day plaintiff’s New York eoigespondent sent to defendant the consular invoices and bills of lading for the sugar, the letter inclosing those documents also indos[205]*205ing another document, which was referred to in the following part of that letter: “We also hand you herewith our customary trust receipt, which kindly sign and return to us at your convenience.”

The defendant retained the invoices and bills of lading so sent to it, and got the sugar called for. by those instruments, but did not sign or return the trust receipt mentioned in the just-quoted request. As results of transactions, each of which had a history practically identical with the one above described, except as to dates, amounts, parties to whom letters of credit were issued, and the sellers of the sugar, the defendant acquired a shipment of sugar which reached Galveston by the steamer Lake Daneey on June 2, 1920, and another shipment which reached Galveston by the same steamer on the same date. By a transaction similar to those above mentioned, except that plaintiff had no connection therewith until after the sugar which was the subject of it was shipped from Cuba and documents therefor were presented in this country, defendant acquired a shipment of sugar by the steamer Tuscan, the invoice and bills of lading for which plaintiff acquired upon paying drafts for the price pursuant to a similar application made to it by Sherburne Company on June 22, 1920. After plaintiff, pursuant to a similar application by Sherburne Company, paid drafts for the price of sugar shipped by the steamer James S. Whitney, it (plaintiff) declined to deliver to defendant the documents representing that sugar until defendant expressly agreed to give plaintiff trust receipts therefor’, and defendant was so advised by plaintiff’s New York correspondent, the National Bank of Commerce. Upon being so advised defendant executed the following:

“July 8, 1920.
“The National Bank of Commerce, 31 Nassau Street, New York City — Gentlemen: In consideration of your forwarding all documents attached to the following drafts: Draft dated July 6th, drawn by the Sugar Planters’ Corp. on you for $93,773.58 at 10 days’ sight, covering shipment of 1,500 bags Cuban centrifugal sugar per the steamship James S. Whitney. Draft drawn by H. H. Pike & Co., dated July 6th, for $226,928.87, at 10 days’ sight, on you, covering 4,000 bags of Cuban centrifugal sugar per the steamship James S. Whitney. The Sugarland Industries will execute a trust receipt covering these same sugars upon receipt of these documents at Galveston, Texas, and will forward said receipt to the Old Colony Trust Company, Boston, Mass., in whose favor it will be made.
Sugarland Industries,
“By W. T. Eldridge.”

As the result of an interview between representatives of the defendant and the plaintiff at the latter’s office in Boston, defendant, on July 12,1920, agreed to issue trust receipts to plaintiff covering the shipments of sugar financed as above stated by plaintiff, and the form of such trust receipts was then agreed on. The following is the trust receipt which covered the sugar embraced in the first above mentioned shipment:

“Old Colony Trust Company Agent’s Receipt.
“Received from Old Colony Trust Company, hereinafter called ‘Trust Company/ the

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6 F.2d 203, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 1996, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sugarland-industries-v-old-colony-trust-co-ca5-1925.