Tomassi v. Tioga Trust Co.

90 Pa. Super. 292, 1927 Pa. Super. LEXIS 62
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 14, 1926
DocketAppeal 170
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 90 Pa. Super. 292 (Tomassi v. Tioga Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tomassi v. Tioga Trust Co., 90 Pa. Super. 292, 1927 Pa. Super. LEXIS 62 (Pa. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

Linn, J.,

This trial, without a jury, resulted in judgment for plaintiff. Defendant appealed.

*294 1. A Chicago dealer in grapes in transit from California sold to the plaintiff two cars, by the following telegram: “We confirm car Alicante at hundred ten Pacific 1448 shipped twenty-sixth contents 1125 lided lugs net 31550 pounds also car Mataros shipped twenty-third Pacific 11619 Contents 1170 lug net 29135 pounds at ninety government inspection show alicants less than two per cent defects almost perfect and mataros less than four per cent defects absolutely no rot or decay either car total invoice both cars 3046.32 we do not divert car without payment but sell on inspections which guaranteed as above stated wire money to Foreman National Bank payable surrender invoices railroad diversion and delivery orders attached state routing desired Pennsylvania Railway embargoed.”

2. Having bought the grapes, plaintiff made another contract. He arranged with defendant for payment by wire. He testified that he requested the bank “to wire the money to Chicago.” His witness stated: “I showed him [bank clerk] the telegram and I told him I wanted to forward this money to [sellers] through the Foreman National Bank and I impressed upon him he should get the inspection certificate, the way bill and so forth, but the most is the inspection certificate, which would describe the quality of the grapes......” Plaintiff was a depositor and customer of the bank and at that time increased his deposit sufficiently to pay for the grapes. Defendant had no correspondent in Chicago, but immediately telephoned to the Philadelphia National Bank, in Philadelphia, the instructions it had received from plaintiff and requested that bank to wire its Chicago correspondent accordingly. Plaintiff put in evidence the following telegram sent by the Philadelphia National Bank to its Chicago correspondent, the Continental and Commercial Bank: “Charge our account and pay to the Foreman National Bank, Chicago, for account of De Wilde & Co. *295 [sellers] $3046.32 to be paid upon surrender of delivery order, weight and inspection certificate...... By order of the Tioga Trust Company, Philadelphia, must be in refrigerator cars.” The Chicago bank made payment to the seller through or at the Foreman National Bank and received certain documents; while the evidence does not state just what was received, it is clear that no inspection certificates were obtained and that none had ever been issued on these ears. The documents were immediately sent to the Philadelphia National Bank and were promptly delivered to plaintiff by defendant. He made no objection then that there were no inspection certificates. Later, the cars arrived, several days apart. At this point his evidence is: “........ as I opened the car, I noticed they were not the quality I bought and I immediately telegraphed to [sellers] and told them that they were not the grapes that I had ordered, >and they answered they would do their best, they would try to refund some of the money back, and at the same time I had a look over the documents ........” and discovered there were no inspection certificates. He then obtained inspectors from the Federal Department of Agriculture who inspected the grapes at the delivery yard; their certificates describe a condition of rot and defects much in excess of what was specified in sellers’ telegram. Plaintiff then unloaded the cars and ordered their contents sold at public auction and brought suit to recover from the defendant bank, the difference between what he paid and the net sum realized at auction, a subject we need not consider.

The evidence of defendant substantially agrees with the evidence of plaintiff as to the nature of the contract to wire the purchase price to Chicago. Defendant’s witness said, “they wanted me to wire the money to De Wilde and Company [sellers] because the only way that De Wilde would handle the transaction they would *296 have to have the money in their hands before they would divert the cars from Chicago to Philadelphia ...... We wired it through our correspondent, the Philadelphia National Bank.” This witness did, however, say that when he handed the shipping documents to plaintiff before the grapes arrived, he “called their attention” to the fact that no inspection certificates had been received and that plaintiff replied, “Well,they said the draft had been paid for, the best thing they could do was to take the grapes in.” We may add that the car 1448, instead of containing grapes sold as Alicante, contained grapes described by plaintiff’s witness as Mission, the “cost” of which was “about $40 a ton” whereas the Alicante cost, — the witness said — about $120 a ton (the contract stated 110). The car 11619, instead of containing Mataros, contained G-rignolina, described by the witness as a “grade inferior to Mataros.”

3. The statement of claim bases the right to recover on negligence; “that the defendant herein wrongfully and negligently honored the draft of the said [sellers] and......paid or caused to be paid to the Foreman National Bank the depository of said [sellers] the sum of $3046.32 without compelling or having in their possession the inspection certificate of the Department of Agriculture which would indicate the quantity and quality of the grapes.” The plaintiff received the particular cars initialed and numbered as stated in sellers’ telegram, and so far as appears, the quantity of grapes purchased.

On the evidence stated in 1 and 2 above, the court below found that there was a contract by which defendant agreed to pay the purchase price at the sellers’ bank in Chicago, and to receive therefor shipping documents providing for delivery to plaintiff as stated in the telegram and, in addition, an inspection certificate.

*297 To support that, plaintiff argues that the undertaking of defendant was to provide for paying the purchase price in Chicago but not to pay unless the sellers delivered a certificate that one ear contained grapes of the brand Alicante and the other Mataros, and that the defects were within the percentages specified, and that for breach of that obligation — called negligence in his statement — liability results. To sustain his argument, cases are cited to show that an agent is responsible to his principal for failure to perform the contract of agency. But the important question remains; what was the contract? Was it to make payment in Chicago or was it a delegation of authority to direct payment to be made there by a competent sub-agent? The evidence does not support the inference that the defendant was to pay or guarantee the payment of the purchase price only on condition that shipping documents and inspection certificates were delivered showing the brand of grapes and the percentages of defects to be as stated in sellers’ telegram. It is hardly conceivable, and it would be out of the ordinary course of business to expect that a bank, though engaged in the transmission of money, should agree to do what substantially amounts to guaranteeing that the’sellers had complied with their contract of sale, without specific stipulation to that effect and on payment of special consideration. The terms stated in the quoted. testimony of the witness would have been met literally with any inspection certificate without regard to what it stated concerning defects.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cardillo v. Torquato Bros.
57 Pa. D. & C. 293 (Somerset County Court of Common Pleas, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 Pa. Super. 292, 1927 Pa. Super. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tomassi-v-tioga-trust-co-pasuperct-1926.