Union Cold Storage & Warehouse Co. v. Pitts

161 S.W. 1182, 176 Mo. App. 134, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 5
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 11, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 161 S.W. 1182 (Union Cold Storage & Warehouse Co. v. Pitts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Cold Storage & Warehouse Co. v. Pitts, 161 S.W. 1182, 176 Mo. App. 134, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 5 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinions

ROBERTSON, P. J.

Plaintiff alleges in its petition that it is engaged in the cold storag;e and warehouse business in the city of Chicago and that at the special instance and request of the defendant it advanced to him the sum of $3300 for which the defendant executed and delivered to it five promissory notes aggregating said sum and that the defendant held in storage with plaintiff in Chicago produce designated and described in various invoices mentioned in said notes which was to be held by the plaintiff as collateral security for said notes; that the collateral contract in said notes provided that the plaintiff should be authorized to sell said produce or any part thereof upon maturity of the notes or at any time thereafter or before in the event that said security depreciated [137]*137in value in the opinion of the plaintiff, and that such ■sale might be made privately or publicly, without advertising or giving any notice to the maker of the notes, and plaintiff should apply the proceeds to the payment of the notes, or any other liability of the defendant to plaintiff, including interest and all expenses, and that in case the proceeds so derived were not sufficient to cover the principal, interest and all expenses, the defendant should pay the deficiency forthwith after such sale. Plaintiff' further alleges that the produce designated in said invoices consisted of dressed poultry to the amount of $2551, which the plaintiff sold under the terms of said notes and applied said amount to the credit of the defendant on the said notes, leaving a balance due of forty-rune dollars on one of the notes and $700 on another of the notes, exclusive of interest on all of said notes. The plaintiff further alleges that the defendant deposited with it other and further warehouse warrants for produce to the value of $717.24, which were sold by the plaintiff, and that the defendant paid in cash the sum of $9.35, making the total amount received on additional collateral $726.59; that there was charged against the defendant interest on said notes amounting to $173.71, insurance on produce in storage $34.47, storage charge $293.16, cartage, labor and packing $46.21, maldng a total of $547.55, leaving a balance due the defendant on said additional collateral account of $179.04, and that after deducting the said last named sum from the balance due on said promissory notes there was a balance of $569.96 due and owing the plaintiff from the defendant, for which amount it prayed judgment, together with interest from April 19, 1912.'

The defendant filed his answer to plaintiff’s petition alleging as a counterclaim that in the year 1910 he stored with plaintiff in Chicago chickens and turkeys of the total value of $4851.38, and that on or about [138]*138June 21,1911, lie demanded possession of said turkeys and ordered and directed the plaintiff to deliver same to another company in Chicago, and that on or about June 29, 1911, he demanded possession of all of said chickens and ordered and directed the plaintiff to deliver the. same to a third company in Chicago, and that these two companies demanded possession of said fowls so sold to them and that the plaintiff failed and refused to deliver any of them but converted the same to its own use, all of which said poultry was then of the reasonable value of $4851.38; and that by reason of the failure and refusal of the plaintiff to deliver the property as aforesaid the defendant has been damaged in said sum, for which, together with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from June 29,1911, the defendant asked judgment. And for another cause of action against the plaintiff the defendant alleged that he was in possession of the property aforesaid of the value above stated and that plaintiff without any authority converted the same to its own use to his damage in the amount above stated, for which judgment, with interest, was prayed.

Plaintiff filed its reply in the nature of a general denial, the trial on the issues was had to the court and judgment rendered and entered by the court against the plaintiff on its petition and 'in favor of the defendant on his counterclaim in the sum of $670, after allowing plaintiff credit for all sums advanced to defendant on the promissory notes together with interest, storage, expense Af sale, and all claims for money advanced and expended for and in behalf of the defendant. Prom this judgment the plaintiff has appealed.

The testimony discloses that for a number of years previous to the transactions involved here the defendant has been engaged in collecting, dressing and shipping fowls to the plaintiff for cold storage in its warehouse in Chicago and for sale on commission, and that [139]*139the plaintiff would advance to the defendant upon such property so shipped and stored certain sums of money agreed upon between them, which the defendant would collect by sight draft and the plaintiff would thereafter forward to the defendant, for his signature and return, an agreement in the nature of a promissory note and a collateral security contract covering the warehouse warrant for the merchandise stored. Prior to June 21, 1911, the price of chickens and turkeys in Chicago began to decline and the defendant became anxious to dispose of the poultry and discharge his obligation to the plaintiff. He thereupon agreed with the two firms above referred to for the sale of the property and so instructed plaintiff and directed plaintiff to deliver same to them, with the understanding that those parties would pay plaintiff the purchase price thereof, which was more than sufficient to pay all of the obligations owed by defendant to plaintiff, and that the plaintiff refused to so deliver the property but thereafter disposed of said produce, as it contends, under its collateral agreement, with the result set out in the petition. The only reason plaintiff gave for not complying with defendant’s request was that one of its officers did not like the parties to whom the defendant had sold the property, although there is no testimony introduced in behalf of the plaintiff which discloses that these parties were not financially responsible and entirely reliable business concerns and although in fact many sales in the same manner had theretofore been made by the defendant to them. The value of a portion of the property alleged to have been converted by the plaintiff was made up of a number of consignments of turkeys which the defendant alleges to have been of the value of $1197.86. At no time had the plaintiff ever made any advancement to the defendant on account of these shipments.

The trial proceeded upon the theory in behalf of the plaintiff that it was not bound to sell the property [140]*140at the market value in June, 1911, for the benefit of defendant and consequently objected, and insists here upon the objection, that the court erred in permitting the defendant to prove the market value of the property at the time it is alleged the plaintiff converted the same. The defendant’s position here is that it was encumbent upon plaintiff under the circumstances disclosed in this case to dispose of the property at the time he requested the sale and that the plaintiff could not arbitrarily refuse to comply with his request and thereafter sell the property upon a declining market and arbitrarily compel the defendant to suffer loss by reason thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
161 S.W. 1182, 176 Mo. App. 134, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-cold-storage-warehouse-co-v-pitts-moctapp-1913.