Rice v. Kendall
Rice v. Kendall
Opinion of the Court
Walker sold a lot of gunny bags to Kendall, Toe & Go., and for the price took their negotiable notes at six months, which ho afterwards transferred to the plaintiffs, Rice & Hathaway.
At the time Walker sold the gunny bags to Kendall, Toe <& Go., they were stored in a wai'ehouse kept by himself. The delivery was effected by giving them his own storage receipt for the bags. Kendall, Toe & Go. then sold the same lot of bags to one Kerchkal for cash, and Kerchkal sold them on a credit to the intervenors, S. H. Kennedy Go. Both these sales were effected through a broker, who caused a delivery to be made by handing Walker's storage receipt to S. H. Kennedy & Go., after it had been endorsed in blank by Kendall, Toe & Go. All this took place while the latter firm was in good credit. On the 24th of April they were protested, and on the morning of the 25th. Kennedy & Go. presented the warehouse receipt to Walker and demanded their gunny bags. He declined giving them up until he had consulted his attorney, stating that he had heard of the failure of Kendall, Toe & Go., and might make himself liable to the syndic or some one else.
Shortly afterwards the plaintiffs caused the bags to be sequestered, alleging that they were the holders of the notes Kendall, Toe & Co. had given to Walker for the price, and as such were entitled to the vendor’s privilege. Kennedy & Go. intervened in the suit and claimed the bags as owners. They had judgment recognizing their rights and the plaintiffs have appealed.
It is clear that Kendall, Yoe & Oo. had parted with all the possession they ever had, and the vendors lien vanished with the possession. 0. 0. 8194, 3184, No. 7. There were two distinct sales in good faith of the same property, one from Kendall, Yoe & Go. to Kerehival, and the other from Kerehival to the intervenors. There was a symbolical tradition of the property by the delivery of the storage receipt endorsed by Kendall, Yoe & Go. They no longer had- any control over the gunny bags, having transferred their ownership; and the warehouse receipt'whióh was the symbol of possession, to an innocent third person for a valuable consideration. After he gave out his storage receipt',’" Wallcer had no possession of the bags in his own right. He was a mere bailee, holding in trust for the real owner.. Ilis possession was the owner’s possession. He had no interest in the bags, except to the amount of his storage account, and was bound to deliver them to the holder of his endorsed receipt, upon its presentation, and a tender of the storage bill. Before the plaintiff took any step to sequester the bags, the intervenors had presented that receipt to Walker and offered to pay the storage. He could not divest or impair the rights of the intervenors thus perfected against all the world, by refusing to deliver the bags to their rightful owners.
The Act “ concerning pledges,” approved February 12th, 1852, (Session Acts, p. 15) in its second section, recognizes a warehouse receipt as evidence both of title and possession; “the delivery of property on deposit in a warehouse, shall pass by the private assignment of the warehouse receipt, so as to authorize the owner to pledge such property.” See also, Wilkes & Fontaine v. Ferris, 5 Johns. 343. Gardner v. Howland, 2 Pick. 599. Chapman v. Searle, 3 Pick. 38.
It is therefore, ordered and decreed that the judgment of the District Court be affirmed with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Rice & Hathaway v. Kendall, Yoe & Co.—S. H. Kennedy & Co., Intervenors
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published