Security Nat. Bank of Dallas v. Farmers' Educational & Co-Op. Warehouse Co.
Security Nat. Bank of Dallas v. Farmers' Educational & Co-Op. Warehouse Co.
Opinion of the Court
On November 2, 1914, Geo-F. Thompson executed 'and delivered to ap-. pellant his promissory note in sum of $480, *650 and on November 7, 1914, another note, in sum of $780. To secure the payment of these notes he delivered to appellants 31 receipts issued by appellee to G. McD. Gamble. Each receipt was for one bale of cotton. A copy of one of the receipts reads:
“Recáipt No. 121.
“Munday, Texas, 10/20/1914.
“Received of G. McD. Gamble of-, county of Knox, state of Tex. Cotton for storage in warehouse of as follows:
Number Marks Weight Class. 561 GD. 536 st. M.
“Charges: Storage, 10c per bale per month. Insurance, 25c per bale per month, classing 10c per bale. Drayage 106 por bale, weighing, 10c per bale. Farmers’ Union Warehouse Co., “R3. By W. E. Gray, Mngr.”
Indorsed:
“G. McD. Gamble.”
The other receipts are of the same tenor and effect except as to numbers, marks, weights, and classifications. The 31 bales of cotton covered by these receipts were incumbered by a mortgage executed by Gamble to the First National Bank of Goree dated December 30, 1913, filed for record January 1, 1914. In the district court of Knox county on March 24, 1915, a decree of foreclosure was entered in favor of the First National Bank of Goree against Gamble, Security National Bank of Dallas, Farmers’ Educational & Co-operative Warehouse Company and others, foreclosing its mortgage upon aforesaid 31 bales of cotton. Thereafter the present suit was filed by appellant against the appellee seeking to recover the 31 bales of cotton or its value to the extent oí the balance due upon the Thompson notes. From an adverse judgment, the Security National Bank of Dallas prosecutes this appeal, and in support of its contention that it is entitled to the relief which it sought asserts this proposition:
“Warehouse receipts issued in October, 1914, by a corporation engaged in operating a public warehouse, which said receipts covered cotton stored in the warehouse issuing the receipts subject to a prior mortgage, but which receipts when issued contained no information or notice of such mortgage, where not stamped or written across their face ‘Not Negotiable,’ or did not have on their face the words ‘Not a Public Warehouse Receipt,’ render the warehouseman issuing such receipts responsible to any legal owner or holder of the receipts acquiring the same for a valuable consideration in due course of trade without knowledge of the existence of the said mortgage on the cotton for any damage which might be occasioned to the owner or holder of the said receipts without notice of the mortg'age as a result of the existence of the mortgage upon the cotton.”
Appellee was incorporated in 1907. During the year 1914 it did a general cotton storage business in the town of Munday, receiving for storage cotton from the general public, making charges therefor. As such it received from Gamble 31 bales of cotton and issued the receipts to cover the same as indicated above. Appellee made no effort to comply and did not in any wise comply with the provisions of chapter 37, First Called Session of Thirty-Third Legislature, providing for a system of public warehouses. Vernon’s Sayles’ R. S. 1914, title 131, articles 7819 to 7827, inclusive. Its warehouse was not controlled, conducted, or managed in accordance with the provisions of such act.
A public warehouseman and public warehouse, within the meaning of the act noted, is thus defined in the first section thereof:
“All persons, firms, companies or corporations who shall receive cotton ⅜ '* * in store for hire, under the provisions of this act, shall be deemed and taken to be public warehousemen; and all warehouses which shall be owned or controlled, conducted and managed in accordance with the provisions of this act, shall be deemed and taken to be public warehouses. * * * ”
“Nothing in this law shall be construed to apply to private warehouses or to the issue of receipts by their owners or managers under existing laws, or to prohibit public warehousemen from issuing such receipts as are now issued by private warehousemen under existing laws: Provided, that such private warehouse receipts issued by public warehousemen shall never be written on a form or blank indicating that it is issued from a public warehouse, but shall, on the j contrary, bear on its face, in large characters, the words ‘Not a Public Warehouse Receipt.’ ”
Affirmed.
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Reference
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