Judges: Lathrop
Filed Date: 9/9/1905
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/9/2024
This is a bill in equity filed in the Superior Court by certain creditors of the Keen Sutterlee Company, to restrain the defendants, who were also originally creditors of the Keen Sutterlee Company, from prosecuting a suit brought by the defendants in the Superior Court against the same company. The bill is reported in full in the case of Moors v. Ladenburg, 178 Mass. 272, where it came before the court on an appeal from a decree of the Superior Court dismissing the bill for want of jurisdiction. It was then held by us that the court had jurisdiction. On the case going back to the Superior Court, it was referred to a master who filed a report, to which the defendants filed many exceptions.
A judge of the Superior Court heard the case on the exceptions and entered a decree overruling the exceptions, and confirming the master’s report, and reported the case to this
The plaintiffs attached certain goods of the Keen Sutterlee Company subsequently to an attachment made by the defendants, and the bill proceeds upon the ground that after the bringing of the suit the defendants’ claim against the Keen Sutterlee Company had been satisfied.
The defendants were bankers doing business in New York. Before the failure of the Keen Sutterlee Company, on January 10, 1896, the defendants had issued letters of credit in favor of that company, by which the company was authorized to make drafts. The defendants were entitled to have the bills of lading and other documents of title to the goods bought by the company transmitted to them, and they were to have “ a specific claim or lien on all property, goods or merchandise, and the proceeds thereof which may have been paid for directly or indirectly by bills drawn under said credit.”
The controversy between the parties to the present suit is whether the proceeds from two transactions, one relating to forty bales of goat skins, and the other to certain lots of glycerine should be credited to the Keen Sutterlee Company in its account with the defendants. The defendants conceded that if they should be so credited the defendants had been paid all that was due them.
The facts found by the master in regard to the goat skins may be stated as follows: On October 28,1895, the defendants issued to the Keen Sutterlee Company a letter of credit for fifty thousand francs under the form of contract stated in the report.
On November 16, 1895, the forty bales of goat skins, with other goods bought by the Keen Sutterlee Company, were shipped at Naples for New York, and a draft representing the invoice cost of the goods, and maturing March 2,1896, was drawn against the bill of lading pursuant to the letter of credit. The draft was accepted by the defendants’ foreign correspondents.
On December 30, 1895, the skins arrived in New York. The defendants surrendered to the Keen Sutterlee Company the bill of lading, taking from the latter a receipt in which the Keen Sutterlee Company declared that it held the merchandise as the property of the defendants with liberty to sell the same as their
The contention of the defendants is that, as under the receipt given by the Keen Sutterlee Company, the defendants had absolute title to the forty bales of goat skins, they were under no obligation to credit the Keen Sutterlee Company with the proceeds of the skins. In point of fact they did so credit them, and the master has found that this account was the only account kept by the defendants of their dealings in matters in which the Keen Sutterlee Company might be interested as of a time subsequently to its failure, and that it represented the true state of the account between the defendants and the Keen Sutterlee Company, as the defendants represented it to be; that it was in substance an account kept by the defendants to show the state of account between them and the Keen Sutterlee Company in which as of a time subsequently to its failure the Keen Sutterlee Company was interested.
We are of opinion that on the facts found by the master the defendants cannot now contend that the proceeds of the bales of skins ought not to be credited to the account of the Keen Sutterlee Company.
The facts as to the glycerine are as follows: The Keen Sut
The defendants’ contention (and they introduced evidence tending to prove it), was that what was done by them in refer
It appeared that the balance of the glycerine was in its delivery somewhat delayed beyond the time fixed in the original contract, and it appeared in evidence that in a letter written February 4, 1896, by Neuflize and Company, they being the correspondents and agents abroad of the defendants, they said “in accordance with your reply by cable we have yesterday given Messrs. E. R. & Co. (meaning Renault & Co.) the guaranty against all action by the Keen-S. Co. which they demand and confirmed the credits most formally extending by one month their duration.”
The master further found on all the evidence, that when the letters of credit issued by the defendants in favor of the Keen Sutterlee Company were cancelled, and when they (Renault and Company) learned of the failure of the Keen Sutterlee Company, they were in doubt as to what their situation was and as to what their legal obligations, duties and privileges were; that
But the master further found as a fact that the defendants were at all times doubtful as to whether they could take to themselves personally the benefit of the possible profits arising from the execution of the balance of the glycerine contract, and that that doubt was evidenced by the way in which they kept their account of these transactions, meaning by that the way in which they kept the account. “To my mind” the master adds “it is inconceivable, if the defendants had felt certain and were convinced (when they obtained from Renault and Company a promise of the execution of the balance of the contract) that they (the defendants) were dealing with Renault and Company solely in their (the defendants’) own rights, that they should have kept the account as it was kept,” and the master found and reported as a fact that they did believe that their dealings as to the balance of the glycerine contract were dealings as to which they might have to account to the representative of the Keen Sutterlee Company or to anybody who might have a rightful claim in that respect; that they hoped especially in view of their correspondence with the receiver of the Keen Sutterlee Company and in view of his conduct in the matter, that
The master further found that the defendants were justified in believing, and they did believe, that the receiver of the Keen Sutterlee Company did not object, and in fact consented, so far as he was concerned, to the defendants’ dealing with the balance of the glycerine on their own account. The receiver and assignee of the Keen Sutterlee Company has never made any claim to anything in connection with the glycerine transactions occurring subsequent to the failure of that company. And the master further found and reported as a fact so far as the matter is a question of fact, that the defendants should account in this case for the proceeds received from the execution of the balance of the glycerine contract, being credited in such account with all proper charges and disbursements suffered by them and made by them in this connection.
It seems to us that it was purely a question of fact whether the defendants obtained the glycerine under the Keen SutterleeCompany’s contract or under their independent contract with, Renault and Company. The master having found that they obtained it under the former contract, it follows that the defendants have been paid, and that the plaintiffs are entitled to a decree in their favor.
So ordered.