Supreme Court of Canada
Milloy v. Kerr, 8 S.C.R. 474
Date: 1880-02-03
Donald Milloy (Plaintiff)
Appellant;
and
John Kerr et al. (Defendants)
Respondents.
1879: June 18, 19; 1880: February 3.
Present: Sir W.J. Ritchie, C.J.; and Strong,
Fournier, Henry, Taschereau and Gwynne, JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Warehouse receipts—34 Vic., ch. 5 D—Right of
property.
At the request of the Consolidated Bank, to
whom the Canada Car Company owed a large sum of money, M.
consented to act as warehouseman to the company for the purpose of
[Page 475]
storing certain car wheels and pig iron, so
that they could obtain warehouse receipts upon which to raise money. The
company granted M. a lease for a year of a portion of their premises,
upon which the wheels and iron were situate, in consideration of $5. The
Consolidated Bank then gave him a written guarantee that the goods should be
forthcoming when required, and he therefore issued a warehouse receipt to the
company for the property, which they endorsed to the Standard Bank and obtained
an advance thereon, which they paid to the Consolidated Bank.
It appeared that M. was a warehouseman
carrying on business in another part of the city; that he acquired the lease
for the purpose of giving warehouse receipts to enable the company to obtain an
advance from the Consolidated Bank; and that he had not seen the property
himself, but had sent his foreman to examine it before giving the receipt,
In February, 1877, an attachment in
insolvency issued against the company, and K. et al., as their assignees
in insolvency, took possession of the goods covered by this receipt, claiming
them as part of the assets of the estate. M. then sued K, et al.
in trespass and trover for the taking.
Held, per Strong,
Taschereau and Gwynne, JJ., (affirming the judgment of the Court of
Appeal, and that of the Court of Queen’s Bench,) that M. never had any
actual possession, control over, or property in, the goods in question, so as
to make the receipt given by M., under the circumstances in this case, a
valid warehouse receipt within the meaning of the clauses in that behalf in the
Banking Act.
[Per Ritchie, C.J., and Fournier
and Henry, JJ., contra, that M. quoad these goods was a
warehouseman within the meaning of 34 Vic., ch. 5 D, so as to make his
receipt endorsed effectual to pass the property to the Standard Bank for the
security of the loan made to the company in the usual course of its banking
business].
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for Ontario, affirming a judgment of the Court of Queen’s Bench, making
absolute a rule nisi to set aside a verdict for the plaintiff. The
pleadings and facts fully appear in the reports of the case in 43 U.C.Q.B. 78,
and 3 Ont. App. R. 350 and in the judgments hereinafter given.
[Page 476]
Dr. McMichael, Q.C., and Mr. J.K. Kerr,
Q.C., for appellant:
The following, among other authorities, were
relied on by counsel for appellant: R.C. Bank v. Ross; Kough v. Price; Burke v. McWhirter; Watson v. Henderson; Union St. Jacques Montreal v. Dame
Julie Belisle; Browne’s
Actions at Law; Bauerman
v. Radenius; Smith’s
Leading Cases; Philips
v. Bateman; Re
Coleman.
Mr. Robinson, Q.C., and Mr. George Kerr,
jr., for respondent.
The learned council cited the following
authorities: Bump on Bankruptcy;
Clarke on Insolvency; In
re Butler; Borland
v. Phillips; Coates
v. Joslin; Mathers
v. Lynch; Newton
v. Ontario Bank; Davidson
v. Ross; Gordon
v. Harper; Owen
v. Knight; Bradley
v. Copley; Smith
v. Miller; Great
Western Railway Company v. Hodgson;
Deady v. Goodenough; Glass
v. Whitney; Paice
v. Walker; Royal
Canadian Bank v. Miller; Todd
v. Liverpool, London and Globe Insurance Company; Bank of British North America v.
Clarkson.
[Page 477]
RITCHIE, C.J.:—
This was an action in which plaintiff alleges
that defendants broke and entered certain lands of the plaintiff and took and
carried away and converted to their own use goods, railway car wheels and pig
iron, &c. of plaintiffs. The defendants claim the property in dispute as joint
official assignee of the estate of the Toronto Car Wheel Company.
These goods originally belonged to that company,
and plaintiff’s contention is, that he being a warehouseman, and the said
company wishing to have the said goods warehoused with him, and not wishing to
incur the expense and inconvenience of transferring the goods from where they
then were, on the company’s property, to plaintiff’s usual place of business on
Front street, at the foot of Yonge street, in the city of Toronto,
by indenture made on the 15th Dec., made and executed under the seal of the
company, in consideration of the rents and covenants therein contained, demised
and leased to the plaintiff, his executors and administrators and assigns, all
that certain parcel or tract of land forming part of the premises presently
occupied by the said lessors, and situate at the north-west corner of Front
and Cherry streets, in said city, and which may be described as follows:
“Commencing at the south-east corner of the premises of one Huggard,
thence easterly along the north side of Front street eighty feet, thence
northerly and parallel with the east limit of said Huggard’s premises
one hundred and fifty-four feet three inches, thence westerly parallel with Front
street eighty feet to premises of said Huggard, thence southerly along
the east limit of said Huggard’s premises to Front street;” for
the term of one year, from the 15th December, 1876, paying therefore yearly $5
at the expiration of the term with certain covenants not material to be noticed;
upon which property the goods in question were.
[Page 478]
This property was staked off, and plaintiff
entered into the possession thereof and of these goods, and granted to the said
company a warehouse receipt as follows:
Received in store in the yard or place near
the corner of Front and Cherry street, Toronto, fourteen
hundred car wheels and three hundred and fifty tons pig iron from the Toronto
Car Wheel Company of Toronto, to be delivered pursuant to the order of
the said Toronto Car Wheel Company to be endorsed thereon.
This is to be regarded as a receipt under
the provisions of statute 34 Vic., ch. 5 of the Statutes of Canada,
intituled “An Act relating to Banks and Banking.” The said car wheels and pig
iron are separate from, and will be kept separate and distinguishable from
other grain, wares, manufactures or merchandize,
Donald
Milloy.
Dated Toronto, Dec. 20th, 1876.
The object of giving this lease and getting the
warehouse receipts, the manager of the company says, was to raise money.
It was for the purpose of raising money to
take up our paper as it became due with the Consolidated Bank. This receipt was
endorsed over to the Standard Bank of Canada.
The evidence of plaintiff’s foreman shows that
he went down to see that the iron was there, and he says:
There were stakes put there, and a place
squared off; I went down to see that the iron was there; I went down also when
I had an order to deliver any; I was disposing of it, or some of it, the same
as I would at our own place when I got an order; I was aware that a lease had
been granted to Mr. Milloy, and from it I exercised control over the
place; I know the quantities delivered to the Toronto Car Wheel Company;
30, 10, 20, and 10; and two loads of iron, 5 tons in each lot; the first order
is dated the 27th December, and was for 30 car wheels; January 10th, 10 car
wheels; January 15th, 20 wheels; February 20, 10 wheels; and 5 tons of iron on
same date; the day I delivered the stuff, I put the figures down in my book; on
the 27th, 5 tons of iron were delivered; these were all the deliveries; I never
counted them; I went to count them twice but there was so much on the wheels, I
could not see them; there was a large quantity there; all that was there was
taken away by the defendants; I don’t know the number myself;
Cross-Examined.—I am in the employ of Mr. Milloy; where I am
[Page 479]
principally, is Yonge street wharf;
this place he had; I don’t know that he had any other place leased for that
purpose that I am aware of; I have been with him I suppose about nine years; I
went down many times there; I was down early in December, about the time the
lease was made; the first entry is a delivery of iron; that is my book, in
which, when the orders were given, through my hands, I put an entry when I delivered;
I asked Mr. Milloy if I would keep an account of my time going down
there; that is wholly my writing there; that across the page was all put there
on the second of January; I had been down several times before that; our
deliveries are before that; I have put in ink over that—1876; on January 25th I
went and measured the yard of the Toronto Car Wheel Company leased by Milloy—83
by 132 feet, and found it correct; that was the first time I measured it and
the last; I did not measure it when I first went down; I went down by Mr. Milloy’s
orders; it might be the day previous he ordered me to go down; it was about
January 25th, 1877, I measured the piece of the yard that was leased; I went
down previously, but I had no memorandum; I was down, on Mr. Milloy’s
instructions; I did not think of keeping any time until I was losing time
delivering car wheels; I had to stop there while they were taking the loads
away; he first told me about measuring the land about the time it is entered
there, I went and did that; I could go out and in then at all times; I went
into the office or in at the gate if it was open; I was in the office at all
times when I went there, except when I went down to move the wheels; we had to
go in at the gate; that part of the property is embraced exactly in the lease.
Donald Milloy—I am plaintiff in this case; I am a wharfinger and steamboat agent,
carry on business on Front street, and at the foot of Yonge
street; I have carried on my business on Front street for a number of
years; that is the only place I have been carrying on my business as a
warehouseman outside of this transaction; Mr. Turnbull came to me first
and spoke to me; I do not remember his christian name; he was in the
Consolidated Bank at that time; I think he was cashier, but I am not certain.
Examination resumed—In consequence of what Mr. Turnbull said to me I got this lease; I
think he came himself first, and then afterwards Mr. Gartshore came with
him; that lease was then taken; I don’t know who drew the lease out; I don’t remember
who brought it to my office; I never saw the lease until left in my office all
ready prepared and executed; I was never asked to sign that lease; I forgot the
time the lease was left; at my office; it was some time in December, I think,
of the year 1876; I think the lease will show the date; I do not remember any
discussion with Gartshore or Turnbull as to the
[Page 480]
terms of the lease; I understood a part of
the property was to be staked out; it was to be the part this property was
stored on; there was no particular discussion as to the land to be leased; I
think it was $5.00 rent I paid; the land is described in the lease; I got it
for $5.00—80 by 154; I don’t know that that was a very cheap lease; it depends
on what you can do with the property; I paid them that $5,00 by cheque; that is
the cheque that I gave, payable to John Gartshore, dated 19th December;
I charged that $5.00 in the books; I have got my book here; I produce it; I
have my ledger here also; I turn up the account of the Toronto Car Wheel
Company; the book-keeper charged the Consolidated on December 19th with $5.00;
on the day after I got cash, $50.00; it was a cheque; he was at the office when
I came in; I really forget who gave the cheque; I suppose it came from the Toronto
Car Wheel Company; I see the book-keeper has balanced it by profit and loss; he
never asked me what to charge; that is an entry of his own; that is the only
ledger account I have with the Car Wheel Company; March 31st, profit and loss,
$45; when I took that lease I got a letter of guarantee from the Consolidated
Bank, guaranteeing the property being there, and being forthcoming; that is the
letter I got, dated 20th December, 1876 (Exhibit 5); as a warehouseman, I do
not remember ever taking such a guarantee before as that; the property was so
far away; this was a special transaction; Mr. Turnbull told me the Car
Wheel Company wanted to raise some money; I don’t know who got the warehouse
receipt; I signed it, left it with the book-keeper in the office, and some one
called and got it; perhaps the book-keeper took it to the bank; I don’t know;
my man went down at the time I got the lease, to see that the car wheels and
the pig iron was there; I do not know whether I got the letters the same day
that I gave the warehouse receipts or not.
Cross-examined by Mr. Cameron—I really do not remember who suggested the lease in the first
place, whether Mr. Turnbull or myself, I cannot say; when I was applied
to for a warehouse receipt I told them the property was too far, and suggested
the removal of the property up to Yonge street, but they preferred doing
it in this way, to save double handling and the costs that would be incurred;
the lease was suggested at this time 5 I know I would not have granted a
warehouse receipt unless I had the lease; when it was so far away, I desired
something more than the goods guaranteed, we generally receive ten cents a ton
a month for storing iron; I had no commission other than the $50; that was all
I received.
I think the plaintiff had the legal title to and
was legally in possession of the land under this lease, and
[Page 481]
had a right to carry on his business of a
warehouseman on these premises so leased to him, and having, by his foreman,
entered and taken actual possession of the goods on the land, the land and the
goods were in fact and in law under his control as a warehouseman; he was in a
position to give the warehouse receipt, and, when he so gave it, he became
responsible for the property to those to whom he gave the receipt, or to
whomsoever the same might be duly indorsed, and that he was not limited to
carry on his business of a warehouseman to one place of business more than
another; that he had a right to carry on his business in the place or places
most suitable and convenient therefor, so long as the premises on which such
business was carried on were in his possession and the goods in his custody and
under his control, and I can see nothing in the fact of his having a guarantee
from a third party for the safety of the goods in the place in which they were
stored, and for their being forthcoming, that can in any way invalidate his
liability as a warehouseman to the bonâ fide holder of the receipt.
The point of this case then, it seems to me,
turns simply upon the question: was there such an indebtedness of the Toronto
Car Wheel Co’y to the Standard Bank as could be secured by the indorsement of a
warehouse receipt? I may say at the outset, that I can discover nothing
whatever in the evidence to show that, so far as the Standard Bank is
concerned, there was any infringement of any of the provisions of the Insolvent
Act, or that the security was in any way invalidated or injuriously affected by
that Act, or that there was anything collusive or fraudulent, illegal or
improper in the transaction, either with reference to the Toronto Car
Wheel Company or their creditors. As I read the evidence, the Car Company were
indebted to the Consolidated Bank, who held what they, for a time, considered a
valid warehouse
[Page 482]
receipt for these goods, but which was either
not a valid security, or the party giving it would not continue to hold the
goods, or both. That the position of the dealings between the Consolidated Bank
and the company was such that the company could not give a good security to the
bank by means of a warehouse receipt, by reason of the past indebtedness of the
claim of the bank against the company; that the bank was desirous of obtaining
a settlement, and payment of all claims due or not due from the company to the
bank, and, for the accomplishment of this, was anxious they (the company)
should obtain a new loan from other parties to whom they might be able to give
a valid security. I can see no impropriety in the bank rendering the company
assistance by advice, or recommendation, or by asking another bank to make a
loan to the company to enable them to obtain means to discharge their
indebtedness, So far as the Standard Bank is concerned, I cannot discover from
the evidence that they were in any way informed or knew the nature and
particulars or state of the transaction between the Consolidated Bank and the
company, or had any information to lead them to suppose the company were in
insolvent circumstances; on the contrary, they seem to me to have accepted in
good faith the recommendation of the Consolidated Bank; and on estimating the
value of the securities and finding the security ample, and believing the
transaction was a safe and good one, took it up in the usual and orderly course
of banking business. The evidence on this point seems very clear and
conclusive.
The indebtedness, for the security of which the
ware-house receipt was indorsed over to the Standard Bank, Stevens the
discount clerk of the Standard Bank says, was on a note dated 20th December,
same day as the warehouse receipt for $21,400, which he says
[Page 483]
was discounted by the Standard Bank in the
ordinary course of business on the credit of that receipt.
Cross-examined—My duty in the bank is discount clerk; that note was brought to me
and discounted; Mr. Brodie, the cashier of the bank, brought me the
note; I discounted it for the Toronto Car Wheel Company; I gave
$20,999.27; I gave the money to the manager of the Toronto Car Wheel
Company, Mr. Gartshore; I know nothing at all about it, beyond the
handing of the note to me by Mr. Brodie; I know nothing about the
warehouse receipts; all I know is the note was handed to me, and I discounted
it; the money was paid in bills; I don’t know where the money went after that;
I don’t know if the Consolidated Bank had discounted any paper with us.
The cashier of the Standard Bank, says:
John L. Brodie—I am cashier of the Standard Bank; it was Mr. Turnbull
called to see me; he asked if I was open to take up a transaction which they
would recommend; I said I would see; he stated the nature of the security; as
our Vice-President, W.F. Cowan, would know something about the value of
these things, I asked to leave it until I would see him; after seeing him, and
estimating the value of the securities, as we had a friendly feeling to the
Consolidated Bank, and they asked us to take it up, we, finding the security
ample, took it up; I did not take it up without consulting the Vice-President
and the President also, I do not know anything but that they recommended the
transaction as safe and good; when a bank recommends to another, there would be
an honourable understanding, I think, to the effect not to allow them to suffer
loss; the securities were recommended as perfectly good, by the Consolidated
Bank; we loaned the money in the usual way.
Q. You knew that the Toronto Car
Wheel Company kept their account with the Consolidated Bank? A. Very likely I
knew that.
Q. Did they tell you their solicitors had
recommended them to get through you? A. They did not tell me anything of the kind.
His Lordship: Was any representation made
to you by Mr. Turnbull he would wish you to do this as a convenience to
them? A. He never made any such representation, but I may have inferred so.
Q. Were you to stand in the place of the
Car Company that the Consolidated Bank stood in? A. I don’t know that; I did it
at the request of the Consolidated Bank, but I did it only because I was
satisfied the security was good.
Mr. Turnbull, of the Consolidated Bank:
Q. State what the arrangement was between
you and the bank?
[Page 484]
A. We went to Mr. Brodie, and told
him the Car Company wanted to raise money; we did not tell him for what
purpose; they would be prepared to give Mr. Milloy’s warehouse receipts;
we told him the security would be good, to our own knowledge, and there was
ample margin, and requested him to make the discount, which he did.
Q. Did you tell Mr. Brodie anything
further? A. I don’t know that I did; I do not think it; there was nothing
further, to my recollection; we told him he was to advance upon the security of
the stuff; we did not say anything about seeing them harmless; that was not
understood between us.
Q. When one bank comes to another, and
recommends them to make a discount, is it not understood between them the one
will see the other all right? A. It would be certainly understood, after the
representation I made as to the nature of the security, that we should see they
did not lose by it; I have not considered this as a matter of our own all
along; I think Mr. Gartshore himself asked me to go with him to the
Standard Bank, seeing I had been with him previously, to ask them to authorize
Mr. Milloy to deliver certain wheels to the Northern Railway Company, on
getting the Northern Railway Company’s acknowledgment to pay the Standard Bank;
I do not recollect any instruction; it was a matter for Mr. Brodie’s
consideration; Mr. Brodie was getting value for all his money; I may
have gone on a second occasion; I am sure as to one occasion, but not as to
two; I am not sure I went a second time.
The Consolidated Bank certainly had a perfect
right to close their transaction with the Car Company and to render the Car
Company assistance to raise the necessary funds to enable them to discharge
their indebtedness. If the Standard Bank made the loan to the Car Company, as Brodie
says, in the usual way (“we loaned the money in the usual way”), and because
they found the security ample, though done on the recommendation and at the
request of the Consolidated Bank, but as Brodie says: “only because he
was satisfied the security was good,” and as Mr. Turnbull says “nothing
was said and it was not understood between us as to the Consolidated Bank
seeing the Standard Bank harmless, and the discount clerk says the note was
discounted by the Standard Bank in the ordinary course of
[Page 485]
business on the credit of that receipt,” I
cannot see how it can be considered otherwise than a pure bonâ fide
independent dealing of the Standard Bank with the Car Company in the course of
their business, even though the transaction was accomplished, through the
instrumentality of the Consolidated Bank, and there may, in consequence of the
representation and recommendation made by that bank to the Standard, be a
sentimental or honourable feeling that the Consolidated Bank should see they
did not lose by it. No doubt the Consolidated Bank were deeply interested in
the Car Company getting the money from the Standard, because it was to
discharge their indebtedness to them, and very possibly they were the more
anxious because the Car Company could not secure them as they had been
heretofore secured, or thought themselves secured. But as it does not appear
that the dealings or the transactions of the Consolidated Bank and the Car
Company were communicated to the Standard Bank, or that they were in any way
cognizant of them, why should the Standard Bank be affected thereby? I think it
may fairly be inferred, that but for the intervention of the Consolidated Bank,
the Standard Bank would not have advanced the money to the Car Company, but if
it was a fair loan in the usual course of business made on the security of this
warehouse receipt offered by the Car Company, I cannot see why the Standard
Bank should be injuriously affected because the Consolidated Bank were
benefited by their debtors being placed in a position to discharge their
indebtedness, nor can I discover upon what pretence the Car Company could
repudiate their lease to the plaintiff or the validity of this warehouse
receipt. If there has been nothing in this transaction at variance with the
provisions of the Insolvent Act and no collusive or fraudulent conduct on the
part of the Standard with a view
[Page 486]
to defeat or defraud creditors, I cannot
discover upon what principle the defendants as the assignees of the Car Company
can assail the lease or security so given by those they represent in good faith
to the bank, which lease or transaction the Car Company could not infringe. As
then I think there is no evidence to establish that this transaction was a
fraudulent preference to or had any legal connection with the Consolidated
Bank, but was an entirely new and distinct transaction between the Standard
Bank and the company, the question in my opinion, in the case is:—was the
plaintiff, quoad these goods, a warehouseman within the letter and
spirit of the Banking Act, so as to make his receipt indorsed effectual to pass
the property to the Standard Bank for the security of a loan made to the
company in the usual course of banking business? and as I think he was, I think
the appeal should be allowed, and judgment given for plaintiff.
STRONG, J., gave a written judgment in favor of
affirming the judgment of the Court of Appeal.
FOURNIER, J., concurred with the Chief Justice.
HENRY, J.:—
This is an appeal from the judgment of the
Appeal Court of Ontario. A verdict was found for the appellant, but set
aside, and an order was made for one to be entered for the respondents by the
Court of Queen’s Bench. From that order the plaintiff appealed to the Appeal
Court of Ontario who sustained the judgment of the Court of Queen’s
Bench, and hence his appeal to this court.
There are three counts in the declaration:—
1st. In trespass, for seizing and taking away
the plaintiff’s goods and converting them to their own use.
[Page 487]
2nd. For trespass to lands of plaintiff and for asportavit
and conversion of plaintiff’s goods.
3rd. For conversion of plaintiff’s goods,
The defendants pleaded thereto:—
1st. A denial of the trespass and conversion.
2nd. To the first count denying the plaintiff’s
property in the goods.
3rd. To the second count denying the plaintiff’s
property in the land and goods.
4th. That the land was the freehold and the
goods the property of the defendants as joint official assignee of the Toronto
Car Wheel Company, insolvents, under the provisions of the Insolvent Act of
1875.
5th. That the plaintiffs right to the land and
goods was only under a lease from the Toronto Car Wheel Company, and by
a pretended delivery to him by that company of the goods as a warehouseman or
agent of the company. That the plaintiff subsequently gave to the company
certain paper writings purporting to be warehouse receipts for the goods to be
delivered pursuant to the order of the company, and the company thereupon
endorsed the same to the Standard Bank of Canada as agents and trustees
of the Consolidated Bank of Canada, merely for the purpose of securing a
large amount of indebtedness of long standing of the company to the last
mentioned bank. It then alleges the then insolvency of the company, and that
the plaintiff and the Consolidated Bank knew or had probably cause for
believing such to exist, and that the inability of the company to meet its
engagements was for a long time theretofore public and notorious. The plea then
alleges that the solvency of the company was attacked by a notice from some of
the creditors to the company of an application for an attachment under the
Insolvent Debtors Act served over thirty days from the endorsement of the
warehouse receipts to the company, and that
[Page 488]
about a month after, a writ of attachment
against the company was issued and delivered for execution to the defendants,
and in about a month thereafter, at a meeting of the creditors, defendants were
appointed joint assignee of the company’s estate in insolvency. That at the
time of the issue and delivery to the defendants of the writ of attachment, the
company was not in possession of the goods and land, and that such possession
was transferred to the defendants, who thereupon took possession of the same as
part of the property and estate of the company, and that as such joint
assignee, they, the defendants, were entitled to retain the said lands and
goods.
6th. The sixth plea is pretty much like the
fifth, but is varied by an allegation, “that the said lease was executed and
the said goods so delivered to the plaintiffs, and the said receipts so
indorsed to the said Consolidated Bank, with intent fraudulently to impede,
obstruct, and delay the creditors of the said company in their remedies against
it, with intent to defraud its creditors or some of them, and the same was so
done and intended with the knowledge of the plaintiff and the said Consolidated
Bank of Canada.”
7th. The seventh varies from the preceding two
pleas by an allegation, “that the deposit, pledge, or transfer of the said
premises by lease, and the delivery of the said goods and the endorsation of
the said receipts to the Standard Bank were made by the said company in
contemplation of insolvency by way of security for payment to the Consolidated
Bank of Canada for a debt then and for a long time due and owing to the
said last mentioned bank, * * * the same being at the time of the
issue and delivery of the writ of attachment to the defendants in the
possession of the company. That the defendants were in March, 1877, appointed
assignees of the said company’s estate and
[Page 489]
effects, and under the provision of the
Insolvent Act, 1875, were then entitled to retain the said lands and goods for
the benefit of the company’s estate.”
The plaintiff by replication, first took issue
on all the pleas. By a second replication to that part of the fourth plea which
alleges that the time of the committing of the alleged trespasses, the said
land was the freehold of the defendants as joint assignee of the company’s
estate and effects, the plaintiff says, “that before the time when, etc., and
before any proceedings in insolvency had been taken against the company,” the
company “by an indenture of lease duly executed under their corporate seal
demised the land to the plaintiff” for one year from the fifteenth day of
December, 1876, which demise was “at the said time when, etc., in full force
and effect and undetermined,” and that “the said plaintiff was in the actual
possession of the said land under and by virtue of the said demise.”
To the latter replication there were three
rejoinders to which it is necessary also to refer.
1st. The first alleges there was only a nominal
consideration for the lease, which is alleged to be dated the fifteenth of
December, 1876. That the company was then a debtor, subject to the provisions
of the Insolvent Act of 1875. That on the 20th of January, 1877, a notice of an
application to be made for a writ of attachment was served on the company and
the writ issued on the 21st of February, 1877. That at a meeting of the
creditors in March following, the defendants were appointed joint assignee of
the estate; that at the time of the issue and delivery of the writ of
attachment to the defendants, the company were in possession of the lands and
that such possession was transferred to the defendants, who therefore took
possession of the same as part of the property and estate of the company, and
as such joint assignee were then (at the time of the
[Page 490]
pleading) entitled to retain the said lands for
the benefit of the company’s estate.
2nd. The second rejoinder, with the same
descriptive averments as in the first, alleges that the lease was executed to
secure a debt due to the Consolidated Bank. That the lease was made with intent
fraudulently to impede, obstruct, and delay the creditors of the company in
their remedies, or with intent to defraud its creditors, and that the same was
so made, done, and intended with the knowledge of the plaintiff and the said
bank (the Consolidated).
3rd. The third rejoinder, with the same
descriptive averments as in the other two, alleges that the lease was made in
contemplation of insolvency by way of security for payment to the Consolidated
Bank of a previous debt whereby the bank obtained an unjust preference. That
the land at the time of the issue and delivery of the writ of attachment to the
defendants was in possession of the company, that the defendants were
subsequently appointed joint assignee of the estate, and as such entitled to
retain the said lands and goods for the benefit of the estate.
In order that my views should be the more
readily understood in regard to the special pleas, the second replication and
the three rejoinders thereto, I have felt it necessary to recite them at the
risk of the charge of unnecessary prolixity.
I must now see how far they are founded on the
Insolvent Act referred to.
Section 131 provides that:
A contract or conveyance for consideration
respecting either real or personal estate by which creditors are injured, made
by a debtor unable to meet his engagements with a person ignorant of such
inability, whether such person be his creditor or not, and before such
inability has become notorious, but within thirty days next before a demand of
an assignment or the issue of a writ of attachment under this act or at any
time afterwards, whenever such demand shall have
[Page 491]
been followed by an assignment or by the
issue of such writ of attachment, is voidable, and may be set aside by any
court of competent jurisdiction upon such terms as to the protection of such
person from actual loss or liability by reason of such contract, as the court
may order.
It is obvious the pleas in question as far as
they relate to the lease and warehouse receipts are not under that section, nor
could they be under the circumstances in evidence for many reasons which are so
palpable that I need not state them.
Section 132:
All contracts or conveyances made and acts
done by a debtor respecting either real or personal estate with intent fraudulently
to impede, obstruct or delay his creditors in their remedies against him, or
with intent to defraud his creditors, or any of them, and so made, done, and
intended with the knowledge of the person contracting or acting with the
debtor, whether such person be his creditor or not, and which have the effect
of impeding, obstructing, or delaying the creditors of their remedies, or of
injuring them or any of them, are prohibited and are null and void, &c.
I need not refer specifically to the special
pleas before mentioned, or to the subsequent pleadings as to them, but may say
that I think they contain substantially allegations sufficient to justify the
reception of evidence under the provisions of the last recited section.
Section 133 is, I think, also applicable:
If any sale, deposit, pledge, or transfer
be made of any property real or personal by any person in contemplation of
insolvency by way of security for payment to any creditor, or if any property
real or personal, moveable or immoveable, goods, effects, or valuable security
be given by way of payment by such person to any creditor, whereby such
creditor obtains or will obtain an unjust preference over the other creditors,
such sale, deposit, pledge, transfer, or payment shall be null and void, and the
subject thereof may be recovered back for the benefit of the estate by the
assignee in any court of competent jurisdiction.
With the addition that if within the prescribed
thirty days or afterwards:
It shall be presumed to have been made in
contemplation of insolvency.
[Page 492]
The seventh plea is the only one alleging a
defence under this latter section. It alleges in substance that the deposit,
pledge, or transfer of the premises by the lease, the delivery of the goods and
the endorsation of the receipts, were made and given by the company in
contemplation of insolvency, and that the warehouse receipts were assigned to
the Standard Bank as the agents and trustees of the Consolidated Bank. These
allegations bring the plea, in my opinion, within the provisions of the act;
for if it were all done to make payment of a previous debt or liability to the
Consolidated Bank, or to secure the payment of it by having it made to the
Standard Bank as mere agents or trustees of the Consolidated Bank, it would in
law be the same as if the transfer were direct to the latter. No other
provision of the act is, in my opinion, applicable. Section 130 refers to
gratuitous contracts or conveyances, but in none of the special pleas is the
ground broadly taken that the lease and transfer of the goods were gratuitous
and without consideration. The sixth and seventh pleas do not in any way refer
to the matter of the consideration for the lease. The fifth, however, alleges
that the lease was given “for a merely nominal consideration,” but another part
of the plea shews there was a consideration by plaintiff agreeing to take
possession of and safely keep goods of the company, and to give therefor
accountable receipts to deliver the same to the company or their order. The
lease could not be held to have been a “gratuitous conveyance” and “without
consideration within the meaning of that section.” I will now consider the
substance of the two sections and will then turn to the evidence to see how far
the issues on both sides have been sustained. To set aside a conveyance under
section 132 requires proof;
1st. Of a fraudulent intent to impede, &c.,
a creditor in his remedies, or to defraud his creditors.
[Page 493]
2nd. That the conveyance was so made and that
the fraudulent intent was known to the party to whom the conveyance was made.
I have read over the evidence repeatedly with
much care and such evidence is conspicuous only by its entire absence. The
proof of the two issues was on the defendants, and proof of both were necessary
to constitute a defence. On the contrary the evidence clearly negatives both
allegations. The history of the whole transaction shows an honest debt due to
the Consolidated Bank. That that institution had previously held the same goods
as collateral security, but difficulties having arisen which prevented a
renewal of their security under the Warehousing Act, through Conger who
had acted as warehouseman, it decided to renew that security by the means
adopted and now complained of. The Consolidated Bank under the circumstances of
its advances on the security of the goods had, in my opinion, such an equitable
lien on the goods as collateral security for its advances, as might have been
enforced in equity, as between it and the company, although the security by
means of the warehouse receipts given by Conger had failed. I cannot,
therefore, conclude that even had the transfer of the receipt from the
plaintiff been directly to the Consolidated Bank, it would have been within
either of the fraudulent intents referred to in the section under
consideration. The evidence as to the advances in question is not, it is true,
very satisfactory as shewing they had been originally made on the security of
the goods, but if not, the onus of shewing that the security was not given for
a then subsisting debt, and that at the time the company was in such an
embarrassed position as to have made the transfers ab initio void was
upon the Respondents. There is no pretence, from the evidence, that such was
the case, and in the absence of proof to the contrary we are bound to presume
nothing against
[Page 494]
the validity of the original security so often
renewed by the warehouse receipt of Conger. The company would be
estopped both at law and in equity from questioning the validity of those receipts
signed by Conger; and if they were valid when given the subsequent
insolvency a year after could not affect the right of the bank. Admitting,
however, my conclusions thus expressed are wholly wrong, where is the evidence
of the other requirement of the section? What is there to show the guilty
knowledge of the plaintiff when he took the lease and gave the warehouse
receipt? I may answer emphatically nothing. We have no evidence on the point at
all, except his own, and he distinctly and positively swears to the contrary,
and no jury would be justified in finding in opposition to his statement in the
absence of proof of circumstances inconsistent with it; and none such are in
evidence here. The learned judge who found the verdict for the plaintiff has so
far thereby shown credence in the evidence of the plaintiff, and I cannot but
approve his having done so.
I will now consider the issues under the
provisions of section 133.
A defence under that section requires, first,
proof that the transfer was made in contemplation of insolvency to a creditor,
and with the addition of one or other of two objects, either to secure payment
for a debt then and previously existing or in actual payment of that debt. It
must be to a creditor, or, what is the same thing, to his agent or trustees, as
in the special pleas in this case is alleged.
To arrive at the true meaning of this section,
it is necessary to define in the first place the term “in contemplation of
insolvency.” A variety of definitions of the term have been given, but from the
researches I have been enabled to make, I am inclined to the opinion that the
decision must, to a great extent, be affected by
[Page 495]
the circumstances of each case. It is often a
question of great uncertainty, so far as the evidence of the fact goes. The
abstract meaning of the term is what, however, I am now more particularly
considering; the construction I feel disposed to adopt is this: In
contemplation of insolvency, I take to apply to the case of a man who
reflectively considers himself in such a position financially that he cannot
meet his engagements and must bring his business to an early close—that his
assets are insufficient to meet his liabilities. The “contemplation” is, no
doubt, intended to be personal to the party making a transfer in such a case to
one of his creditors; but it might in some cases be a question of evidence
whether his contemplation, although not so, should have resulted in the
conviction that he occupied such a position, as by law, prevented him from securing
or paying one or more of his creditors to the injury of the others. The policy
of the law is, no doubt, to require every one placed in circumstances of
reasonable doubt of being able to pay all his creditors not to make any
preference. I take It, therefore, that a preference so given is void. There
are, however, cases where a person fairly and reasonably believes himself well
able to pay all his liabilities, and has assets more than enough to pay all his
debts and anticipates no immediate interruption of his business; and if to
enable him to discharge debts due to others and to keep his business going, he
obtains further time for payment of a debt due to one or more creditors by
giving them security on his real or personal estate, it cannot, in my opinion,
be said he did so “in contemplation of insolvency” within the provisions of the
section. The question is, to my mind, a mixed one of law and fact.
In the report of the trial, I find the learned
judge decided, that when the note was given to the Standard Bank the company
was insolvent, but that the bank
[Page 496]
was not aware of that fact. I presume he meant
in view of the act, and although he does not distinctly say that the transfer
was made in contemplation of insolvency, I think that was what he meant. Having
seen the witnesses and heard their evidence, he was better able to decide that
point, and apart from any view I might from the evidence be otherwise inclined
to adopt, I will adopt his finding as the correct one, although I think the
evidence hardly sustains it. I am, however, decidedly of the opinion that the
defendants wholly failed to established the fact that the transfer was made to
the Standard Bank as the agents and trustees of the Consolidated Bank, and
that, therefore, the pleas not having in that respect been proved, the defence
must fail.
When the trespasses and conversion took place,
the appellant was in the lawful possession of the land and goods. That
possession was given to him by the then owners of both. He had a title by lease
to the land, and his possession of the goods was uncontrollable by any one
except the Standard Bank—to whose order he held the goods. His man had
immediate charge of them and he, the appellant, exercised acts of possession
and control over them inconsistent with any right of the company to interfere
with them or control him in regard to them. He had become answerable for their
safe keeping to the Standard Bank, and was in a position to bring trespass or
trover for any injury to conversion of them against any person but one having a
superior right or title. His position as bailee threw upon him responsibility
which he could only relieve himself from by keeping his contract, and to enable
him to do so the law gave him a remedy to protect him from loss and injury. He
is, therefore, entitled to recover in this action unless the defendants can
avoid the transfer to him on the grounds taken in the pleas.
[Page 497]
Bearing in mind the allegations in all of the
three special pleas, dispute the validity of the transfer of the lands and
goods on the ground that the transfer was made to the Standard Bank as the
agents and trustees of the Consolidated Bank, let us consider the evidence
referring to that transfer.
The appellant alleges that he signed and
delivered the warehouse receipt to the company ignorant as to what bank it
would be endorsed. Witnesses from the directing and managing staff of both
banks were examined, and they all swear positively the discount of the
company’s note was solely on the collateral security of the goods, It is true
it was done at the request of the cashier or manager of the Consolidated Bank,
with which institution the Standard Bank was on terms of friendly commercial
relations, but that is nothing, as all the other evidence sustains this position
and there is nothing to contradict it. It is the evidence given by the
respondents and brought out of their own witnesses by their own counsel. How
could any court or jury reject it in toto, and set up in opposition to
it some fanciful ideas that the case was otherwise. The respondents, by
producing such evidence on the trial, and substantiating the testimony of one
witness by others to corroborate it, I maintain, are completely estopped from
taking a position founded on the presumption that such evidence was unreliable
or untrue. Courts and juries cannot make evidence—their duty is to decide
according to the evidence produced—to reconcile conflicting evidence if
possible, and, if not, to decide according to the weight of it, but certainly,
where the evidence is all in one direction, not to allow their imaginations to
furnish antagonistic conclusions. Nothing in the administration of justice
would be more dangerous than the admission of such a rule. Once leave the
controlling and guiding cardinal point, and the chances are a hun-
[Page 498]
dred to one that injustice would be done in the
great majority of cases. It is true that injustice results from false and
improper relations of facts, but the main object is to secure the greatest
amount of success in dealing judicially with existing legal controversies.
Taking then the whole evidence, it would be an
unnecessary waste of time and words to point out in detail how essentially and
effectually it negatives the allegation that the Standard Bank took the transfer
as the agents and trustees of the Consolidated Bank. When the whole transaction
between the company and the Standard Bank was concluded by the discount of the
note and the payment over of the proceeds to the company, what relation of
agency or trusteeship, I would like to be told, existed between the two banks?
The discount was obtained through the aid of the representative of the
Consolidated Bank, but that was all. No, even verbal, promise of indemnity is
pretended to have been given and the only relation remaining between the two
banks was that of a supposed honorable, but not binding, implication of
liability not to allow one bank to lose who discounted for a third party on the
recommendation of the other. No such position was spoken of or relied on in
making the discount, and if it were it would be unavailable in case of loss
Suppose, however, a binding contract for indemnity had been given, would that
destroy the lien on the goods? Would it in the slightest degree legally affect
it? If a man on a mortgage as security on another man’s land lend him money,
and takes at the same time a bond for further security from a third party, no
one would contend the taking of the latter would avoid the mortgage. Suppose
the money went to pay a debt to the party to the bond, could it in such a case
be said that the mortgagee was the agent or trustee of such party? No authority
would sustain such a doctrine, and still the
[Page 499]
respondents rest their defence on that, to my
mind, absurd proposition. Admitting, however, as correct the construction of
the evidence, as the defendants counsel suggest, I must differ from those who
conclude thereupon in favor of the defendants. If one man owes another a debt
for the payment of which he is pressing, but from pressure for funds himself,
or from any other cause, no matter what, he cannot give further indulgence, or
take such security as the debtor could offer him, and he, for the purpose of
recovering his debt, induces another to advance the required funds on such
security, I can conceive no law or principle which would invalidate the
security, or make one party a trustee for the other. There is no one provision
or principle contained in the Insolvent Act that in the slightest degree refers
to such a transfer bonâ fide made, which I, in this case, have no reason
to doubt was the case; but on the contrary, am bound by the evidence to decide
was the case. There is no doubt that the Consolidated Bank was anxious for the
settlement of its claim, and took the measures the evidence shows for the
purpose of getting in the debt, but why should their anxiety and measures
affect the bona fides of the transaction on the part of the Standard
Bank? I cannot see upon any principle why such should be the decision.
I have, therefore, only to add that in my
deliberate judgment the defence under the special pleas has wholly failed.
For the same reasons I must decide in favor of
the appellant on the other issues.
I have attentively considered all the judgments
delivered in the Queen’s Bench and the Court of Appeal, and was struck with the
divergence as to the controlling points which they relatively exhibit.
Mr. Justice Wilson, the learned present
Chief Justice of the Queen’s Bench, in his judgment says:
[Page 500]
The lease cannot be said to have been a
gratuitous lease or contract. It was a beneficial one to and for the company;
and if it cannot be impeached on other grounds it cannot, in my opinion, be
held to be invalid because it is gratuitous.
For the reasons already given, as well as for those
given by him, I entirely approve of his ruling on that point.
He says, too, he can see no reason for avoiding
the lease on account of the purpose for which it was given—”even although it
was made to meet or effectuate a single transaction.” This, of course, not to
touch any question of fraud or improper dealing, “and as honestly meant as it
was honestly acted upon.”
I have considered the legal question involved
and the statutes applicable to it, and I have no difficulty in arriving at the
same conclusion; and I feel justified in adopting his reasoning as to those
parts of the case. His lordship also approves as legal the endorsement of the
warehouse receipt; and also decides that the plaintiff was properly in court
and not bound to seek relief by a petition to the judge of the Insolvency Court
I concur with his decision of these two points. His lordship’s judgment was
therefore in favor of the plaintiff upon all the points, except that in
reference to the relative position of the two banks. He assumed the position
that, had the receipt been transferred to the Consolidated Bank it would have
been void, and from. the evidence he held, that the Standard Bank was acting
solely in the interest and as the mere instruments of the other bank as a
cover.
For the reasons I have already given I differ
from the first of these two latter conclusions, and I think the evidence as
wholly against the latter one.
After the argument of the appeal at Toronto
judgments at length were given by the learned Chief Justice of Ontario
and Mr. Justice Patterson.
[Page 501]
The former says:—
Upon this statement of facts I am of
opinion that the plaintiff was not a warehouseman of these goods within the
meaning of the acts and (consequently) that the endorsement of the receipt
given by him did not transfer any property to the bank. In coming to this
conclusion I disregard the circumstances which are effectively dealt with by
Mr. Justice Wilson for the purpose of showing that the Standard Bank was
really the Consolidated Bank in the whole affair. 1 should have much difficulty
in holding, if the warehouse receipt had been given by a warehouseman in the
ordinary course of business, that the transaction was proved to be in its
essence a frauds lent preference to the Consolidated Bank. I might not have
been able to free my mind from grave suspicions that this was its true
character; but I should have thought that this was a question upon which there
ought to be a finding by the judge or jury who had the opportunity of hearing
the witnesses. But I cannot bring myself to the conclusion that the plaintiff
was in this transaction a warehouseman or that his receipts come within the
fair meaning of the acts which enabled this mode of dealing with property to be
equivalent under certain circumstances to a chattel mortgage.
Upon all the other points there is a concurrence
of opinion in favor of the plaintiff, but as regards the two questions the one
judgment is opposed diametrically to the other.
Mr. Justice Patterson rules against the
finding that the transfer to the plaintiff was made “in contemplation of
insolvency.” He says:—
The first fact, therefore, viz: the
contemplation of insolvency has to be established and no such fact is found.
I think, however, it was found by the judge on
the trial, and, therefore, am led to believe that what was meant was that it
had not been proved.
He is of opinion also that under the
circumstances the alleged preference to the Consolidated Bank was not unjust.
After referring to the previous warehouse receipts held by the Consolidated
Bank, and upon which they depended for security, he says:
That the change from one warehouseman to
another which an accident made necessary, while it restored the property for an
[Page 502]
instant to the control of the car company,
might not touch the justice of the bank’s claim to be secured in preference to
creditors the dates or particulars of whose debts we know nothing of. We have
not the materials for a decision, even if it was properly our province to
decide, that the preference was unjust. The onus of establishing these facts
was upon the defendants, and therefore the uncertainty in which they are left
affords no ground for setting aside the plaintiff’s verdict.
Referring to 34 Vic., ch. 5, sec. 47, he
says:
Upon this it is argued that as the transfer
to the Standard Bank was, in reality, to secure an antecedent debt of the
Consolidated Bank, it was forbidden by the statute. I do not take that view of
it. I think that, although the two Banks were so identified, that the interest
of the one might, under the provisions of the Insolvent Act, vitiate a
transaction which, in form, was affected by the other, yet the Standard Bank,
having really advanced its money, had a right to take the security in question,
under the terms of the Banking Act, even though the money was to go to pay the
old debt of the other Bank: and I do not perceive that this is affected by the
circumstance that the bank which was benefited agreed to save the other
harmless.
I. entirely agree with this view of the law.
He therefore concurs with Chief Justice Moss
in reversing the judgment of Chief Justice Wilson upon the only point on
which the judgment of the latter was against the appellant, and as the learned
justices Burton and Morrison concurred in the two judgments so delivered,
the judgment of the Court of Queen’s Bench was on that point overruled.
Apart then from any question of fraud or unjust
preference, the decision of Mr. Justice Patterson was based on the want
of legal title of the plaintiff. He says:—
I am unable to hold that the Insolvent Act
avoids the transaction without drawing inferences of fact which should properly
have been drawn by the judge at the trial, and he has not drawn them.
As affecting the legal title and possession of
the plaintiff, the learned judge thinks the evidence is insufficient “that he
had no actual possession or control of the goods, but that it was not in
contemplation that he should
[Page 503]
have it. The guarantee he required from the bank
for the forthcoming of the goods, while sufficient evidence of this, is only
one fact in a consistent series.” I have read and considered the evidence as to
this point very carefully, and I feel bound to decide in the opposite
direction. The goods were in an open yard some distance removed from the
ordinary warehouse of the plaintiff, and in the absence of some guarantee of
their safety would entail extra loss of time and more vigilance than he might
have felt he should incur. His taking an indemnity would or could not affect
his liability to the owner or his endorsee. His liability to them would be the
same, and as a merely legal proposition I cannot see how the fact of the
indemnity can in any way affect the question of possession. On the contrary
taking the whole transaction together, it is rather evidence of the possession
being in him. That his possession and control should be complete, the right to
hold the land was given him by the company. His right to take possession of the
goods was also given him by the company. They substantially said to him: We
will make you, for the time, the legal owner of the land upon which the goods
are deposited, and you shall have them in your possession and under your
control as warehouseman on your giving us a warehouse receipt for them. He
accepted the offer, and in pursuance of its terms assumed the necessary
responsibility and gave the required receipt. By the terms of it he became
responsible for the safety of the goods. To enable him to perform his part of
the contract the possession and control of the goods was absolutely necessary.
The company would be estopped from disputing his
right to that possession, and as soon as the company endorsed that receipt over
to another party, their right to the property in, and the possession of, the
goods ceased subject, however, to any right of redemption of
[Page 504]
them, if any, as between them and their
endorsee. Independently, however, of this legal proposition there is abundant
evidence that the plaintiff had the actual possession and manual control of the
goods. After the transfer of the warehouse receipt to the Standard Bank; which
took place immediately after it was signed, the plaintiff received and executed
orders from that bank for several lots of the goods. His man went to the yard
on each occasion and delivered the goods so ordered and kept a detailed account
of what he delivered. The company never interfered with his possession or
disposal of them under the orders of the bank or otherwise. They were not on
land then in possession of the company and how could it be contended that the
goods were actually or constructively in the possession of the company? If not,
then, they were not only actually but in contemplation of law in possession of
the plaintiff.
It may however be contended that although the
company could not have claimed or taken possession of them the right of the
assignees is different. If the transfer was not affected by the provisions of
the Insolvent Act the right and title of the assignee is identical with those
of the insolvent. His legal engagements and contracts are those which the
assignee is bound by, and estoppels against the insolvent are equally so
against his assignee. By operation of the Insolvent Act the assignee is put in
the place of the insolvent with power in certain cases to avoid contracts, made
in violation of the act. It was very properly decided by Chief Justice Wilson
in re Coleman that
the assignment does not, however, “pass to the assignee any property which was
not the property of the insolvent nor any greater estate or interest in his
property than he himself had in it. An equitable mortgage good as against the
[Page 505]
insolvent would be good against his assignee in
insolvency, and so also would an equitable assignment of a debt or other
appropriation of his estate good against him be good also against his
assignee.” If such be the law, and I have no doubt of it, the assignee of the
company occupied no higher ground than the company itself did, and he is
equally with them estopped from disputing the legal title and possession of the
plaintiff of the land and goods. The respondents admit having entered upon the
land and taken the goods. If their act was not a justifiable one they were
trespassers on the land of the appellant held and possessed under his lease and
for taking and converting his goods.
In the judgments delivered by Chief Justice Moss
and Mr. Justice Patterson, they appear to have been grounded principally
or wholly upon the conclusion that the plaintiff was not a warehouseman of the
goods in question within the meaning of the acts; and the latter quotes my
learned brother Gwynne in a judgment of his in Ontario Bank v. Newton. I have read that judgment, and with all
deference, I must contend the principle there decided does not touch this case.
In that case, the party who signed the receipt had never been a warehouseman,
and his only act as such was in signing the receipt, then the subject of
consideration, and it was decided that he could not by such an act make himself
a, warehouseman for the purpose of or under the acts. How that decision can
affect this case, where the fact of the plaintiff having been a regular
warehouseman is not only not denied, but admitted, I confess myself unable to
discover. A distinction, however, is attempted to be drawn in this case from
ordinary ones, because the goods were not stored in the usual warehouse or yard
of the plaintiff I have considered the point and cannot sustain that
distinction.
[Page 506]
Is a warehouse keeper to be limited to one
warehouse or yard, or would a warehouse keeper be disqualified to open a
warehouse yard apart and at a distance from his warehouse, or would he be
limited to one warehouse or one yard? I can see no restriction in the acts. The
act does not require the warehouseman to be the keeper of any particular kind
of warehouse, but provides for the giving effect by endorsement to the receipt
of any person who is a warehouseman. The acts give effect to the receipt of a
warehouseman “for cereal grains, goods, wares or merchandise stored or
deposited * * * in any warehouse, mill cove or other place within the
province, and from the date of the endorsement vests all the right and title of
the indorser to or in such cereal grains, goods, wares or merchandise, subject
to the right of the indorser to have the same retransferred to him if such
bill, note, or debt be paid to him when due” A warehouseman, or yard keeper, is
not the less so because he has more than one warehouse or yard, and as the acts
only require the receipt to be from a warehouseman, a receipt given by one
having more than one warehouse satisfies the requirement of the act certainly
as fully as, if not more fully, than if he had but one. A man could hardly be
the less called a hotel keeper if he kept two or three hotels instead of but
one. Nor are the means he takes to obtain one or more of the warehouses a
necessary inquiry to validate the receipts of a warehouseman or yard keeper.
Suppose a warehouseman becomes the tenant of a warehouse in which goods of a
third party are stored, and he, after taking a lease from the owner with the
understanding that thereby he is to have possession of the goods to hold them
for the owner, and he subsequently signs a warehouse receipt for them, which is
endorsed to a bank, would it not be monstrous to hold that in case of any
informality in the lease or otherwise, the bank should lose its
[Page 507]
advances. The only enquiry the acts require is
to ascertain that the party is a warehouseman, and that he has signed the
receipt. To require such an inquisitorial and often impracticable inquiry as
would be otherwise necessary, would defeat the whole object and purposes of the
act. In a great many cases goods are deposited hundreds of miles from the banks
making the advances, and the time and trouble necessary to make such inquiries
would paralyze the beneficial operation of the Acts. Such I claim could not
have been intended, and I feel bound to say such is not the true construction
of them.
We are told, however, that attention should be
given to the Chattel Mortgage Acts which require registry. The object of those
Acts is not altogether to give publicity to transfers, but to secure titles to
parties for debts existing or for advances by which the owners would be
accommodated and benefited. The object was, to prevent frauds from secret
transfers, and whilst such were allowed to prevail, no one felt safe in
advancing upon chattel security any more than he would be inclined to do in
case of land security in the absence of registry regulations The main object I
take as to both was to enable a man as well with regard to personal as real
estate to go to the registry office and satisfy himself in respect of either
that there was no previous assignment or incumbrance in his way. Subsequent to
the enactment in question Parliament, which is invested with the power to
legislate in regard to the regulation of Trade and Commerce, thought proper to
provide that a party might obtain a lien on goods in another way, and
prescribed the mode by which it could be so obtained. Under the latter the
plaintiff, as a warehouseman, received the goods, signed a warehouse receipt
for them, which was endorsed to the Standard Bank. If the proceeding throughout
was
[Page 508]
according to the late enactments (which
virtually repealed the former Acts to that extent) what right have we to
consider at all the previous Chattel Mortgage Acts? If they at all conflict we
must give weight to the later enactments. The later Acts provide for no
registry; and the beneficial operation of them would have been frustrated if
they had done so. Parliament, for wise commercial considerations, has dispensed
with any registry in cases provided for, and it is not the province of courts
to set themselves up against the policy of acts—a jurisdiction the constitution
has not given to them. In reference to the case before us Parliament has spoken
in amply plain and binding terms, and it is not for us to say it did not mean
what those terms explicitly express. After making the necessary provisions and
conditions, the legislature has plainly said that if those provisions and
conditions are complied with and fulfilled, the endorsement of the warehouse
receipt shall convey to the endorsee a good title or lien. The appellant has
brought himself within such provisions by complying with them. Within the terms
of the statute he was in possession lawfully of the goods, and I cannot
conceive how, under the circumstances the alleged policy of the Chattel
Mortgage Acts can be invoked as a set-off to rights legally acquired under the
other acts. As the principles involved are commercially so important and affect
trade throughout the whole Dominion, I have gone more into detail than might
have been necessary for the decision of the present case.
Having fully given my views upon the legal
questions involved and the evidence adduced on the trial, I have now only to
add that I think the judgment against the appellant should be reversed, that
the appeal should be allowed and judgment given for him with costs.
[Page 509]
TASCHEREAU, J.:—
I am of opinion to dismiss this appeal. That Conger’s
warehouse receipts were utterly illegal and void in law seems undenied. That Milloy’s
receipts were but the continuation of transactions of the same nature as those
with Conger appears to me plain and evident. The parties attempted to
give Milloy’s receipts more of an appearance of legality, but the whole
transaction was as fictitious and colourable as the one with Conger. Milloy
was never in the actual possession required by law of the goods in question to
authorize him to give a warehouse receipt on them. The shadow of a lease which
the Car Company granted to him was not even signed by him and the nominal rent
of five dollars was paid by the bank; even in the present suit, Milloy
is only a nominal plaintiff. He so little had the possession of the goods, that
he required from the bank a guarantee that they would be forthcoming when
required. For these reasons, I am of the opinion that the unanimous judgments
of the two Ontario courts in this case should be confirmed and this
appeal dismissed with costs.
GWYNNE, J.:
I have been unable to read the evidence in this
case without arriving at the conclusion that the transaction, in virtue of
which the plaintiff had executed to him by the car company the instrument
called a lease, and in virtue of which the plaintiff signed the document which
has been called “a receipt under the provisions of statute 34 Vict., ch
5 of the statutes of Canada, intituled ‘An Act relating to Banks and
Banking,’” was devised and contrived wholly by the Consolidated Bank.
The evidence also satisfies my mind that (if it
were necessary for the determination of this case to establish
[Page 510]
this, which I do not think it is), the object of
the Consolidated Bank in designing this contrivance was to endeavour to secure
payment to themselves of a large debt due to them by the car company (which
company the bank well knew to be in insolvent circumstances) in preference to
the other creditors of the company, and that this contrivance was devised in
preference to a chattel mortgage, because it was well known, both to the car
company and to the bank, that a chattel mortgage would be publicly known and
would precipitate the impending insolvency.
But, whatever may have been the motive of the
bank, it is quite apparent to my mind that, to carry out the transaction
devised, the plaintiff was introduced into it wholly as the agent of the bank,
and that he only consented to act in it by their procurement, in their
interest, upon their guarantee, and in short as their agent; that in this
character it was that he accepted the document called “the lease,” and that he
signed the document called “a warehouse receipt.” Personally, he never had
possession of the property mentioned in the receipt and in his character of
warehouseman he never in reality contemplated assuming possession of the
property, or any control over it, or responsibility for it. The fair conclusion
from all the evidence appears to me to be that he took no part in the
transaction whatever, otherwise than by the direction of, upon the guarantee
of, and as the agent of, the bank, in which latter character also the fair
conclusion is, that the present action is brought. Under the circumstances
appearing in evidence it is, in my judgment, an abuse of terms to call the
receipt given by the plaintiff a receipt within the meaning of the clauses in
that behalf in the Banking Act, or to say that the plaintiff ever had any
actual possession, control over, or property in, the goods mentioned in the
receipt,
[Page 511]
or in fact, to regard him in the transaction in
any other capacity than that of an agent of the Consolidated Bank. To decide
otherwise would, as it appears to me, open the door to a ready mode of
nullifying the Chattel Mortgage Act, and of successfully perpetrating those
transactions which the Insolvent Act pronounced to be frauds upon creditors. If
it were necessary (but for the reasons already given I do not think it is) to
trace the connection of the Standard Bank with the transaction, I think the
fair inference warranted by the evidence is that they also interfered only in
the interest of and at the request of the Consolidated Bank, and upon the
implied undertaking of the latter bank to indemnify them against loss in the
event of their advancing the money which they did advance, an undertaking which
most probably has been fulfilled or the Standard Bank would naturally be the
plaintiffs here, and that they knew or had sufficient information from which
they could and should have known, and may, therefore, be inferred to have
known, the infirmity attached to the receipt upon which they were asked to
advance the money. But whatever may have been the conduct of the Standard Bank
in the transaction, whether they were the dupes or the coadjutors of the
Consolidated Bank in endeavoring to perfect the contrivance of the latter, it
is plain, to my mind, that for the reasons given above and in the Court of
Appeal from whose judgment this appeal comes that plaintiff cannot succeed in
this action.
Appeal dismissed without costs.
Solicitors for appellant: McMichael,
Hoskin & Ogden.
Solicitors for respondents: Kerr &
Akers.