50 So. 153 | Ala. | 1909
Lead Opinion
This suit was brought by the appellee against the appellant, and the facts as agreed upon are: That John JEL Coughlan, under the firm name of Smith & Coughlan, who is a cotton broker in Birmingham, had sold 100 bales of cotton to Yan Leer & Co., cotton brokers in Philadelphia, and in accordance with instructions from said Van Leer & Co. shipped the cotton under a bill of lading in which said Yan Leer & Co. were named as the shippers and W. W. Crawford, who is the cashier of the defendant, was named as the consignee, stating, “Notify Van Leer & Company, Consignee, address, Philadelphia, as information only, and not for purposes of deliverythe destination of the cotton being Wilkes-barre, Pa. Thereupon Coughlan drew a draft on Van Leer & Co., to the order of W. W. Crawford, cashier, for the amount of the purchase price, sent the invoice to Yan Leer & Co., and'deposited the draft, with bill of
It was shoAvn: That the plaintiff knew nothing about the transactions between Yan Leer & Co. and Smith &
In Eufaula Grocery Company v. Mo. Nat. Bank. 118 Ala. 408, 24 South. 389, the Eufaula Grocery Company purchased a car load of hay from J. A. B. & Co., of Missouri, who shipped a car load of hay to said grocery company at Eufaula, Ala., and drew on it for the price of the hay with bill of lading attached; the money to be paid “on arrival of the car of hay,” and said draft being payable to R. D. C., cashier (he being the cashier of the Missouri National Bank, the defendant in the action). Said Missouri Bank sent the draft, with the bill of lading attached, to the Eufaula National Bank for collection. The grocery company paid the draft, on receipt of the car load, but, on finding the hay to be “decayed and unmerchantable,” commenced suit against the Missouri Bank for the money, while it was still in the hands of the Eufaula Bank. The court says that: “At the time this suit was brought, the money in question was not to be regarded as being in the hands of the Missouri Bank,, so far as the rights of J. A. B. & Co., in reference thereto, were concerned.” This court- held that, as there was nothing on the draft to indicate that any one other than . the Missouri Bank .had any interest in it, and it was sent to the Eufaula Bank for collection for its own account, the grocery company had a right to consider it as the property of the Missouri Bank, and, as said Missouri Bank had placed itself in that position towards the
In the case of Haas & Co. v. Citizens’ Bank of Dyersburg, 144 Ala. 562, 570, 571, 572, 39 South. 129, 130, 131, 1 L. R. A. (N. S.) 242, 113 Am. St. Rep. 61, Klyce had sold to plaintiff a quantity of meal, drew a draft on plaintiff with bill of lading attached, payable to the defendant, “and then and there sold and delivered said draft, bill of lading, and account to the defendant” (as alleged in the complaint). The decision is based upon the principle that the defendant, by purchasing the draft and the account and bill of lading, took the place of Klyce and became thereby bound to deliver the goods, just as Klyce was bound. The court, in its opinion, says: “By no rule of construction can the averments of the complaint justify the conclusion that the bill of lading was held by the defendant as collateral security for the draft, or that the defendant was merely Klyce’s agent for its collection.” The court also adverts to the principle that: “Assignments of bills of lading are not governed by the commercial law. The transferee simply acquires the title to the transferrer to the goods described in them.” The court also says: “The draft was drawn to the defendant’s order, accompanied by the bill of lading and the account, each of which was sold to it. The draft had not been accepted by the plaintiffs before its negotiation to defendant, and until accepted, in the absence of some fact tending to show that defendant was induced by the conduct of the plaintiffs to purchase it, they were not bound by it. When it was paid, the purchase price to be paid for the goods, as well as the
In the case now under consideration, the plaintiff sues as the assignee of Van Leer & Co., and, as stated in the Haas & Co. Case, the bill of lading not being commercial paper, “the transferee simply acquires the title of the' transferrer to the goods -described. Then what were the rights of Van Leer & Co. ? It could not be said, as in the Eufaula Grocery Co. Case, that said Van Leer & Co. had a right to consider it the property of the defendant company, because they had constituted Smith & Goughian their agents to have the bill of lading made out in their name as shippers, for certain purposes, fully understood by them, and it was, in fact, their bill of lading, made payable to the cashier of the bank, by their own procurement, and with their full knowledge as to who the real shipper was. For the same reason, and because there is no pretense that the defendant was the purchaser of the claim and of the bill of lading, the Haas Case does not apply. The defendant never assumed any obligation with regard to the quantity of the cotton shipped under the bill of lading, nor has it placed itself in any position whereby Van Leer & Co. had any right to look to it for the guaranty of the quantity of said cotton.
These points were presented in various ways, by demurrers to complaint, pleas, and demurrers thereto, and by objection to evidence; but the entire contention is involved in the judgment of the court, and the exception thereto embodied in the twenty-sixth assignment of error, and it is not necessary to particularly consider the others.
The court erred in rendering judgment for the plaintiff.
Reversed and rendered.
Concurrence Opinion
while concurring in this conclusion, desires to emphasize the fact that he does not acknowledge the correctness of the case of Haas v. Citizens’ Bank of Dyersburg.