77 So. 167 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1917
The evidence adduced by the plaintiff tended to show that the draft drawn by Keeney on Botts Produce Company, in favor of plaintiff and payable to its order, with the bill of lading attached, and duly indorsed by Keeney, was forwarded to and received by the defendant the Bank of Madrid for collection, with instructions not to deliver the bill of lading except upon payment of the draft. The defendant's evidence tended to show that the draft with bill of lading attached was not received by the defendant bank, and that it had no connection with the transaction. It was therefore plaintiff's right to have the question submitted to the jury, if it has shown such interest in the cause of action as entitles it to sue thereon.
When Keeney delivered to the plaintiff the draft drawn by him on Botts Produce Company in favor of the plaintiff, with the bill of lading attached, indorsed by him "for collection," the legal title to the chose and a special property in the goods represented by the bill of lading passed to the plaintiff, subject to be divested upon payment of the draft by Botts Produce Company, and a delivery of the bill of lading to said produce company, leaving in Keeney an equity which entitled him to sue in his own name and recover as for money had and received, if in fact defendant collected the draft. Josiah Morris Co. v. Alabama Carbon Co.,
This does not necessarily preclude the plaintiff's right to sue in this case. The plaintiff seeks to recover, not only on the theory that the defendant received and collected the draft, but on the further theory that the defendant bank delivered to Botts Produce Company the bill of lading without securing payment of the draft, thus enabling Botts to obtain possession of the goods without paying for them. If the jury found, in accordance with the plaintiff's theory, that the draft and bill of lading were forwarded to and received by the defendant for collection, and the defendant received and retained them, the law implies a promise by the defendant to the plaintiff to collect the draft and remit the proceeds, or return the draft and bill of lading if payment is refused. Schrader v. Bailey Grocery Co.,
The purpose of the indorsement of the draft and bill of lading by Keeney to the plaintiff was to invest the plaintiff with the legal title to the chose, and give it a special property in the goods represented by the bill of lading, to enable it to carry out the transaction and give full acquittance to the purchaser for the purchase price of the goods represented by the draft. Hence the plaintiff had authority to receive the remittance and give full acquittance, not only to Botts Produce Company, but to the collecting bank. It is well settled in this state that, when a promise is made by one person for the benefit of another, either may sue, and likewise that, a party having the legal title to an obligation, to whom payment can be legally made, and who can legally discharge the debtor, an action may be brought in his name, although the money, when collected, is not for his use, but is for the use or must be paid to another; and this is so notwithstanding the provisions of section 2489 of the Code of 1907. Rice v. Rice,
The witness Botts, offered by the plaintiff, was manifestly a hostile witness, and there were tendencies in the evidence that collusion existed between Botts and the defendant to fraudulently acquire the carload of onions, the subject-matter of this transaction, and it was permissible for the court to allow leading questions to this witness, though the answers had some tendency to affect his credibility. Hickman v. State,
The cross-examination of the witness Watford was within the rule, and the rulings of the court in this respect were free from error. Cox v. State,
The above-stated conclusions justify the action of the trial court in refusing to defendant the affirmative charge, and in overruling the motion for a new trial.
Affirmed.