108 Ga. 70 | Ga. | 1899
-Branan Brothers instituted an action in trover against the Atlanta & West Point Railroad Company and C. V. Truitt, to recover ten boxes of tobacco. The evidence made substantially the followdng case: Spencer, Traylor & Company sold to Cunningham, a merchant in LaGrange, ten boxes of manufactured tobacco on a credit, and delivered the same to the Richmond & Danville R. R. Co. at Danville, Va., to be forwarded to Cunningham, taking from the railroad company an ordinary bill of lading, which the consignors transmitted
There are several definitions of this right given by text-writers, as well as made by adjudicated cases, which we have examined with some interest. Chancellor Kent, in the second volume of his Commentaries, p. 702, defines the right of stoppage in transitu to be that which the vendor has, when he sells goods on credit to another, of resuming possession of the goods while they are in the possession of the carrier or middleman in the transit to the consignee or vendee and before they arrive into his actual possession or the destination he has appointed for them, on his becoming bankrupt and insolvent. The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, 131 Mass. 457, declares that the right of stoppage in transitu is an equitable extension, recognized by the courts of common law, of the seller’s lien for the price of goods of which the buyer has acquired the property but not the possession. Mr. Hutchinson in his Law of Carriers, §409, says that this right is based on the plain reason of justice and equity, that one man’s goods shall not be applied to the payment of another man’s debts, and that if after the vendor has delivered the goods out of his own possession, and has put them into the hands of the carrier for delivery to the buyer, he discovers that the buyer is insolvent, he may retake the goods, if he can, before they reach the buyer’s possession, and thus avoid having his property applied to paying debts due by the buyer to other people. An interesting discussion of the seller’s right of stoppage in transitu is found in Pi-ofessor Burdick’s Treatise on the Law of Sales
Our Civil Code, § 2285, declares that the right continues until the vendee obtains the actual possession of the goods; and it is also declared in section 3552 of the same Code, that, if the goods are delivered before the price is paid, the seller •can not retake because of failure to pay, but, until actual receipt by the purchaser, the seller may at any time arrest them ■on the way and retain them until the price is paid. Again, it is provided by section 3553 of the same Code, that a bona
That such was the construction of our code is made manifest by the ruling in the case of Ocean Steamship Company v. Ehrlich, 88 Ga. 502. In that case, goods were consigned in New York to be delivered to Epstein & Wannbacher at Savannah, and shipped by the Ocean Steamship Company. On arrival they were placed on the wharf of the steamship com-, pany, the freight and wharfage had been paid, and nothing remained to be done to change the actual possession from the carrier to the consignee except to remove the goods. It was shown that it was the custom of the carrier to deliver goods so placed, when the freight and wharfage were paid, without requiring the bills of lading. The consignees sold the goods to Ehrlich and exhibited to the purchaser the bills of lading, but executed no assignment of such bills. They delivered to him the receipted freight and wharfage bills and also an order on'the carrier for the goods, and Ehrlich paid the agreed purchase-price. On exhibition of the order to the carrier, a part of the goods were delivered and carried away. On returning for the remainder, it was found that the consignor in New York had notified the carrier not to deliver the goods to the consignee. The carrier, acting under the notice, refused to make further delivery of the goods; and the question was, were the consignors in time? After citing the provisions of the code above referred to, Chief Justice Bleckley, delivering the opinion of the court, said: “Under these provisions nothing defeats the right of stoppage but actual possession in the vendee, or bona fide assignment of the bill of lading. . . The actual possession of the goods not removed from the wharf was certainly never in [the consignees] r and what they did
The claim of the plaintiffs in error in this case is, that the sale made to them by the consignee, and the subsequent recognition of such sale by the carrier and the agreement on its part to reship the goods, was such a delivery as vested in them' title to the goods free from the right of stoppage in transitu. It must be remembered, however, that nothing will defeat this right, except actual possession of the goods by the consignee, or an assignment of the bill of lading, which is a symbolic
Judgment affirmed.