This suit proceeds upon the theory that notwithstanding the defendant bank, the payee of the draft, cashed the same or placed the proceeds thereof to the credit of the drawers, Smith & Goughian, it became liable to the plaintiff, upon a subsequent payment, by it, of said draft, as for the breach of the contract of sale between it, the plaintiff, and the consignor of the cotton and drawers of the draft, Smith & Coughlan, and which said draft, when paid by the plaintiff, had the bill of lading for the cotton attached thereto, and which said bill of lading, when delivered to the defendant, was indorsed in blank. The question therefore arises: Did the defendant bank who cashed the draft, or placed the proceeds thereof to the. credit of the drawers, Smith & Cougblan, and who forwarded the same for collection with bill of lading attached, become liable to the plaintiff, upon payment of said draft, for a breach of the contract of sale, between the plaintiff and the vendors of the cotton, Smith .& Coughlan, growing out of a shortage in the weight of the cotton or a deterioration in the quality? We think not. The defendant, by purchasing or cashing the draft, did not undertake thereby to carry out the contract of sale. Nor did the assignment of the bill of lading put the defendant in the shoes of the vendors and entail upon it the duty of standing sponsor for their warranties and obligations, connected with or growing out of the contract of the sale of the cotton. “Assignments of bills of lading are not governed by the
The appellants contend, however, that the bill of lading, duly indorsed, was attached to the draft, and that they had the right to rely upon it as a security protecting them in the payment of the draft. As heretofore set out, the defendant, by being the transferee of the bill of lading, was under no legal obligation to carry out the contract for Smith & Coughlan. They did not become a party to the contract of sale, and the only rep? resentations or warranties that can be attributed to them was that the bill of lading was in the same condition as when they got it from Smith &. Coughlan. We doubt if the status would be changed, if the transfer of the bill of lading had been unconditioned, as it would only operate to transfer the title to the property, and not the contract of sale, so as to put the defendant in the shoes of Slnith & Coughlan; but the transfer was conditional and Avas only a security for the draft, as the draft to which it was attached shows upon its face that the bill of lading was attached. The plaintiffs had knowledge, or notice of facts to put them on notice, that the payment of the draft- would divest the defendant of any title or claim to the cotton under the bill of lading, and that the bill of lading was simply held as collateral security for the draft, and which was sufficient to negative all idea that the defendant, in acquiring the bill of lading, had become the vendor of the cotton or had undertaken to perform the contract of Smith & Coughlan. This conclusion is supported by the great weight of authority, English and American, and some of which are directly in point, in law and fact, and is opposed by a
The opinion in the case of Eufaula Grocery Co. v. Missouri Bank, 118 Ala. 408, 24 South. 389, contains expressions contrary to the present holding, and which would indicate that defendant bank, as payee of the draft, was a guarantor of Burbaker’s contract with the Eufaula Grocery Company. We need not, and do not, question the soundness of the conclusion in said case; but the opinion seems to proceed upon a misconception. of the record and is not responsive to the appellant’s style of action or complaint or the argument and contention of counsel, upon the appeal, as will appear from the read
The case of Haas v. Citizens’ Bank, 144 Ala. 562, 39 South. 129, 1 L. R. A. (N. S.) 242, 113 Am. St. Rep. 61, reaffirmed 157 Ala. 607, 46 South. 1036, whether sound or not, can be differentiated from the present case, and, in fact, from all the cases cited for and against the present holding; In this Haas case, the complaint averred, not only that the bank acquired the draft and bill of lading, but purchased the account also, and on page 571 of 144 Ala., on page 129 of 39 South. (1 L. R-. A. [N.S.] 242, 113 Am. St. Rep. 61), the court, speaking through Tyson, J., stresses the point that the bank purchased the account, and does not fasten its liability upon the draft and bill of lading alone. In response to the contention, by the bank, that it held the draft as a bona fide purchaser and was not therefore liable, the court says: “To so hold would be to give effect to' only a part of the transaction — to ignore its ownership of the goods and the ac
The judgment of the city court is affirmed.
Affirmed.