18 La. 447 | La. | 1841
delivered the. opinion of the court.
In this case, an attachment was issued at the suit of a resident of the State of Tennessee, against a citizen of the State of Arkansas. Thomas B. Lee & Co. of the city of New-Orleans were made garnishees, and answered the interrogatories propounded to them by the plaintiff, as follows : 1st. that they did receive 208 bales of cotton marked E. B. per steamer Campté. 2d. That they believe the cotton was made in the
On the first of May, 1840, the President and Directors of the Branch of the Real Estate Bank of the State of Arkansas at Washington, intervened and alleged’ that the attachment in this suit having been sued out against the property of Isaac N. Jones,- was levied upon the proceeds of 208 bales of cotton in the hands of T. B.- Lee & Co. by making them garnishees. That said cotton was shipped by the intervenors’ agent E. Britton, for their use and benefit, and consigned to the house of Lee & Co. by said Britton (they refer to the bill of lading) to secure the payment of a draft drawn by Jones on said Lee & Co. for $10201, payable at the New-Orleans Canal and Banking Company, due 3d of March, 1840, belonging to the' intervenors, and that the proceeds of said cotton- belongs to the intervenors, in virtue of the delivery to and possession of said cotton by their said agent for the purpose of applying the same to the payment of the draft; and that according to the laws of Arkansas, where the cotton was delivered, they áre entitled to the said proceeds and have a right to apply the' same to the payment of said draft by privilege and in preference to plaintiff’s claim.- They pray accordingly.- — Plaintiff answered the petition of intervention, by pleading the general issue, and denying specially the intervenor’s alleged privilege or lien on the property attached. — ¡There was judgment below in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant for $2,500, and in favor of the intervenors for the proceeds of the cotton attached ; and the plaintiff, after having vainly attempted to obtain a new trial, took the present appeal,
The first objection made to the intervenors’ right of reco- . . _ very is that the bank had no power or authority to enter into such contract by the laws of the State of Arkansas. The charter of the Real Estate Bank of Arkansas is not before us, but it has been admitted that it was duly and legally incorporated by the legislature of said State; if so, as a bank, the institution has undoubtedly the power to loan money, and it is conceded, that, as an incident thereto, it had the power to take security. It is contended however that the bank could
But, it is urged that the cashier had no authority to contract for the bank: the terms of the contract show clearly that it was made for the sole benefit of the bank, and for the purpose of securing a sum of money loaned by and due to the institution; the proceeds of the cotton are tobe paid over to th^
Our next inquiry is with regard to the legal effect of the contract and of the delivery of the cotton, under the laws of Arkansas: it is admitted on all hands that the contract in question is neither a sale nor a mortgage. From its features, it appears to us to be in the nature of a pledge, with this ference however that here the pledgee was authorized and required to sell the cotton pledged. This is not an unusual stipulation of common law pledges; before delivery, it was defeasible, but after delivery, the contract became complete, and its effect could not be destroyed by any act of the debtor or by any subsequent proceedings of the pledgor’s creditors, It is one of those contracts which are daily resorted to for the , , convenience of commerce, and which take their effect only from the delivery of the property transferred or pledged for the security of the debt. Delivery is essential to its validity; and Mr. Pike, a member of the bar of the State of Arkansas, states in his testimony, that he understands the law of said State to be that even a parol agreement or contract for such a purpose, followed up with a delivery or transfer of the property is legal and binding on the parties thereto; and on third
One of the material distinctions between a pledge and a mortgage, is : that a pledge is'a deposit of goods redeemable on certain terms, and either with or without a fixed period for redemption. 4, Kent's comm., 132. A pledge is defined to he a bailment or delivery of goods by a debtor to his creditor, to he kept till the debt he discharged. 2, Kent, 449; Story on bailment, No. 286. Where no time is limited for the redemption, the creditor may call upon the pledgor to redeem, and this, under the common law, he may do, after the debt is due, by having a judicial sale under a decree of foreclosure, or he may sell without judicial process upon giving reasonable notice to the debtor to redeem. 2, Kent, 452/ Story, p. 207, sec. 308, 310. — In the present case, the pledgor may he fairly considered as having waived his right to notice by his consenting that the cotton should he sold to satisfy the debt for which it had been pledged, and by thus limiting his right of redemption to his paying the debt previous to the sale of the cotton. Story, sec. 317, says: “In speaking of sales by the pawnee, it has been assumed that there is no special agreement between the parties, as to the time or mode of sale, existing, nor any stipulation wholly interdicting any sale. If such an agreement should exist, it must ordinarily regulate the rights of both parties; and neither of them will he allowed to depart from it with impunity.” This shows clearly that the parties, may, by a special agreement stipulate as to the time.and mode of sale, that such an agreement must then regulate their rights, and that it is only in the absence of any such agreement, that the pledgee has to resort to the election of the two remedies pointed out by law to obtain satisfaction of his debt by a judicial sale under a decree of foreclosure or by a sale made after notice given to the debtor to redeem. We agree with the appellees’ counsel that the contract under consideration partakes both of the features and character of a pledge and of an assignment in trust,
It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment of the Commercial Court be affirmed with costs.