43 La. Ann. 1 | La. | 1891
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff sued to be recognized as the pledgee and qualified owner of certain cotton, or entitled to recover from the defendants the amount of a draft on them, to secure the payment of which, bills of lading for said cotton, indorsed in blank, were delivered by the consignor at the time of shipment.
The cotton having been sequestered, certain parties intervened the day after the seizure and bonded it.
The defendants denied title in plaintiff to the cotton, or right against them to recover the amount of the draft, averring that the cotton had been consigned to them by the consignor, whose creditors they were at the time; that they had possession of the cotton on which they had a privilege; that they sold it, paid themselves, and that there remained a balance to the credit of the consignor, applicable to the draft.
There was a qualified judgment for plaintiff, and one in favor of the intervenors, condemning the defendants to pay the amount of the draft and recognizing the rights of the plaintiff as pledgee to the proceeds of the cotton. From this judgment the defendants have appealed suspensively. The judgment for intervenors is not up for review.
C. M. Waterman & Co., having purchased 68 bales of cotton, borrowed to pay it from the plaintiff’s bank $3280.28, for which they drew at Arksville, Miss., on January 13, 1890, their draft on the defendants, attaching thereto, indorsed in blank, the bills of lading which they had obtained at Ackerman, Miss., from the railroad company for the cotton which was consigned to the defendants at New Orleans.
The draft was negotiated and delivered to the plaintiff, who, without delay, transmitted it to its correspondent here, who presented it, with the bills of lading annexed, to the defendants for acceptance and payment on the 15th and 16th, which was declined on the ground that they had received no advice or invoice from Waterman & Co. touching the same.
On the 16th the cotton, consigned to the defendants, was received by them and stored, and on the 17th it was sold by them to Strauss & Co., who paid for the same on the following day.
On the 20th the plaintiff obtained'a sequestration against the cotton, which was executed on the day after. On the 22d Strauss & Co. intervened, and, as said, bonded the cotton, which went to their possession.
The cotton realized $3275.74 net, out of which the defendants paid themselves $1799.35, the amount of their claim for advances against Waterman & Co., leaving a balance of $1476.30 in their hands, out of which they acknowledged that plaintiff’s claim could be paid.
The plaintiff’s contention is that, by the transfer to them for value of the bills of lading, which were designed to secure payment of the draft, they have acquired a right to be deemed and taken to be the owners of the cotton, so far as to give validity to the pledge, created in their favor by Waterman & Co., and that they are entitled to the possession of the cotton, or to the amount of their draft.
On the other hand, the defendants urge that, as they were creditors for a balance of Waterman & Co. when the cotton was shipped to, and was received by them without contrary advice, they had a privilege on it which entitled them to a preference over all and even any seizing creditor.
The question presented for solution is, therefore:
Whether a bona fide holder and owner for value of a draft of a consignor,’ to whom the bilí of lading of product has been trans
Section 6 of the Act of 1868, No. 150, page 194, in substance provides: that bills of lading, given by any forwarder, may be transferred by indorsement, and the transferee shall be deemed and taken to be the owner of the goods, so far as to give validity to any pledge, lien or transfer created by the forwarder, the property or goods to be delivered only on surrender and cancellation of the bill of lading.
In Delgado vs. Wilbur, 25 An. 84, the then court (1873) well said, commenting on that identical section, that it is only a legislative sanction given to the commercial law of universal application, that a bill of lading, legally transferred, gives title to the property it, represents; quoting authorities in support.
There can therefore be no doubt that when the bills of lading were indorsed in blank by Waterman & Co., and delivered to the plaintiff in Mississippi to secure the payment of the draft drawn by them on the defendants, the plaintiff acquired a right of pledge which necessarily followed them into Louisiana, continuing to attach thereto, notwithstanding any possession which the defendants subsequently acquired of them.
The contention of the consignees, that, under paragraph 2 of Article 3247, R. C. C., they are entitled to a privilege for the balance for advances due them, is not well founded.
That article does not rule so as to settle the controversy. It has. undergone, since its insertion into the Code, modifications which prevent its application favorably to the defendants.
In 1874, by Act. 66, page 114, the matter first received legislative consideration, but in 1882 it was put into a new shape, which controls the present litigation.
By Act No. 44 of that year (1882) Section 3, page 56, the Act of 1874 was amended so as to allow to all merchants, factors and others having any sum of money due them by any consignor sending any agricultural product for sale at New Orleans, or any other town or city in the State, for the pwrpose of paying the same, a pledge on such property, from the time of the mailing of the bill of lading, or
The words, “for the purpose of paying,” and those relative to prior encumbrances, were then ex industria inserted, as they are not found in the Act of 1874.
This provision of law is clearly destructive of the defendants’ pretensions for several reasons, which are matters of fact.
Although it be true that the defendants were creditors of Waterman & Co., as claimed, still the fact remains that the cotton was not shipped to them for the purpose of paying themselves; that no bill of lading therefor was mailed or given to the carrier for transmission to them; that there existed a previous valid qualified alienation thereof, which could not be defeated or lessened by any subsequent transaction.
The ruling invoked, made in the case of Helm vs. Meyer, Weis & Co., 80 An. 948, can afford the defendants no relief.
The essential facts on which the controversy turned are dissimilar from those in the instant case, and the law which governed in its -decision is different from that which controls in the present litigation.
In that case, the shipments were made “for account of the consignor,” without any qualification; the letters of advice contained no mention of any draft as having been drawn against them; the bills of lading had been transmitted to the consignees; the draft had been drawn after the letters had issued and been received; the bills of lading were not annexed to the draft, which was presented after the consignees had accepted the consignment, received the cotton and disposed of it.
In the present instance the draft was drawn, the bill of lading transferred in blank, being attached thereto, was presented to the consignees before they had accepted the consignment, taken possession and disposed of the cotton.
In the first case, the defendants relied on the first paragraph of Article 8247, R. O. 0., which was properly applied to the facts as presented, the court holding that the consignee could not be divested in the manner attempted by the draft holder.
In the case under consideration, the defendants rely on the second paragraph of the same article, which refers to a different state of
Even had the second part of the article not undergone modifications, it would not justify the pretensions of the defendants, who never had a legal possession for themselves of the cotton, and never had the bills of lading in their favor, so as to give them any pledge or lien on the cotton.
The ruling in 30 An. 943 rather militates decisively against the defendants here, for it formally and correctly announces that there can be no doubt of the correctness of the general proposition that a consignee who accepts a consignment with the advice and notice that the consignor has drawn on him, for a stated amount, against the goods consigned, impliedly promises to accept and pay the draft, and on refusal may be sued for a breach of contract.
It also announces by the clearest intimation that a consignee’s claim to a right on the product can not be defeated by any thing short of the negotiation of the bills of lading, or of a designation in the bill that the shipment is for the account of the draft drawn.
The rights of a consignee who is a creditor have been acknowledged and enforced on the goods consigned to him when in his legal possession, actually or constructively, in the Helm case, 30 An. 943, and also in Florsheim vs. Howell, 33 An. 1184, and in Phelps vs. Howell, 35 An. 87, in both of which the provisions of the Act of 1874, No. 66, received application, the holder of the bills of lading being deemed the possessor.
If therefore it be true, and it surely is, that a consignee’s right can not be destroyed by the consignor’s ill practices, as was attempted to be done in those cases, it is no less so that equally sacred are those of a creditor of the consignor, to whom the bills of lading have been transferred, to secure the payment of a draft of which he is the holder and owner.
Such rights can not be impaired by the omission of the consignor to advise the consignee of the drawing of the draft and transfer of the bills of lading when the draft and bills attached are presented to the consignee before he has knowledge, or has accepted, or has taken possession of the consignment.
While ruling as we do, emphasizing the presentment he/ore acceptance, we are not to be understood as intimating that, even had
The reason assigned by the defendants for not paying the draft, that they had received no instruction touching it, is inadmissible.
It was immaterial to the holder of the draft and bills whether such was or not the fact.
His possession of the indorsed bills was his unassailable title, and his exhibition of them to the consignees previous to their taking possession of the consignment were better than any instruction or advice which might have been given them, as they established conclusively that the .consignor had parted with his title to it by transferring the same to another, and thus made known, in an absolute way, facts, knowledge of which could have been transmitted by correspondence. That presentment proves that the consignees were notified of the existence of the draft and of the transfer of the bills of lading before they had accepted the consignment and received the cotton.
The complaint that the plaintiff never had possession of the cotton, while the defendants had, can hardly be gravely contended for.
By the transfer of the bills of lading the plaintiff acquired a right of pledge, and therefore in legal contemplation had a valid constructive possession of it superior to that of any actual possessor, which continued to the very end, when the cotton, by being illegally sold by the consignees, passed to the hands of innocent third parties.
The claim, on the other hand, of the defendants, that they had possession, lacks foundation.
The possession which the defendents acquired after the draft with the annexed bills of lading had been presented and thus notified to .them was, if not tortious, to say the least, was wholly unauthorized and unjustifiable, as taken in direct violation of the law, which forbids the delivery of product by a carrier in cases in which the bills of lading have been transferred, unless on surrender or cancellation of the same (Section 6, Act 150 of 1868) by the consignee or holder of the bills.
It is therefore apparent that the plaintiff was entitled, as holder of the draft and of the bills of lading indorsed in blank attached thereto, to be deemed and taken as owner of the same, so far as to give validity to any pledge which the forwarder had created thereon; that the defendants were in time amply notified of the conditional
It is clear that, as the cotton can not be made forthcoming by the defendants, and they can not produce the identical proceeds, they must be held generally liable for the amount of the draft.
The objection to the jurisdiction of this court, made by the appellee, is ill-founded. It suffices to say that the amount in dispute was that of the draft sued on, and that it was not reduced by the acknowledgment at first made by the defendants, that the plaintiff could be entitled only to the net balance of the proceeds of the cotton, after payment of what was due them, and which was below our lower limit; the acknowledgment not having been acted upon by the plaintiff before the defendants had changed their position, and the original condition of things restored.
The appellee has prayed for damages, treating the appeal as frivolous.
It may be, as in point of fact it is, true, that the defences set up are not maintainable, but as the issues were seriously presented and the questions of law involved were never previously clearly adjudicated upon, we do not think ourselves warranted in thus mulcting the appellants.
Judgment affirmed.