[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *241
The letter of Strippleman Boyce to the defendants, dated March 1, 1853, accompanying and inclosing a bill of lading of the twenty-four bales of cotton, expressly advised them that they (Strippleman Boyce) had written to Messrs. Archd. H. Lowery
Co., 121 Front street, New York, inclosing a draft on their (defendants') house, for $500, payable when the said cotton was sold. This was a clear and explicit appropriation of $500 of the proceeds of said cotton, when sold, to the use of A.H. Lowery
Co., payable upon the presentation of the said draft. The defendants obviously so regarded it at the time, for in their letter of the date of March 28, acknowledging the receipt of the bill of lading, they say: "Your draft in favor of A.H. Lowery
Co. shall be honored from the proceeds of the cotton," c., and the statement of the defendants, by their clerk, in the presence of one of the defendants, that "it was all right, and that the draft would be *242
paid out of the proceeds of the cotton," is to the same effect. The draft was not a bill of exchange requiring acceptance to bind the drawers, but a specific draft or order upon a particular fund. (Story on Bills of Exchange, 86.) It was equivalent to an assignment in equity to Lowery Co., of so much of the proceeds of the cotton. (Morton v. Naylor,
I think the judgment below should be affirmed.
DENIO, Ch. J., DAVIES, SUTHERLAND and GOULD, Js., concurring,
Judgment affirmed.
