122 Wash. 29 | Wash. | 1922
-On December 12, 1916, the Parker-Bell Lumber Company delivered to the Northern Pacific Railway Company at Pilchuck, Washington, a
It appears that neither the messenger- of the bank, the bank, nor the Parker-Bell Lumber Company was ever aware that the Buckeye Lumber Company had abstracted and retained the bill of lading of December 12, originally accompanying the draft, until after the insolvency of the Buckeye Lumber Company. During
Promptly, according to the practice of the National City Bank in such cases, it called upon the agent of the Chicago & Northwestern Railroad Company in Seattle, about one o’clock Saturday, to verify its issuance of the exchange bill of lading, and learned that the exchange bill had not been issued by the railroad company. Upon having its attention called to this information, the Buckeye Lumber Company explained that it was a mistake of its office, wherein frequently there were prepared exchange bills of lading and duplicates thereof on forms provided by the Chicago & Northwestern Railroad Company to be signed by the agent of that railroad company, sometimes in the office
The Parker-Bell Lumber Company admitted the carload of lumber was reasonably worth $1,151. On December 16, 1916, and for some time thereafter, the Buckeye Lumber Company and its officers had a good reputation for honesty and integrity in their business dealings. The respondent bank had no knowledge whatever of the planner in which the original bill of lading came into the possession of the Buckeye Lumber Company until long after that lumber company became insolvent. The evidence shows that a very large amount of business is done by which the manufacturers of lumber sell and consign their products to lumber brokers in Seattle, shippients to be made to eastern points, and that the bills of lading issued by the initial carrier direct and specify the connecting-carriers over which the shipment is to go; that the manufacturer collects through its bank from the broker by transmitting the bill of lading with sight draft attached, and that, in turn, the broker meets the payment by borrowing money from his bank upon his note and pledging an assignment of the original bill of lading, or an exchange bill of lading designating the broker as consignor and his customer in the east as consignee, together with an invoice by the broker to his purchaser, duly assigned, with an order on the purchaser to remit to the bank loaning the money. The trial court found, upon an abundance of evidence, that such manner of doing business in the lumber, banking and transportation business was well known to the public generally and to each of the defendants in this action at all times stated in the complaint, and for many years prior thereto.
It is contended by the appellant that the fraudulent
The case of Quality Shingle Co. v. Old Oregon L. & S. Co., 110 Wash. 60, 187 Pac. 705, has been cited and' discussed by the parties on this appeal. That case, however, was decided upon the act of Congress relating to bills of lading in interstate and foreign commerce, approved August 29th, 1916, U. S. Stat. at Large, vol. 39, ch. 415, p. 538. By the terms of that act it did not go into effect until January 1, 1917, and confessedly was not in force at the date of the transaction involved in the present case. However, it is argued by the appellant that that case is a correct exposition of the common law rule and that its principles will have to be overruled if the judgment in the present case is permitted to stand. That case and the present one are dissimilar. There the equities of the seller, who had acted promptly upon the discovery of the failure of consideration for the sale of the shingles covered by the bill of lading, were protected and enforced against an innocent purchaser because of the specific terms of the Federal statute applicable to the situation. There was in that case no question whatever of conduct on the part of the losing party reasonably calculated to inflict loss upon the other party, which we think is the controlling consideration in the present case. The right of either the Buckeye Lumber Company or the National City Bank to have at any time demanded and received the carload of lumber is not involved, but rather the question controlling the case is, did the Parker-Bell Lumber Com
This is a clear instance, we think, as decided by the trial court, for the application of the familiar rule, founded on the best of reason, that where one of two innocent persons must suffer from the fraud of a third person, the loss should fall on him who, by his imprudence, enabled such third person to commit the fraud.
A further contention is made that the court wrongfully allowed eight per cent interest per annum instead of the legal rate of six per cent on the $1,100. The basis of the judgment, which we think was proper, was a recovery for a loss that would not have been sustained but for the imprudent conduct of the appellant,
Parker, O. J., Tolman, Fullerton, and Bridges, JJ., concur.