262 Mass. 170 | Mass. | 1928
The plaintiff sues upon a check given by the defendant payable to a third person and indorsed to the plaintiff. The defendant stopped payment of the check and denies liability.
There is no dispute that the check was given by the defendant as the purchase price of goods bought by him from the plaintiff and was made payable to a nominee for the plaintiff. Liability is disputed on the ground that no title to the goods passed or could pass from the plaintiff to the defendant; that the consideration has failed; and that the transaction is illegal. This defence is open where, as here, the plaintiff and defendant are the real parties to the controversy, and the plaintiff is only in form a holder in due course. The holder had notice of every defect. G. L. c. 107, §§ 75, 79.
The evidence reported will support findings of the trial judge as follows: The goods dealt in were known by both parties to the sale to be jerkins and shirts taken by fishermen from the cargo of the sunken steamer “Port Hunter” some time between November 29 and the last of December, 1918, while it lay without fife, light, lines or guards, submerged upon a shoal in Vineyard Sound. The “ Port Hunter”, an English steamer loaded with cargo belonging in part to the French government and in part to the government of the United States of America and bound for France, early in November, 1918, was in collision in Vineyard Sound; was towed to and was beached on a shoal, submerged from her stern to her number one hatch, and full of water. The navy department, then in control of coastwise salvage facilities, sent vessels to her assistance which removed considerable cargo in an effort to lighten the ship. On November 16, she
These findings would justify further findings that ship and cargo had not been abandoned when the goods in question were taken from the cargo or acquired by the fishermen vendors of the plaintiff, and that these goods were not salvaged.
The trial judge found for the defendant, and reported the case for determination by this court.
The title of the United States never passed from it; for at no time were the goods abandoned, and until abandonment no one else could have more than a title by possession. See Merrill v. Fisher, 204 Mass. 600, 602. The judge was justified in holding that a cessation in effort of the coastguard to save the ship did not constitute an abandonment of the cargo, especially where responsibility for the ship and cargo was left with the captain.
There is no force in the contention that the plaintiff had a lien for salvage which passed to the defendant by the sale and constituted a consideration. The goods were removed from the wreck or picked up from the sea by fishermen. There is nothing to show that these men took them to preserve them for the owner, or as a basis for claims of salvage. Their conduct in selling to the plaintiff justifies a finding that they did not. The dealings of buyer and seller in the sale of June 28 fully support a finding that they were not dealing in a right to salvage. Instead, the transaction bears earmarks of dealing in goods believed to have been taken without right. The right to compensation for salvage depends upon scrupulous regard, on the part of the salvor, for the right of the true owner. Mason v. Ship Blaireau, 2 Cranch, 240. The Bello Corrunes, 6 Wheat. 152. Houseman v. Schooner North Carolina, 15 Pet. 40. As was stated in The Island City, 1 Black, 121, 130, “While the general interests of society require that the most powerful inducements should be held out to men to save fife and property about to perish at sea, they also require that those inducements should likewise be held forth to a fair and upright conduct with regard to the objects preserved. Compensation for salvage service presupposes good faith, meritorious service, complete restoration, and incorruptible vigilance, so far as the property is within the reach or under the control
Consideration failed completely. The defendant was justified, legally, in stopping the check, and refusing payment.
If it be urged that the defendant knew all the facts attending the plaintiff’s title and got all that the plaintiff had to convey, the short answer is, that the transaction could be found to be illegal, and that the law will not assist either party, but will leave him where it finds him. Moss v. Copelof, 231 Mass. 513. Duane v. Merchants Legal Stamp Co. 231 Mass. 113.
The rulings of the judge were right. He was not bound as matter of law to find for the plaintiff. In accord with the terms of the report, judgment for the defendant is to enter on the finding.
So ordered.