110 Wash. 60 | Wash. | 1920
This controversy in its beginning was over the ownership of 185 M shingles, being a car load; hut the action is in form one wherein the plaintiff, Quality Shingle Company, seeks to recover the proceeds of a sale of the shingles made by the defendant, Old Oregon Lumber & Shingle Company. The action was so commenced and prosecuted because of an agreement between the parties to this action, entered into before its commencement, whereby it was agreed that the shingles he delivered to the defendant’s purchaser and the proceeds of such sale substituted for the shingles in any litigation between the parties to the agreement looking to the determination of their respective rights to the shingles. A trial in the superior court upon the merits resulted in findings and judgment against the defendant, awarding to the plaintiff recovery in an amount equal to the proceeds of the sale of the shingles made by the defendant, with interest. Prom this disposition of the cause the defendant has appealed to this court.
The controlling facts are not in dispute, and may he summarized as follows: On June 16, 1917, respondent, Quality Shingle Company, was the owner of the shingles in question. On that day it delivered the shingles to the Great Northern Railway Company, at Edmonds, in this state, for shipment to Whitefish, in the state of Montana. The railway company thereupon delivered to respondent a straight, nonnegotiahle hill
“That, at the time of such purchase, the said Shepard-Traill Company, with the intent and purpose of thereby making delivery to said defendant of the said shingles hereinbefore mentioned, delivered to' said defendant the said bill of lading issued to the plaintiff by the Great Northern Railway Company on June 16, 1917, for said car No. 206812, which bill of lading, prior to the time of its delivery to said Shepard-Traill Company had been endorsed in blank by the plaintiff and delivered by plaintiff to Shepard-Traill Company; that the defendant purchased said shingles,' and took said bill of lading so endorsed in blank by plaintiff in good faith and paid to said Shepard-Traill Company the full*63 and fair price for said shingles, to wit: the sum of $455.10, without notice, actual or constructive, of any fact to put defendant upon inquiry as to the endorsement and delivery of said bill of lading by plaintiff and delivery thereof to said Shepard-Traill Company or reason to suspect that plaintiff had any interest or claim upon or to said shingles or any part thereof.”
This finding, in so far as it relates to good faith on the part of appellant in purchasing the shingles from Shepard-Traill Company, and in so far as it touches the question of appellant’s being required to take notice of any defects in the title of the Shepard-Traill Company, we think it will appear, presents questions of law rather than fact.
Upon the refusal of the Metropolitan Bank to honor the check, respondent promptly claimed ownership in the shingles, and so notified appellant, also notifying appellant that it would demand possession of the shingles from the Great Northern Railway Company, in whose possession they still were in course of transportation. Thereupon, on June 25th, 1917, an agreement was entered into between respondent and appellant that respondent should permit the shingles to go forward and be delivered to the purchaser thereof from the defendant, and that the proceeds of such sale should be substituted for the shingles in any litigation between the parties to the agreement, looking to the determination of their respective rights to the shingles. Thereafter, in pursuance of that agreement, the shingles were caused to be delivered by appellant to its purchaser, it receiving the proceeds of such sale, the recovery of which are here sought.
That the sale agreement entered into between respondent and the Shepard-Traill Company was an agreement for a cash sale, that Shepard-Traill Company obtained possession of the bill of lading by giving
It is at once plain that this was an interstate commerce shipment, since it was a shipment from a point in this state to a point in the state of Montana. "We think it follows, therefore, that the question of the effect of the assignment of the bill of lading, and the rights acquired by appellant, the assignee, is controlled
‘ ‘ Sec. 8604aaaa. A bill in which it is stated that the goods are consigned or destined to a specified person is a straight bill.
“Sec. 8604b. A bill in which it is stated that the goods are consigned or destined to the order of any person named in such bill is an order bill. Any provision in such a bill or in any notice, contract, rule, regulation, or tariff that it is nonnegotiable shall be null and void and shall not affect its negotiability within the meaning of the Act unless upon its face and in writing agreed to by the shipper.
‘ ‘ Sec. 8604o. A bill may be transferred by the holder by delivery, accompanied with an agreement, express or implied, to transfer the title to the bill or to the goods represented thereby. A straight bill can not be negotiated free from existing equities, and the indorsement of such a bill gives tbe transferee no additional right. ’ ’
There has not come to our notice any decision of the courts touching the question of the meaning of these provisions of the Federal Act. It seems to us, however, that, the language of the act above quoted plainly places the assignee; of a straight bill of lading in all respects in the shoes of his assignor. The language, “a straight bill of lading cannot be. negotiated free from existing equities, and the indorsement of such a bill gives the transferee no additional right, ’ ’ it seems to us plainly means that, whatever right, legal or equitable, may exist in the property described in the bill of lading in favor of someone other than the assign- or of the bill of lading as against him, continues to exist as against his assignees. We are of the opinion
The judgment is affirmed.
Holcomb, C. J., Mackintosh, Main, and Mitchell, JJ., concur.-