214 Mass. 196 | Mass. | 1913
This case seems to have been dealt with, both at the trial and at the argument in this court, largely as if the plaintiff’s rights depended upon the title which it acquired when the bill of lading for the goods in question, with the indorsements thereon, was delivered to it. If that were so, it might be found, • as was found at the trial, that the plaintiff took the bill of lading with notice of the defendants’ claim to the goods represented thereby and of the trust receipt which the defendants had taken from the Massachusetts Hide Company, and so was not a purchaser in good faith and without notice of the breach of duty of the Hide Company in violating the terms of that trust receipt. But that point is not decisive of the case. The plaintiff had, or there was evidence that it had, purchased the hides from the Columbia Leather Company; and, if so, the plaintiff, whatever notice or knowledge it may have had of the defendants’ rights, yet acquired all the rights of its vendor. Murdock v. Chapman, 9 Gray, 156. Thompson v. Kenyon, 100 Mass. 108. And see the cases collected in 35 Cyc. 363.
The testimony was that the Columbia Company took these hides from the Massachusetts Hide Company in payment of a debt due to it from the Hide Company. The defendants had held this bill of lading, and the goods mentioned therein were to be delivered to their order, in consequence of their having issued to the Hide Company a letter of credit, upon which the hides had been purchased in Russia and shipped to Boston. The defendants had paid or caused to be paid the drafts drawn under their letter of credit for the price of the hides, and bills of lading for the hides
By this transaction, under the common law as declared by our decisions, the title to the hides remained in the defendants; the Hide Company had no power to dispose of them in any other way than by a sale to Baker; and no one else could by a purchase from the Hide Company or by any dealings with it acquire a title to the hides which would be good against the defendants. The bill of lading merely represented the goods themselves; the Hide Company had no greater right, and could pass to any [purchaser other than Baker no greater right, than if its possession
• But before any of these transactions took place our uniform bills of lading act, St. 1910, c. 214, had been passed. Section 5 of that act provides that “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 a negotiable or order bill.” By § 29, “A negotiable bill may be negotiated by the indorsement of the person to whose order the goods are deliverable by the tenor of the bill. Such indorsement may be in blank or to a specified person. If indorsed to a specified person, it may be negotiated again by the indorsement of such person in blank or to another specified person.” By § 32, any one to whom a negotiable bill has duly been negotiated acquires thereby “such title to the goods as the person negotiating the bill to him had, or had ability to convey to a purchaser in good faith for value, and also such title to the goods as the consignee and consignor had, or had power to convey to a purchaser in good faith for value.” By § 38, “the validity of the negotiation of a bill is not impaired by the fact that such negotiation was a breach of duty on the part of the person making the negotiation, or by the fact that the owner of the bill was deprived of the possession of the same by fraud, accident, mistake, duress or conversion, if the person to whom the bill was negotiated, or a person to whom the bill was subsequently negotiated, gave value therefor, in good faith, without notice of the breach of duty, or fraud, accident, mistake, duress or conversion.” And § 39 further adds that “where a person having sold, mortgaged or pledged goods which are in a carrier’s possession and for' which a negotiable bill has been issued, or having sold, mortgaged or pledged the negotiable bill representing such goods, continues in possession of the negotiable bill, the subsequent negotiation thereof by that person
The effect of the statute has been to change fundamentally the rights of parties to transactions within its purview. In the present case, if the statute applies to it, when the defendants delivered their bill of lading to the Hide Company, with their unconditional and unlimited indorsement thereon, they entrusted their property to the honesty of that company and relinquished their right to set up their title against any one who might in good faith, for value, and without notice of the duty which rested upon the Hide Company, purchase from that company the goods described in the bill and take from that company a delivery of the bill itself duly indorsed by it. The previous decisions of this court, by which the defendants were protected against the consequences of their agent’s breach of duty, have been abrogated and nullified by the statute. As is, said in Williston on Sales, § 437, the statute “ renders unsafe what has doubtless been a common practice of bankers who advance money on documents of title — the entrusting of the documents for a special purpose to the pledgor of them or the proposed buyer of the goods.” The Columbia Company seems from the findings of the judge to have made, or at any rate it could be found to have made and there is no finding that it did not make,1 its purchase from the Hide Company in good faith and without notice of any limitation upon the authority or any breach of duty' of the Hide Company. It gave value for its purchase. The statute provides (§ 53) that “an antecedent or pre-existing obligation,whether for money or not, constitutes value where a bill is taken' either in satisfaction thereof or as security therefor.” If the statute applies to this case, the plaintiff’s exceptions must be sustained. • The case then must be governed by the decisions which either' were made upon statutes resembling more or less closely the one ‘ which we are considering, or independently of statutes have. adopted the rule thereof instead of the one laid down in our former decisions. See for example Tiedeman v. Knox, 53 Md. 612; Hutchings, Sealy & Co. v. Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway, 84 Kans. 479; Pollard v. Reardon, 65 Fed. Rep. 848; Munroe v.
This bill of lading was a foreign contract. The goods were foreign goods, shipped from Russia. The bill of lading contained the stipulation that “any claims or question between the owners of the goods and ship-owners shall be determined by the English law.” It has been found as a fact, on evidence which warranted the finding, that a transfer of a bill of lading to an indorsee for a special purpose by the English law passes no title to the goods except for such special purpose. Nor can we consider upon'this question any English decision which was not put in evidence at' the trial. Miller v. Aldrich, 202 Mass. 109. Even without the clause which we have quoted from the bill of lading, the statutory law of this Commonwealth could not be made to govern the rights and obligations of the carrier of these goods under the foreign contract. With that stipulation, those rights and obligations must be determined by the law of England, and our statutes have no bearing thereon. But no question for or against the carrier is raised. The rights of the parties before us depend upon their contracts with each other, and all those contracts were made here and are governed by our laws. Everything done by either party has been done here, and it is only their rights against each other by reason of what has been done here that are now in question. The law of the place where the defendants made their indorsement is the law which must determine the result of their action. Alcock v. Smith, [1892] 1 Ch. 238, 255,263, 266, 269. The same rule is applied to the transfer of foreign notes, checks or bills of exchange by indorsement, and the contract of indorsement is governed by the law of the place where that is made. Glidden v. Chamberlin, 167 Mass. 486, 494. Embiricos v. Anglo-Austrian Bank, [1905] 1 K. B. 677. McLean, J., in Nathan v. Louisiana, 8 How. 73, 82. So the rights, as between themselves, of the parties to a domestic transfer of shares in a foreign corporation are governed by the domestic law, though their rights against the corporation may depend upon the foreign law. Williams v. Colonial Bank, 38 Ch. D. 388; affirmed on appeal, sub mom. Colonial Bank v. Cady, 15 App. Cas. 267.
But it is said that the statute is unconstitutional, because it is a regulation of foreign and interstate commerce, and so encroaches
It follows from what has been said that the Columbia Company by its purchase from the Hide Company and the indorsement and delivery of the bill of lading acquired as against the defendants a good title to the hides, and that title passed to the plaintiff by its purchase from the Columbia Company. The act of the defendants in obtaining the hides from the carrier by means of the second bill of lading was, as to the plaintiff, wrongful and, having been done under a claim of right, constituted a conversion, for which they became liable to the plaintiff; and no demand was necessary before bringing the action. Hunt v. Boston, 183 Mass. 303. Geneva Wagon Co. v. Smith, 188 Mass. 202.
Nor can the defendants be heard to assert that the first bill of lading had become a spent document, upon the ground that before
We need not consider the exceptions in detail. The essential features of the case are covered by what has been said. We may .add, however, that the specific evidence, the admission of which ■was excepted to, was rightly admitted at the time that it was offered. It tended toward the maintenance of the defense set up. It would have become material if neither the plaintiff nor the Columbia Company was a bona fide purchaser of the hides.
Exceptions sustained.