20 Wend. 267 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1838
After advisement the following opinions were delivered :
The plaintiffs in error were not entitled to the goods in question on the ground, that they were the purchasers thereof without notice of the rights of the real owner ; they were in the same situation in this respect as every other purchaser of goods from a person who had no authority to sell. If the' owner of the goods had caused the bill of lading to be made out in' the name of Collins, so as to give him a prima facie right tc the goods as owner, or consignee for his own benefit, a bona fide purchaser might have been entitled to protection. The principle adopted in the case of Mowry v. Walsh, 8 Cowen, 238, might be applicable to such a case; but here the change of the bill of lading itself was .a fraudulent act on the part of the master of the vessel, or his agéní, and could not defeat the right of, | the owner of the goods who had not authorized any such change. ‘ ! The bill of lading is, by the custom of merchants, transferable,- ! so as to vest in the assignee.the title to the goods which the ! assignor had in ¡ them ; but if a person without authority from me ships my goods and takes a bill of lading- in his own name, j he cannot, by assigning that bill of lading to another, divest my -¡ title to the property^ If by the perils of the sea, or otherwise; the master of the Dove was unable to continue the voyage, and he was obliged to send on the cargo by another vessel*, hehad no right to change the consignee of the goods and if he wished to retain a lien upon the goods for the freight fro rata itineris, he should have done so by a special clause in the new bill of lading. In this case the unauthorized sale of the goods in the port of New-York, by the master of the Dove, was probably
The question does not arise on this writ of error whether the Messrs. Saltas by the purchase were substituted in the place of Coffin & Cartwright as to the lien upon the goods for the freight paid by them to the master of the Dusty Miller. If there had not been an actual conversion of the goods before the commencement of the suit, the question would arise whether there ever was a lien which the purchasers from Coffin & Cartwright could claim the benefit of; and, if such lien existed, whether it had not been waived by putting their claim to retain the goods upon other grounds. It appears, however, by the evidence, that the plaintiffs in error had actually converted the goods, by selling them on the day of their purchase; and if they once had a lien which would have rebutted .the presumption of a conversion, from the mere fact of refusing to deliver on demand, when the amount of the lien was not tendered or offered to be paid, a tender after they had put it out of their power to receive the money and deliver the goods, by an actual sale," would have been a useless ceremony, and was not necessary to enable the owner of the goods to recover in an action of trover. In such a case if there was a valid lien in favor of the defendants before the conversion, they would be entitled to be recouped in the damage, to the extent of such lien; but they could not defeat the plaintiff’s action altogether.
The bill of lading signed by Collins at New-Orleans was only prima facie evidence that the consignees were the owners of the property, and the letter of Bridge & Vose, the shippers, which was sent to the consignees with the bill of lading, was sufficient to rebut that presumption and to show that the property really
This cause, though of small magnitude as to the amount of property in question, has been contested in various forms through all -the courts to this tribunal of last resort.
The spirit of contentious litigation ought to find little favor here ; yet in this instance, I think, the parties have deserved well of the public, because the main question in the case is of great importance and must frequently arise in a commercial community. It ought, therefore, to be distinctly settled on principles of general application. That those principles are not very clearly settled in our state, we need no higher evidence than the manner in which this cause now comes before us. The supreme court have reversed the unanimous decision of the superior court of law of the city of New-York, and on the broad principles governing the questions which we are now to decide, there is a direct contrariety between the opinions of our highest court of common law and those of our most eminent commercial tribunal, as delivered by their chief justice, who was formerly chancellor of this state.
The universal and fundamental principle of our law of personal property, is, that no man can be divested of his property without his own consent; and, consequently, that even the honest purchaser under a defective title cannot hold against the true proprietor. Thatu no one can transfer to another a better title than he has himself,” is a maxim, says Chancellor Kent, “ alike
To whatever and however numerous exceptions this rule of our law' may be subject, it is unquestionably the general and regulating principle, modified only by the absolute necessity or the obvious policy of human affairs. The chief justice' of the superior court has said, in his opinion on this case, that1£ it must be conceded that a purchasér for a fair and valuable consideration in the usual course of trade, without notice of any conflicting claim or any suspicious circumstances to awaken inquiry, or to
The first and most remarkable class of these exceptions, relates to money, cash, bank bills, checks and notes payable to the bearer or transferable by delivery, and in short, whatever comes under the general notion of currency. It was decided by Lord Chief Justice -Holt, at an early period of our commercial law, that money and bills payable to bearer, though stolen, could not be recovered after they had passed into currency; and this u by reason of the course of trade which creates a property in the holder.” “ They pass by delivery only, and are considered as cash, arid the possession always carries with it the property 1 Salk. 126. A long series of decisions, beginning with Miller v. Race, 1 Burr. 452, has now settled the law, that possession of such paper is presumptive proof of'property, and that he who received it in the course of trade for a fair consideration, without any reason for just suspicion, can hold it against the true owner, and recover on it against the drawer, maker and others parties, even if the paper had been stolen from or lost by the former holder; such former holder .retaining all his original rights only against the thief or the finder, or whoever received the paper from them under suspicious circumstances. These decisions have been argued upon as authorities (at least in the way of analogy) both at bar and in opinions of the courts, in cases involving the same question as to goods or other moveable property. Hence, it was inferred that goods bought or received in the course of trade, stand on the same footing with bank notes or checks so received.” But an examination of the cases
Setting wholly aside then, this part of the law as to cash, bank notes, and bills to bearer, as founded on the peculiar necessities of currency and trade, and regulated by decisions and usages peculiar to itself, what rules do we find to obtain in other instances of conflict between the rights of original owners and those of fair purchasers 1 After a careful examination of all the English cases and those of this state, that have been cited or
I. The first is, when the owner with the intention of sale, has in any way parted with the actual property of his goods, with his own consent, though under such circumstances of fraud or error, as would make that consent revocable, rescind the sale, and authorize the recovery of the goods as against such vendee. But if the property passes into the hands of honest purchasers, the first owner must bear the loss. Thus, to take an instance from our own reports, where goods were obtained by a sale on credit, under a forged recommendation and guaranty, and then sold to a bona fide purchaser in the customary course of trade, the second buyer was protected in his possession against the defrauded original owner. Mowry v. Walsh, 8 Cowen, 243. So, again, where the owner gave possession and the apparent title of property to a purchaser, who gave his worthless note, in fraudulent contemplation of immediate bankruptcy, a fair purchase from the fraudulent vendee was held to be good against the first owner. Root v. French, 13 Wendell, 572. See also McCarty v. Vick, 12 Johns. R. 348. In all such cases, to protect the new purchaser, there must be a full consent of the owner to the transfer of property, though such consent might be temporary only, obtained by fraud or mistake, and therefore revocable against such unfair first purchaser.
II. The other class of cases in which the owner loses the right of following and reclaiming his property is, where he has, by his
Thus, the consignee, in a- bill of lading; is furnished by his consignor with such evidence of right of disposal, according to the custom and law of trade; so that the bona fide holder of the bill endorsed by the consignee is entitled ^.to all the rights of property of the consignor in-those goods, if-bought fairly in the course of business, although'the actual consignee, under whose endorsement he holds, has no right to the goods as against the' former owner. If such goods were not paid for, they might be' stopped in transitu by the owner, unless his e'onsignee has already assigned his bill of lading; but'that assignment divests the owner of his right of stoppage against such assignee.
The famous series of decisions in the various courts in the casé of Lickbarrow v. Mason, 2 T. R. 63, 2 H. Black, R. 11, 5 T. R. 367, which led to the establishment of the doctrine of this qualified negotiability of bills of lading, memorable alike in legal and commercial history, strongly'-illustrates the whole question before us. There, Buller and his-associate judges, trained up at the feet of the great father of English commercial jurisprudence, maintained and established the law as we .now hold it, under the influence of Mansfield’s genius, upon" his reasoning and on his authority," against those of Lord Loughborough and others, the most 1 darned lawyers of their times. All the arguments and admissions of both sides show how deeply the general principle is rooted in the law of England, that (to use Lord Loughborough’s words) “ mere possession, without a just
Again : the owner may lose the right of recovering his goods against purchasers, by exhibiting to the world a third person as having power to sell and dispose of them ; and this, not only by giving a direct authority to him, but by conferring an implied authority. Such an authority may be implied by the assent to and ratification of prior similar dealings, so as to hold such person out to those with whom he is in the habit of trading, as authorized to buy or sell. It may be inferred from the nature of the business of the agent, with fit accompanying circumstances. “If a man,” says Bayley, J. in Pickering v. Buck, 15 East, 44, “puts goods into another’s custody, whose common business it is to sell, he confers an implied authority' to selland the cause was decided on that ground. But this implied authority must arise from the natural and obvious interpretation of facts, according to the habits and usages of business; and it never applies where the character and business of the person in possession, do not warrant the reasonable presumption of his being empowered to sell property of that kind. If, therefore, to use an illustration of Lord Chief Justice Ellenborough, in the case just cited, a per
Beyond the precise exceptions I have above stated, I think our law has not carried the protection of the fair vendee against the defrauded or unfortunate owner. It protectslnnfwhen the owner’s misplaced confidence has voluntarily given to another the apparent right of property or of sale. But if the owner loses his property, or is robbed of it, or it is sold or pledged without his consent by one who has only a temporary right to its use by hiring, ¡ or otherwise, or a qualified possession of it for a specific purpose, ¡ as for transportation, or for work to be performed on it, the owner' can follow and reclaim it in the hands of any person, however innocent. Among the numerous cases to this effect, I will cite only that of Howe v. Parker, 2 T. R. 376, which I select not only on account of the strong and unhesitating manner of the decision, but because it was pronounced by the very judges who, in the case of Lickbarrow v. Mason, had carried the protection of a bona fide purchaser under a bill of lading far beyond the rigor of the ancient law. There, plate had been pawned by a widow who had only a life interest in it under her husband’s will, of which fact the pawnee had no notice. It was not doubted that the lien for the monies advanced on such pledge was void against, the remainder-man, after the widow’s death. "Per curiam: This point is clearly settled, and the law must remain as it is, until the legislature think fit to provide that the possession of such chattels is proof of ownership.”
In order to decide in such conflicts between the claims of
The rule of our law, as I understand it, is perfectly consistent with the equity between the parties, as far as such equity can ¡apply; and it serves the great interests of commerce, in a state of such extensive foreign and domestic trade as ours, by protecting the property of the stranger, as well as of our own citizens, against the possible frauds of carriers by sea, or by internal transportation, whilst it throws upon the resident merchant the responsibility of taking care with whom he deals, and teaches him a lesson of wholesome caution. It is no mean proof of the wisdom of the rule, that it agrees in substance with the provisions of the Napoleon Code. The code, like our law, holds as a general rule, that the sale of goods, by any but the true holder, is a nullity ; "La vente de la chose d’autrui est nulle" Code Civil III. art. 1599. It confines the authority of the special agent or mandataire to the strict limits of his power j and in sales, the power must always be special and express. Code Civil, art. 1989. It allows the right of revendication or stoppage in transitu against the insolvent or fraudulent purchaser or consignee j but that right ceases, as with us, against the consignee, when the goods have been fairly sold according to the bills of lading ; " vendues sans fraude sur factures et connaissements." Code de Commerce, Liv. III., art. 576, 577, 578. The Scotch law, as I gather from Bell's Commentaries, lays down a different rule, that " a purchaser, in the course of trade, should be protected in the purchase of goods from any one who has them in lawful possession.” This agrees with the doctrine of our superior court, and might be a safe enough rule, if generally adopted and understood. But it is not the rule of our own law, which is perhaps quite as wise, as well as certainly founded on a much larger and wider commercial experience.
Let us apply these conclusions to the present case. Collins, the person whose sale it is asserted must divest the original
Neither does the selection of a ship and its master vest in the master any implied authority to sell the ship, or any part of her cargo. His business is to carry the goods, and no more, with some other clearly defined and very limited .powers, to be exercised only in cases of absolute necessity. He stands in the same legal relation to his cargo with the watchmaker, in the case supposed by Lord Ellenborough, who has in bis hands a watch to be repaired. He is not exhibited to the world as the owner, or agent for selling; and if he does sell it, the sale is void against the true proprietor. The law of shipping is well known to the commercial world, to declare that the master has no authority to sell the cargo, or any part of it, unless under circumstances of pressing necessity abroad; and of that absolute necessity, the
It is true that the rule will sometimes, as was urged by Chief Justice Jones, "involve purchasers in great perils;” but that peril can scarcely be called “ unreasonable,” since there is a reason of public policy'of at least equal weight to counterbalance this inconvenience. It is the same which is the ground of the absolute prohibition to a master or carrier to sell the goods he transports, except under insurmountable necessity ; it is to prevent, in the language of the court in the case just quoted, 5 Barn. & Cress. 620, " fraudulent sales of ships and cargoes in foreign
On the other question, as to the right of the defendants below to stand in the place of their vendor, and to be protected to the extent of the charges on the lead for freight, as claimed by Collins, I need say but little. The right of lien in such circumstances, (if any right exist here,) depends upon actual possessions by the factor, or carrier, or his immediate agent. When the' goods are sold and delivered to a third person, the lien, as such, expires with the possession. This is the distinction between the” present case and the former suit against Coffin & Cartwright, who were immediate agents or bailees of Collins.
The two courts below have agreed in deciding against the validity of the objections to the evidence raised on the trial of the cause, and I have nothing to add to the reasons they assign j to all which I fully assent.
The importance of the principles and rules not only of decision but of active business involved in this cause, especially in relation to that vast and busy community which I immediately represent in this body, has led me to examine this whole head of law with an interest and at a length wholly disproportioned to the amount of value in controversy. If the views I have been able to present shall in any way, directly or indirectly, tend to settle the law on this head, or make it more clearly and correctly understood, the study I have given the subject will have been well bestowed.
I am of opinion that the judgment of the supreme court,, reversing that of the superior court of New-York, be affirmed.
Judgment unanimously affirmed.
The following is what was said by Chief Justice Jones in the superior court of law of the city of New-York, on the main question in this case:
“It must be conceded, that a purchaser, for a fair and valuable consideration in the usual course of trade, without notice of any conflicting claim, or any suspicious circumstances to awaken inquiry, or to put him on his guard, will, as a general rule? be protected in his purchase, and unaffected by any latent claims. But there are exceptions to this rule, and it is supposed by the plaintiff that he comes within them. He was the owner of the lead, and Collins, the master, who assumed the power of disposing of it, was a mere carrier, to whom it was entrusted for the purpose of transportation; and the sale of it, by him, was without necessity, and wholly unauthorized. It is, on this ground, contended that the sale was void, and that no title passed by the transfer. There can be no question, that an agent for a special purpose, has no authority to sell the property of his principal, unless in cases of abso