53 Md. 612 | Md. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Act of 1876, ch. 262, provides that “ all bills of lading ” executed in this State, or, if executed elsewhere, providing for the delivery of merchandise within this State, “ shall be and they are hereby constituted and declared to be negotiable instruments and securities, (unless it be provided in express terms to the contrary on the face thereof,) in the same sense as bills of exchange and promissory notes, and full and complete title to the property in said instruments mentioned or described, and all rights and remedies incident to such title, or arising under or derivable from the said instruments, shall enure to and be vested in each and every bona fide holder thereof for value, altogether unaffected by any rights or equities whatsoever of or between the original or any other prior holders •of or parties to the same, of which such bona fide holder for value shall not have had actual notice at the time he became such.” • This statute is more comprehensive and sweeping in its phraseology and effect, than the statutes of Missouri and Pennsylvania recently construed by the Supreme Court in the case of Shaw & Essey vs. Merchants’ National Bank of St. Louis, reported in The Legal Intelligencer of March 26th, 1880. In that case a bill of lading for cotton was stolen from the bank during the transit of the cotton from St. Louis to Philadelphia, and endorsed over to parties who advanced $8500 thereon, and the jury found that when these parties received it, they knew facts from which they had reason to believe that the parties from whom they took it, were not the lawful owners of it,
But, as we have seen, the terms of our statute are different and more comprehensive in scope and purpose. Shortly before this law was passed it had been decided hy this Court in the case of Balt. & Ohio R. R. Co. vs. Wilkens,
Having thus disposed of this preliminary question, raised in argument rather than directly presented by any of the rulings of the Court to which exceptions were taken, we now proceed to consider those rulings, and this necessitates a brief statement of the main facts of the case.
Earnest Waltjen, trading under the firm name of “ John Campsen & Co.,” did business in Charleston, South Carolina, as a miller, grain dealer and commission merchant. The appellant (the plaintiff below) was a flour merchant in St. Louis, and James Knox, the defendant and appellee was a commission merchant in Baltimore, trading under the firm name of James Knox & Co. There had heen for some time business dealings between Camp-sen & Co. and Knox & Co., and among other transactions of a similar character there was a draft for $1803.75 drawn by Knox & Co. to their own order, and accepted by Camp-sen & Co., which fell due on the 19th of September, 1878, and this draft Knox & Co. had endorsed and procured to he discounted by the Citizens’ Rational Bank in Baltimore. About the 9th or 10th of September, 1878, Camp-sen & Co. purchased a lot of flour from the plaintiff, through one West, the plaintiff's agent in Charleston, to he shipped to Charleston via Baltimore, subject to the order of Campsen & Co. and about the same time also purchased other flour from other parties in St. Louis to be shipped in the same way. The reason assigned for shipment by this route was that Campsen & Go. had made ■arrangements with the Merchants’ Steamship Company running between Baltimore and Charleston, (in which Waltjen appears to have been interested) for a deduction on freight when they received a certain amount of goods to be shipped by one steamer. The plaintiff and the other parties in St. Louis shipped the flour by rail consigned to Campsen & Co., Baltimore, and forwarded to
The plaintiff’s first and second prayers proceed upon the theory, and assert substantially the proposition that no title passed if Waltjen was insolvent and knew himself to be so, and had no reasonable expectation to pay for it, or did not intend to p.ay for it, when he purchased the flour, received the bill of lading and endorsed and sent it to Knox, and if the jury find these facts then the plaintiff is entitled to recover, notwithstanding they may further find that Knox, on the faith of this endorsement of the bill of lading and receipt of the flour, paid the draft due on the 19th of September, and now holds the other drafts on Campsen & Co., given in evidence. It seems to us very clear there was no error in rejecting these prayers. As we have already said, the fact that Knox may have re
The plaintiff’s third and fourth prayers in effect place his right to recover upon the ground that there was a combination between Knox and Waltjen to purchase the flour and apply the proceeds of it to pay the acceptances of Campsen & Co., held by Knox, and thus to cheat and defraud the plaintiff. But the defect in these prayers is that there was no evidence in the cause to prove, or, in the legal sense of the terms, “ tending to prove ” any such fraudulent combination or conspiracy. We have carefully examined the record and can find therein no testimony “ legally sufficient ” to sustain the alleged fact of such combination, and hence there was no error in the rejection of these prayers.
Nor do we find any error in the instruction granted at the instance of the defendant. It asserts that if the jury find that the defendant received from Campsen & Co. the letters of the 16th and 20th of September, and that the bills of lading for the flour in controversy, endorsed by Campsen & Co., were transmitted to the defendant by these letters, and that the defendant had been the holder and owner of the acceptance of Campsen & Co., due on the 19th of September, mentioned in the letter of the 16th, and before the receipt of that letter this acceptance had been discounted by the Citizens’ National Bank and endorsed by the defendant, and was then the property of that bank, and that in accordance with the request in that
The Court was also clearly right in rejecting the testimony to which objection was made by the defendant. So much of this testimony as appears in the record was hearsay and altogether inadmissible.
We have thus disposed of the case without reference to the question raised by the appellee’s counsel in argument, whether under the circumstances trover was the proper form of action. In the view we have taken of the case it becomes unnecessary to decide that question.
Judgment affirmed.