Norval, J.
This was an action against A. Y. Miller and C. C. Miller, as principals, and George E. Westcott, Eli H. Doud, W. G. Sloane, and Frank Pivonka, as sureties, upon a bond of indemnity. Two general demurrers were interposed to the petition, one by the principals upon the said bond, and one by their sureties. The demurrer of the Millers was overruled, and the court entered judgment against them for the amount claimed. The demurrer filed by the sureties was sustained and the action dismissed as to them. Plaintiff complains of the judgment sustaining this demurrer. The following is a copy of the bond upon which the suit is brought:
“Know all men by these presents, that' we, A. V. Miller and C. C. Miller, under the firm name *303of Miller Bros., as principal, and George E. Westcott, Eli H. Dond, W. G. Sloane, and Frank Pivonka, as sureties, are held and firmly bound unto the Union Stock Yards Company, Limited, of Douglas county, state of Nebraska aforesaid, in the sum of ten thousand dollars, good and lawful money of the United States, to be paid to the Union Stock Yards Company, Limited, to which payment, well and truly to be made, we bind ourselves, our heirs, executors and administrators, firmly by these presents. Signed and sealed with our seal.
“Dated this 9th day of July, A. D. eighteen hundred and ninety.
“The consideration of this obligation is such that if the above bound, or either of them, or their heirs, executors, and administrators, shall well and truly pay, or causé to be paid, to the Union Stock Yards Company, Limited, as follows: All accounts, consisting of railroad freight charges, or advanced freight charges, all feed and yard charges, and other charges that may occur, or for any damage that may occur, in ,the handling of stock in the aforesaid stock yards in consequence of the mixing or turning out wrong stock, or any act of A. Y. Miller or G. 0. Miller as principal, or their agents or employes, by reason of which the said Union Stock Yards Company, Limited, shall. suffer loss or damage, or by the negligence of the said A. V. Miller and 0. 0. Miller’s agents or employes, and to fully satisfy and to pay the same upon demand, and to deliver up all keys or other property, if any, belonging to the said Union Stock Yards Company, Limited, when called upon so to do, then this obligation to be *304void; otherwise to remain in full force and effect.
“Dated July 9, 1890.
“Miller Bros. [L. S.]
“Geo. E. Westcott. [L. S.]
“Eli H. Doud. [L. S.]
“Frank Pivonka. [L. S.]
“W. G. Sloane.
“Signed and sealed in presence of
U__»
The petition alleges, in substance, the incorporation of the plaintiff, and that it owns and operates the stock yards at South Omaha; that the Millers were partners engaged in the live stock commission business in said city, under the name of Miller Bros.; that about the time they commenced said business at said place, and in order to receive permission to carry the same on, in, and upon plaintiff’s premises, and to secure plaintiff against all acts, doings, or default of said Miller Bros, in and about the conducting of said business of live stock commission merchants, the defendants executed and delivered to plaintiff the bond set out above; that in January, 1891, one E. B. Rogers was the owner of fifty head of cattle, which he had purchased’ with funds furnished him by the Merchants Bank of Sidney, which cattle were then in the possession of said bank, and held by it to secure the sum of $1,250, the amount so advanced; that said Rogers, as further security, made and delivered to said bank a draft, in words and figures as follows:
“$1,250. Sidney, Nebraska, January 19,1891.
“Pay to the order of Edward M. Mancourt, cashier, twelve hundred and fifty dollars, for value received, and charge the same to the account of E. B. Rogers.
“To Miller Bros., South Omaha, Nebraska.”
*305That when said sum was, so advanced, it was understood between the bank and Rogers that said cattle were to be shipped to South Omaha in the name of the bank, and that the bill of lading therefor should be taken from the railway company conveying said cattle and attached to a draft for the amount of the bank’s advances; that on January 20, 1891, the bank shipped for its own benefit, in its cashier’s name, from Sidney to :South Omaha over the Union Pacific railway all of said cattle, taking the bill of lading for said •shipment, showing Mancourt, the cashier, to be both consignor and consignee; that said bill' of lading had the words “Notify Miller Bros.” written thereon, which was a direction to plaintiff when the cattle were received in its yards to notify Miller Bros, of their arrival; that the bank attached said draft to the bill of lading and forwarded the same through the usual mode to South Omaha for collection against Miller Bros., and that by reason of said facts they were not entitled to receive said cattle until they paid said draft and obtained the bill of lading attached thereto; that said cattle were carried to, and received by, plaintiff at its yards in South Omaha, and placed in pens to await the orders of the owner, and while there Miller Bros, called upon and produced to plaintiff a written order purporting to be •signed by said Mancourt, in whose name they had been shipped, directing the delivery of said cattle to Miller Bros, by plaintiff; that said order had not been signed by said Mancourt nor by his authority, but was forged, which Miller Bros, at the "time well knew, yet they represented to the plaintiff that the same was genuine and that they were authorized to receive said cattle; that thereupon *306plaintiff, not knowing of the rights of said bank in and to said cattle, but believing said order to be-genuine, and relying thereon, and upon said representations, delivered said cattle to Miller Bros.,, who sold them upon the market, received the proceeds, and retained the same, and refused to> pay such proceeds over to said bank or the plaintiff, or to pay said draft; that it was the custom with the plaintiff, at and before the execution of said bond, and ever since has been, to permit livestock commission men, whom the way-bill of shipment of cattle directed plaintiff to notify of the arrival thereof, to receive such cattle Avitliout the production of the usual bill of lading, and it is. customary for the live stock commission merchant so notified to demand and receive the shipment without waiting the arrival of the usual bill of lading, which custom was well kndwn to Miller Bros, and observed by them. The petition further alleges that the bank brought suit against this plaintiff for the value of the cattle, and at the request of Miller Bros., the Stock Yards Company-employed counsel and defended said action upon a statement of facts furnished by Miller Bros.; that the bank recovered a judgment therein fertile sum of $1,317.07, and costs taxed at $58.83, which sums the Stock Yards Company was compelled to and did pay, and the further sum of $150' expended by it for attorneys’ fees in defending said action, no part of which amounts have been paid by Miller Bros., although requested so to do, save the sum of $700.
The question raised by the demurrer is whether the acts of the plaintiff in turning out the cattle in question to Miller Bros., the sale thereof by the latter, and the conversion by them of the proceeds. *307arising from such sale are covered by tbe conditions of tlie bonds in suit, so as to bind the sureties therein. It must be conceded that the conditions contained in this bond are broad and comprehensive in their scope and nature. They, among other thing's, bind the sureties to pay all loss or damages which the obligee shall sustain resulting from' any act or negligence of Miller Bros, or their agents or employes. If the plaintiff was justified in delivering this shipment of cattle to Miller Bros, without requiring the production by them of the bill of lading, then it is entitled, upon the facts pleaded, to recover against the defendants sureties; otherwise the demurrer was rightly sustained. The important inquiry in the case is whether plaintiff was or Avas not in fault in delivering the cattle to Miller Bros. Defendants insist that the delivery was an act of negligence on the part of the plaintiff, while the Stock Yards Company contends against the proposition.
It is conceded by counsel for plaintiff that where a person delivers property, for which a bill of lading has been issued, to any one except the owner and holder of said bill, he does so at his own risk, and is liable for the value of the property. The proposition is sound and abundantly sustained by the authorities. (Hutchinson, Carriers, sec. 130, and cases cited in brief of defendants; Shellenberg v. Fremont, E. & M. V. R. Co., 45 Neb., 487.) As an excuse for the delivery of the cattle without the production of the bill of lading issued by the railway company, plaintiff relies upon the custom which it alleges existed at the time the delivery was made as well as Avhen the bond was executed. Undoubtedly it is competent in many cases for a party to allege and prove that *308a particular custom, existed. As was said by the present chief justice in his opinion in Milwaukee & Wyoming Investment Co. v. Johnston, 35 Neb., 561: “Custom or usage in a trade or business may be shown for the purpose of interpreting a contract or controlling its execution, but not for the purpose of changing its intrinsic' character, provided it is known to the party sought to be charged thereby, or is so well settled and so uniformly acted upon as to create a reasonable presumption that it was known to both contracting parties, and that they contracted with reference to it.77 A custom which is uniform, long established, and generally acquiesced in, and so widely and generally known as to induce the belief that the parties contracted with reference to it, is binding without proof of actual notice thereof to the parties. But a person is not bound by the custom or usage of an individual unless personal knowledge thereof is brought home to the party sought to be charged. In 27 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 749, it is said: “In regard to the usage of a particular individual, It may be said that no person without knowledge of such usage can be bound by it in Ms dealings with the individual. It would be unfair to hold -.that the business usage of a particular bank, or merchant, or manufacturer, or hotel-keeper, could have any effect upon the rights of a person dealing in ignorance of such usage. But if the usage be known and assented to, and dealings are had with isuch knowledge and assent, the usage impliedly forms a part of the contract between the parties, and is therefore binding.77 (See Walsh v. Mississippi Valley Transportation Co., 52 Mo., 434; Stout v. McLachlin, 38 Kan., 121; Bliven v. New England Screw Co., 23 How. [U. S.], 420; Loving v. Gurney, *3095 Pick. [Mass.], 15; Keogh v. Daniell, 12 Wis., 181; Celluloid Mfg. Co. v. Chandler, 27 Fed. Rep., 9; Scott v. Maier, 56 Mich., 554.) Applying the doctrine stated to the case at bar, it is obvious that the sureties are not bound by the custom set up in the petition. No general custom or usage among stock jmrds companies is pleaded, but that it was customary with this plaintiff alone to deliver cattle to commission men whom the way-bill directed it to notify of the arrival of the shipment, without producing the usual bill of lading. Notice of such custom to Miller Bros, is alleged, but it is not averred that the sureties had any knowledge of' its existence, therefore it cannot be said that they signed the bond with reference to plaintiff’s, custom.
Reliance is made by plaintiff upon the fact that the bill of lading accompanying this shipment, contained directions to notify Miller Bros, of the-arrival of the stock at plaintiff’s yards in South Omaha. It is argued that the clause referred to in the bill of lading was evidence to plaintiff that it was the intention of the shipper that the persons designated to be notified were his agents to make the sale of the cattle, and the stock yards company had a right to rely upon the honesty of such agents and trust them with the shipment. If this were true, it would have been sufficient to defeat the action brought by the Merchants Bank of Sidney against this plaintiff for the value of the stock. But the direction in the bill of lading to notify Miller Bros, did not authorize the plaintiff herein to deliver the stock without the production of the bill of lading. Hutchinson, Carriers [2d ed.], sec. 131b, in discussing this subject, says: “It is a common practice, where the bill of lading pro*310vides for delivery to the consignor’s order and has gone forward attached to a draft on the purchaser or other person by whom payment is to be made, to give directions that such person be notified of the arrival of the goods in order that he may pay the draft and procure the goods. Such a direction to notify, however, does not dispense with the production of the bill of lading as in other cases, and if the carrier delivers the goods to the person so to be notified without requiring him to produce the bill of lading, he will be liable for the loss thereby incurred.” The following cases are directly in line with the above decision: Bank of Commerce in Buffalo v. Bissell, 72 N. Y., 615; Furman v. Union P. R. Co., 106 N. Y., 579; Myrick v. Michigan C. R. Co., 107 U. S., 102; North P. R. Co. v. Commercial Bank of Chicago, 123 U. S., 727; Joslyn v. Grand Trunk R. Co., 51 Vt., 92; Libby v. Ingalls, 124 Mass., 503; North v. Merchants & Miners Transportation Co., 146 Mass., 315; Nat. Bank of Chester v. Atlanta & C. A. L. R. Co., 25 S. Car., 216. Whilst Miller Bros, were to be notified of the arrival of the stock, yet this fact did not authorize them to receive the cattle without the production of the bill of lading. The use of the words “Miller Bros.” in the bill of lading showed that they were not intended as the consignees, but indicated merely that they were to be advised of the arrival of the cattle. Besides, it was stated in the bill of lading that Mancourt was the consignee, and this the plaintiff knew, or should have ascertained, before parting with the possession of the stock. Delivery could alone be safely made to the consignee or to some one authorized by him to receive the cattle.
Considerable stress is laid upon the fact that *311Miller Bros, obtained possession of the cattle by reason of a spnrions order for their delivery purporting to have been signed by the consignee. Of •course, as between the owner of the bill of lading and this plaintiff, that fact could make no difference, since the forged order conferred no authority upon plaintiff to deliver the cattle to the persons presenting it. This is too obvious to require ■discussion. That the Stock Yards Company was liable to the consignee of the cattle for their value, There can be no .question. If the sureties are liable do the plaintiff, it is by reason alone of the fact dhat their principals obtained possession of the ■cattle upon the fictitious order already mentioned, and failed to account for the proceeds. The question, therefore, presented for determination is whether the receiving of the shipment in controversy by Miller Bros, upon an order which they at the time knew to be forged, and which they falsely represented to plaintiff to be genuine, is within the stipulations or conditions of the bond which is the foundation of this action. Although, where a person delivers property consigned for transportation without the production of the bill of lading therefor,, if one is issued, it is at his own risk, it ■does not follow that he is liable in damages in ■case the delivery is made to the party entitled to receive the same, notwithstanding the bill of lading is not exhibited or produced. The bill of lading is the evidence of the holder of his right to receive the shipment, but its surrender or production is not indispensable to a proper delivery. It would be difficult, we apprehend, to find any one To contend against this proposition. The important thing is that the shipment is received by the person entitled thereto. Had the cashier of the *312bank given an order to plaintiff to deliver these cattle to Miller Bros., then it is obvious plaintiff would have been protected in turning out the stock to them though no bill of ‘lading was produced. But that was not done. On the contrary,, possession of the cattle was obtained from plaintiff by Miller Bros., who had no right to them, upon an order presented by them which they represented to be the genuine order of the owner of the stock, when they knew it was fictitious. It was. this act that occasioned the loss to plaintiff, and it falls within the scope of the bond, since the sureties obligated themselves to indemnify plaintiff against loss or damage it might sustain by reason of “any act” of their principals. As between these sureties and the plaintiff, the latter,, under the facts pleaded, cannot be charged with negligence in making the delivery.
It is said that the shipment would have been delivered, even though the order had not been presented, inasmuch as it was the custom with plaintiff to allow commission men to whom the way-bill directed it to notify, to receive the shipment without waiting the arrival or production of the bill of lading. Although such custom is pleaded, it does; not appear that the delivery of the stock would have been made without the order, or if the fraud had not been practiced. On the contrary, it is; affirmatively stated that plaintiff in making the delivery relied upon said order and the representations of Miller Bros, that it was genuine, and that they were entitled to receive the cattle thereon. It is sufficient that plaintiff had a right to, and did in fact, rely upon the genuineness of the order and the representations of Miller Bros, in parting; with the possession of the cattle, although it, in. *313part, may have been influenced by its local custom. Whether reliance was placed upon the order is a question of fact for the jury upon the trial of the case. From the views expressed it follows that the petition states a cause of action against the sureties, and the court erred in sustaining their demurrer. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.