36 Mo. 575 | Mo. | 1865
delivered the opinion of the court.
This case was affirmed at the March term of this court, 1864, and a re-hearing was granted at the same term. The reasons for the decision were somewhat briefly stated, and in such manner as to lead to the supposition that the case had not received that careful consideration on some points which the importance of the questions involved, might seem to demand. It has been re-argued with much learning and abil
The case may be stated in substance as follows: The plaintiff, a merchant of St. Louis, and one A. Titus a merchant of New Orleans, were transacting business with each other, as factors and commission merchants, the former shipping produce to New Orleans, and the latter shipping groceries to St. Louis, to be sold on commission and the proceeds placed to account, or as purchases to be charged in account, under a special arrangement and mutual understanding between them, that such business relations should be continuous for an indefinite time; that the plaintiff should buy and forward produce to Titus at New Orleans, receiving a commission and drawing bills against the shipment, or charging the amount to the credit of the other in account, and that Titus should make consignments of sugar, coffee, and molasses, to be sold on commission and account, on which the consignee at St. Louis was to make advances within the limit of a general letter of credit authorizing the consignor to draw and negotiate bills on the consignee, against the shipments made, to the extent of three-fourths of their value, at five or ten days’ sight, preferring ten, when the shipments were made. This business had continued for about four montl&s, when, on. the eleventh day of August, 1859, there was a balance of account due the plaintiff amounting to $10,000, for advances already made in the course of the business. On the 6th day of August, by bill of lading of that date, Titus consigned to the plaintiff 300 sacks of coffee, and delivered the goods on board the steamer “ Gladiator,” bound for the port of St. Louis.
He addressed a letter to the consignee, enclosing the bill of lading, in which he was named as consignee, dated Aug. 8, 1859, and the invoice of same date, showing 300 sacks of coffee, 48,919 pounds, at 11J cents per pound (with insurance and drayage), amounting to $5,688.18, informing him of the consignment, and saying he had drawn against it for $4,200 at five days’ sight-; that it was a good article and he
The old action of replevin could be maintained against the sheriff alone in such cases; it is founded upon his wrongful act. He must defend the action here; but the ultimate interest in the result concerns the plaintiffs in the attachment suit more than it does him. We think it would have been very proper for the court to have allowed them to be made co-defendants.
The main question is of the right of property as between • the consignee and the attaching creditor; and in order to determine their rights, the matter is to- be considered as it stood at the date of the attachment. And the first inquiry is, whether the plaintiff had acquired any lien or property in the goods consigned. He had received the invoice and bill of lading, and the shipment was made, and the goods delivered to the carrier, in pursuance of the arrangement that existed between the parties. The matter is to be considered with reference to this arrangement and the previous dealings of the parties with one another. It is not to be confined to this particular consignment alone, as a separate and independent transaction, standing by itself; in which case, the result might be quite different. It was a part of the arrangement, and evidently well understood by both parties, that the consignee at St. Louis was to make advances on the shipments made to him, and that the proceeds should be placed to the credit of the consignor in account to cover such advances and the general balance of account between them.
The authority to draw bills for those advances, before the arrival of the goods shipped, was limited to three-fourths of the value of the shipment in each particular instance; but it is also plain that the balance of the proceeds of each shipment, over and above the bill that was authorized to be drawn against it, was to be credited in account, and the shipments were intended to be made, and were made, not only to re
In general, the bill of lading alone vests in the consignee only a naked legal title, or a mere special property, the whole beneficial interest or general property remaining in the'consignor; and in such case the consignee may maintain an action against a wrong-doer, or against the carrier if he fail to deliver the property according to the bill of lading, and he may transfer the property by an assignment of the bill of lading for a valuable consideration as the act of the consignor himself; but in the absence of any special agreement, arrangement, or implied understanding otherwise, he
The consignor, in such cases, may himself transfer the property by assignment or delivery of one of the bills of lading to any other person, as for instance to his banker, with whom he negotiates his draft against the shipment, and that will vest the property in the assignee, even though the consignee receive a second bill of lading and the goods from the carrier, and endeavor to hold them to cover a general balance of account against the consignor, while at the same time refusing to accept his bill, because he had exceeded his authority, and was already largely indebted to him; and such was the case of Allen v. Williams (11 Pick. 297) ; for, in that case, it was the manifest intention of the consignor that the shipment should not go to the consignee, unless he first accepted the bill. The delivery of the bill of lading and the goods by the carrier, being without authority, vested no title in the consignee, against an actual transfer of the property by the consignor himself, even though they had come into his possession; and accordingly, it was held that the matter of the previous dealings of the parties ancf the balance of account was wholly immaterial. The conduct and acts of the consignor were utterly inconsistent with any supposition or intent that the consignment was to go to his credit on the general balance of account, in- pursuance of any previous arrangement. (Sto. Ag. § 378.) There is nothing of this kind here.
The consignor had never attempted to change the destination of the consignment, or to transfer the property to another ; he sent the bill of lading and invoice directly to the consignee, and delivered the goods to the carrier, with the intent that they should go to him; the acceptance of the draft was in no way made or intended to be a condition precedent to the vesting of the property in the consignee, nor was there any thing in the transaction which was inconsist
Where acceptances have actually been given upon the faith of a consignment by bill of lading, there can be no doubt that the consignee acquires such a lien, or property in the goods, as no subsequent act of the conveyance can divest; such an acceptance is held to be an advance upon the pa "cular shipment.
here there has been no advance or acceptance expressly made upon the particular consignment, and the question is only of a general balance of account for previous advances, the case differs not so much in principle as in the evidence required to establish the lien. It matters not whether the lien for a balance of account arises by operation of law from the usage of trade, or from the positive and special agreement and understanding of the parties, (Sto. Ag. § 375,) and it may extend to all sums for which a factor has become liable as surety or otherwise for his principal, whenever the suretiship has resulted from the nature of the agency, or the express arrangement of the parties, or it has been undertaken upon the footing of such a lien; (Ibid. § 376.) Whether or not the given consignment is to be considered as made to cover a general balance of account, will depend
In Ryberg v. Snell, (2 Wash. C. C. 403,) the consignor had parted with his interest in the property before it came to the possession of the consignee; there was no proof of any special arrangement or agreement, and a lien for a general balance of account was denied; but the principle was recognized, that if the consigment to the factor had been founded upon any special contract, which vested in him a legal title to the property, or if it had been made “ in consideration of advances made, or arrangement entered into, on the faith of the consignment or the like,” the case would have been different. It might be said that the advances here were not specially made upon the faith of this particular consignment, but they were made on the faith of this as of all future consignments which should be made in the regular course of their special business, and in pursuance of the arrangement which they had entered into concerning it; and so, it may very well be said, that the advances were made on the faith of this consignment among the rest. It was intended within the scope of the arrangement and fell under the implied contract, resulting from their course of business and the previous dealings between them. (Sto. Ag. § 355.) There was nothing in the conduct of the consignor which was inconsistent with this view of the mat
The letter of credit contained these words: “You are at liberty at all times to value on us as against actual shipments to the extent of three-fourths of their value, at five to ten days’ sight.” The statute concerning bills of exchange provides (R. C. 1855, p. 293, § 3), that “an unconditional promise in writing to accept a bill before it is drawn, shall be deemed an actual acceptance in favor of any person to whom such written promise shall have been shown, and who, upon' the faith thereof, shall have received the bill for a valuable consideration.” This language requires something more than a general letter of credit; it must be a promise to accept a bill, and the bill must be received on the faith of such written promise, to accept it. It is the established rule of law, that a written promise to accept a non-existing bill must point to the particular bill and describe it in terms not to be mistaken. (1 Pars. Bills, 293 & n. f.) The statute seems to have adopted this rule. This letter of credit amounted only to a general authority to draw bills for a given purpose, to indefinite amounts, and, on uncertain times, within a general limitation; it did not point to the particular bills, nor describe them in terms by which they could be identified. It did not amount to an “ actual acceptance” of the bill in question.
It was so held in a like case upon a similar statute in New York, (Ulster County Bank v. McFarlan, 3 Denio, 553). Nevertheless, it was a promise to accept and pay bills drawn on him, which were to be negotiated by the drawer for his benefit, and it was evidently intended to be shown to the
The amount paid upon the faith of this letter came clearly within the authority given by the letter of credit, and as the bill was never accepted, it becomes wholly immaterial whether it were drawn for an amount which exceeded the limit of the letter or not.
The evidence tended to show that Titus had practised some secret fraud in respect of the quantity of the coffee, and the valuation which he put upon it for the purpose of fixing the amount of his draft; but that did not change the character or effect of his consignment, nor does it affect the rights of the parties here. It was a general authority, and was to be taken most strongly against the giver of the power. It left the matter of the valuation to the agent; the banker could hardly be required to look beyond the letter of credit, the invoice and the bill of lading, and to reckon the expenses, fix the value, and weigh the coffee ; and if a secret fraud were practised in these matters by the agent entrusted with such a power, it would seem that the principle ought to be applied, if it were at all necessary, that when one of two innocent persons must suffer, it should be the one
In this view of the case, it is evident that the clause in the instruction given for the plaintiff which left it to the court, sitting as a jury, to say whether “ the said bill of exchange was drawn in conformity to the authority contained in said letter,” was wholly immaterial. It really made no difference whether the bill were drawn in conformity with that authority or not. Considered by itself, it was clearly erroneous, as referring a matter of law to the jury; but it is equally clear that the defendant suffered no prejudice by that error; and the verdict and judgment being for the right party, the case will not be reversed on that ground alone. (R. C. 1855, p. 1300, § 34; Gobin v. Hutchins, 15 Mo. 400; Johnson v. Armdall, 34 Mo. 338.)
In accordance with the views above stated, all the instructions which were asked for by the defendant were correctly refused.
The judgment will be affirmed.
Judge Lovelace not sitting.