delivered the opinion of the Court. The only question in this case is, whether Homer, the trustee, is liable to be charged for the amount, admitted to be due and owing from him to the principal defendants.
The plaintiff is a merchant of this city ; the defendants, Job and John Jackson, are English subjects resident at the town of Burslem, and engaged in the manufacture and sale of crockery ware.
It appears by the answer of the trustee, who is a merchant, of Boston, that in the autumn of 1834 he gave one of the firm of J. and J. Jackson, who was then in this country, an order for 40 packages of crockery, to be shipped the ensuing winter ; that the goods were shipped accordingly ; and that he was to have them on a credit of six months, to be computed from the time of their arrival. He further states, that the 40 packages were duly received, that he claimed the right to reject three packages, as not being merchantable, that he was indebted to the Jacksons for the residue, amounting to $743, and that up to the time of the service of the plaintiff’s writ, he had no notice that any other person than the Jacksons, had or claimed any right to the proceeds of these goods.
Upon this evidence standing alone, the trustee would un doubledly be chargeable. The facts show a direct contract for the sale of goods, by the principal defendants to the trustee, a delivery and acceptance pursuant to that contract, and a consequent debt due by the tiustee to them.
In order therefore to obtain his discharge, it is for the trustee to show that some other person is entitled to demand and receive this debt. We will not now stop to raise any question in regard to the evidence before the Court, but will consider the facts as they appear by the trustee’s answer, and the documents which he has adopted and made part of his answer.
From these it appears, that the Messrs. Jackson, residing in an interior town in England, were under the necessity of sending the goods, which they had occasion to forward to heir customers in this country, to Liverpool, that being the port at which they were to be shipped. For this purpose, they were accustomed to transmit their packages of goods to William
After the trustee was summoned, he received notice from the attorneys in fact', of Messrs. Brown Si Co., Messrs. Curtis, that they claimed the money, and at their request the trustee has submitted the documents referred to, as part of his answer.
The question therefore is, whether the plaintiff under his attachment, or Messrs. Brown & Co., have the better title to take this debt, due from the trustee.
Messrs. Brown Si Co. claim this debt upon one of twr grounds •
2. That the transaction in question, was in the nature of an assignment of this debt to them, and that notice of it being given to the debtor, at any time before he has actually paid it over, is seasonable notice, and gives the Browns an equitable title, as upon the assignment of a chose in action.
The Court aré of opinion, that this claim cannot be maintained upon either ground.
In order to constitute a lien there must be some possession, custody, control, or disposing power, in the person claiming the lien, or his agent, in and over the subject matter, in which such lien is claimed. This is the fact, in the case of a carrier, a factor, a manufacturer or workman, or warehouse-keeper. In the case of a factor, indeed, the factor sells the goods, and thereby parts with the lien on the goods ; but at the same moment he takes the proceeds, whether the money, or security, which he may take in his own name, and thus as between him and his principal, the lien is immediately transferred to the proceeds. In case of a carrier, the freight is, by the nature of the contract, to be paid before the delivery of the goods, and the carrier retains his custody and control of the goods until the lien is discharged. So a warehouse-keeper for his storage, and the tradesman for his labor. But by the very nature of the duty undertaken by Messrs. Brown & Co., that of receiving the goods in packages from Burslem and forwarding them to America, to be delivered, not to an agent of theirs but to the purchaser of the goods from the Jacksons, they were necessarily to part with the custody of the goods, without retaining or having any power or control over the proceeds. They are to receive the goods sent from Burslem, and see that they are put on ship-board, to be forwarded, not to any agents of theirs, but directly to the customers of the vendors, without notice to them of any claim of Messrs. Brown Co. It would have been a breach of contract on their ''art, and a violation of their trust, to sell or even to onen or
2. Nor is there sufficient legal ground to maintain, that the facts prove an assignment of this debt as a chose in action, by the Jacksons to Messrs. Brown & Co. The transaction took place long before the debt was created. Had it been an assignment of all debts afterwards to become due from ail persons in the United States to the Jacksons, it is, to say the least, questionable whether it could be maintained. But it does not amount to that. It is an authority to certain firms in this country, to collect all debts due to them, and when collected to appropriate the proceeds to Messrs. Brown & Co., who would thereupon credit the amount to the Jacksons. This might be a very useful and convenient arrangement fot the parties, and without considering it as an assignment, would operate to a great extent as a security to the Browns.
When the goods were sent to them at Liverpool, to be forwarded, they would know the fact that such goods were sent, to whom, to what amount, by what ship, &c. By keeping their agents advised in this country, they would have the means generally, through their ample power of attorney, to collect the amount, which, when collected, would enure to the security of the Browns. But until thus collected, neither Messrs. Brown 81 Co., nor the agents in this country, had' either the custody, possession, or the power or control ove,
On the subject of lien it should have been added, that as Messrs. Brown St Co. received the goods for the sole purpose of forwarding them in the packages as they received them, and thereby, by the very exercise of the authority vested in them, to part with the custody of the goods, and the disposing power over them, I do not perceive how such a kouse stands in any better situation in respect to lien, than any
The circumstance that Messrs. Brown & Co. shipped the goods, gave them the means of knowing the fact, and nothing more. Supposing any other house in Liverpool or London not engaged in the business of forwarding goods, had undertaken to -make advances on like terms, and the Jacksons had undertaken to keep them constantly advised from time to time, of all shipments by them made to their customers in America, and should so inform them, it could hardly be maintained, that such house would have a lien on such goods, or the proceeds of them, in security for their advances, and I do not perceive how Messrs. Brown & Co. stand upon any better ground, merely because the goods pass under their inspection, for a limited and special purpose, the accomplishment of which necessarily removes them from their custody and control.
As there was neither a lien on this debt, nor any assignment thereof prior to the attachment, the Court are of opinion that the attachment was valid, that the attaching creditor has a preferable right to hold both the debt due from the trustee and the three crates of crockery ware remaining in his hands, and that the trustee be charged on bis answer.
The foregoing case was argued in writing by Blair, for the plaintiff, and C. P. Curtis and B. R. Curtis, for the trustee. On the subject of lien the plaintiff’s counsel cited Lickbarrow v. Mason, 6 East, 21, 25, note ; 2 Kent’s Comm. (3d edit.) 638 ; Sweet v. Pym, 1 East, 4 ; Ryberg v. Snell, 2 Wash. C. C. R. 294, 403 ; 2 Saund. Pl. and Evid. 637 et seq. ; Montague on Lien, 8 ; Rushforth, v. Hadfield, 7 East, 224 ; Jarvis v. Rogers, 15 Mass. R. 414; Allen v. Megguire, 15 Mass. R. 490. The counsel for the trustee cited on the same subject, Drinkwater v. Goodwin, Cowp. 251 ; Hammonds v. Barclay, 2 East, 227 ; Houghton v. Matthews, 3 Bos. & Pul. 489 ; Seymour v. Hoadley, 9 Connect. R. 418 and to the point of assignment, Gerrish v. Sweetser, 4 Pick. 374 ; Dix v. Cobb, 4 Mass R. 512 ; Blake v. Williams, 6 Pick. 304.
