Farmers' Cotton Oil Co. v. Atlanta & St. A. B. Ry. Co.
Farmers' Cotton Oil Co. v. Atlanta & St. A. B. Ry. Co.
Opinion of the Court
The action is in trover, by appellee a common carrier, to recover damages for the conversion of freight which had been delivered by it through its own mistake, without actual fraud on the part of appellant. If appellant was guilty of any wrong, it was negligence in.not knowing that the freight delivered did not belong to it, or that the delivery to it was by mistake of the carrier, and in not correcting the mistake. The mistake was not induced by appellant. We do not say that the evidence shows either of these faults on its part, but this is the only fault that the evidence in the slightest degree tends to establish. The freight was cotton seed, and appellant wasj in the business of buying cotton seed in the market, and appellee was in the business, and in the habit, of delivering to it the seed so purchased. The seed in question were purchased by another, cotton seed company, of somewhat similar name, viz., the Southern Cotton Oil Company and were received by the carrier, consigned to the purchaser; but by a mistake of one of the carrier’s agents the waybill was made out so as to show a delivery to be made to appellant, *50 and they were so delivered, and appellant paid the freight charges to appellee. Before appellee discovered the mistake, appellant had either used the seed, or they were so commingled with other seed of appellant that a delivery back to the carrier, or the real consignee, could not be had. The' carrier demanded the seed after discovering the mistake but never did offer to refund the freight charges.
It is made to appear that the real consignee, on failure to receive the seed, went back upon its vendors, and that the vendors refunded the purchase money and the sale as between them was necessarily rescinded; and that the vendors then took up the matter with appellant, and appellant paid the vendors for the seed, and thus adjusted the differences between themselves.
The above case was a much stronger case for the appellee carrier than this, and yet it was held that the carrier could not recover in detinue, and we see no reason why it could recover in trover, if it could not in detinue, so far as appears from, the facts of the two cases. It is true, of course, that there may be a recovery in trover when there could not be in detinue, or possibly in detinue when there could not be in trover; but, so far as the facts of this case are concerned, the undisputed facts would, by' the application of the rule declared in the above case preclude a recovery by the carrier in either case, unless it offered to make the defendant whole, or to purge itself of its own wrong. No man shall profit by his own wrong. It was the negligence of the carrier that confused the goods in question, and, without attempting to rectify its own wrong so far as appellant concerned, it attempts to retain its money paid as freight charges and also to hold it as for a conversion, which its own negligence caused. In that case it is said:
“The general rule is that where any person has been induced to deliver anything, by such means (whether by fraud or mistake of fact) that he is entitled to rescind the transaction, he must, in order to do so, first restore to the other party whatever may have been received in exchange for 'the thing he seeks to recover back. Evans v. Gale, 17 N. H. 573; 43 Am. Dec. 614; Jones v. Anderson, 82 Ala. 302 [2 South. 911]. In this case the plaintiff parted with the possession and such special property in the horses as was vested in it as a common carrier or bailee upon the consideration of the payment of a certain sum of money. It seeks to recover back the property upon the grounds that it delivered the property to defendant, by mistake of fact,-or fraud, and at the same time refuses to repay the defendant the *51 money received. We cannot perceive any sound reason why the general rule does not apply to the plaintiff. The appellee cites the case of Young v. East Alabama Ry. Co., 80 Ala. 100, in support of the Contention that plaintiff could maintain the action, without a restoration of the money received. There are some expressions in the opinion which sanction the contention; but the case rightly construed, with reference to the facts, is not an authority on the question.”
Here the case is much’ weaker for the carrier. The delivery was; made to appellant without fault on its part. It really thought at the time it received the seed that the seed belonged to it, and that th'e delivery was intended to be made to it. If any fault could be ascribed to it, it was; mere negligence in not ascertaining that these particular seed were not intended to be delivered to it. It did not discover tbe mistake until it was too late to redeliver the seed to appellant or the true owner. It did, however, then pay the original vendor therefor, wh'o had reacquired the title of the vendee, to whom delivery should have been made.
“An innocent person cannot be beld liable for a conversion, if his act can be justified as having been in any manner authorized by tbe owner of the property. Therefore if a baker orders flour of K. and H., who, in turn, buy of G. to fill such order, and the warehouseman with whom tbe flour was stored delivers to K. and H. flour which belonged to M., and K. and H. deliver it to the baker, who uses it, tbe warehouseman cannot maintain trover against the baker therefor. ‘In this case,’ tbe court said, ‘when the owner has given to another, or permitted him to have, control of tbe property, no one can be held responsible in tort for its conversion who merely makes such use of the property, or exercises such dominion over it, as is warranted by tbe authority thus given. Strickland v. Barrett, 20 Pick. 415; Burbank v. Crooker, 7 Gray, 158, 66 Am. Dec. 470. In this case tbe plaintiffs delivered tbe flour to Kemble and Hastings as the flour purchased by them from Greenough. Against tbe plaintiffs, therefore, the delivery to Kemble and Hastings, and the sale by them to tbe defendant, was an authority to liim to treat it as bis own. That it was so delivered by mistake might have entitled the plaintiffs to reclaim tbe property from one having it in possession, or to recover its value from one who had disposed of it with knowledge of the mistake. Chapman v. Cole, 12 Gray, 141, 71 Am. Dec. 739. But they cannot take advantage of their own mistake to convert into a tort that which has been done in good faith, in pursuance of authority given by themselves.’ Hills v. Snell, 104 Mass. 173, 6 Am. Rep. 216.”
Reversed and rendered.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.