DeWolf v. Gardner
DeWolf v. Gardner
Opinion of the Court
This case presents an exceedingly important and interesting question, affecting the very large and growing trade between the Western States, and the markets and shipping ports of the Atlantic coast, in the great staples of grain, pork, and other country produce. The facts in the present case are as follows:
The plaintiff executed in his own name a duplicate warehouse receipt, dated 27th October, 1847, acknowledging that he had received in store, in good order, &c., five hundred barrels superfine flour, branded and marked, and which he agreed to hold, subject to the sole order of Charles D. Gibson, or his assigns, and by the first opportunity to ship the same consigned to him, with conditions that said receipt remained
These documents all bear one and the same date, are parts of one transaction, refer to each other, and must be construed together. The intent is clear and manifest, that these specific barrels, branded, marked, and numbered, and so capable of being identified and distinguished, should stand as collateral security for that draft. Notice is given to Gibson, the consignee. He could only know of the deposit, pledge, and intended consignment to himself, by a presentation of the documents ; and his acceptance of the draft was an assent to take the consignment, upon the terms proposed. It is an old rule of mercantile law, that when goods are consigned to a person, with notice that a draft is drawn against it by the consignor, in favor of a third person, the consignee cannot accept the consignment and refuse to accept the draft. But here he did, in terms, accept the draft, as drawn against that consignment. It is not necessary to determine at what precise time
When the notice of the intended consignment was given to the consignee, Gibson, and he assented to it, he assented to receive it on account of the bank as holder of his acceptance ; he became their agent to receive, hold, sell, and account for the flour, and from that time they became the owners of the property. It is not necessary to hold that they were absolute owners; it is enough that they had a right of property and of possession to secure the payment of the particular draft, and the right of the plaintiff as former owner of the specific property had become divested, and his right remained only to the surplus money which might remain after a sale of the flour and a payment of the draft from the proceeds. The ground of defence in the present case is, that supposing the plaintiff is correct in holding that the defendants taking a pledge of these goods from a factor and consignee, for sale, derived no title to the goods, but on the contrary, by such an attempt to pledge this flour, the consignee forfeited his own lien on it, still that the conversion was not a conversion of the property of DeWolf, and that he cannot maintain this action. The court are of opinion that this defence is well maintained, and that the illegality of the transaction by which the defendants acquired the possession of the property and converted it to their own use, is of no importance to the plaintiff; because, whatever of wrong there may be in this transaction on the part of the defendants, the plaintiff is not the proper party to obtain redress by a suit. This depends upon the question whether enough was done, in the present case, to divest the ownership of the plaintiff, and vest the special property in the barrels of flour in the holder of this
Recent English authorities lead to the same result. “ If,” says Parke, B., in Bryans v. Nix, 4 Mees. & Wels. 791, “the intention of the parties to pass the property, whether absolute or special, in certain ascertained chattels, is established, and they are in the hands of a depositary, no matter whether that depositary be a common carrier, or shipmaster, employed by the consignor or a third person, and the chattels are so placed, on account of the person who is to have that property, and the depositary assents, it is enough; and it matters not by what documents this is effected.”
In the present case, it is manifest from the whole tenor of the transaction, that the property should stand conditionally bound to the holder of .the draft; that it was to be placed in the hands of Gibson, as consignee, for sale, but until a sale, to hold for the holder of the draft. To this Gibson assented, and thereupon became agent for such holder. The terms of the certificate are, that it shall remain attached to said draft, as evidence of a lien on the property in favor of the holder, until payment. This gave to the consignee named, Gibson, the power of a factor to sell the same upon its receipt, holding the proceeds, instead of said property, accountable as agent to the holders of the draft, and to the consignor for the balance. It is very manifest from the whole language of these documents, and the delivery of them as evidence of property, that until a sale the consignee held the flour as the property of the holders of the draft, and his possession was their possession. So, when goods are forwarded by a debtor to his creditor to meet advances, and delivered to a carrier, it is a transfer of the property, though the goods are to pass through the hands of those who have claims upon the consignor ; yet they are considered so far the property of the consignee that he may maintain trover for them. Evans v. Nichol, 3 Man. & Gr. 614.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Fitz Henry DeWolf v. John D. Gardner & anotner
- Status
- Published