Muller v. Pondir
Muller v. Pondir
Opinion of the Court
Pondir, who claims title to thp bills in controversy, under Sehepeler & Co., alone defends this action. As between him and Sehepeler & Co., it may be conceded that by the loan of money to the latter firm, under the circumstances established at the trial, and upon their promise to transfer the bills when they should arrive in Hew York, he acquired an equitable title, and could have enforced a specific performance of the promise, and an indorsement and delivery of the bills to him.
But this equitable right comes far short of conferring upon him the rights of a bona fide holder for value of negotiable paper when transferred in the usual method and in the ordinary course of business. A transferree of commercial paper for value, in the ordinary course of business, without notice of any defects in the title, is protected by the law-merchant against all latent equities, whether of third persons or of parties to the instrument. His title is perfect, and his right to enforce the obligation absolute. But if any of the circumstances are wanting which go to make up this perfect title, a purchaser or transferree of commercial paper takes it subject to the same rules which control in the case of a transfer or assignment of non-negotiable instruments.
The defendant Pondir never became the holder of the bills in dispute; they were not transferred to him by indorsement
Neither was there anything in the history of the transaction or the acts of the parties which will give Pondir a better or other title as against the plaintiff than the mere equitable title, valid as against Schepeler & Co. only. The plaintiff is not estopped from asserting the same equities and the same legal rights against Pondir which would have availed against Schepeler & Co. The only act of the plaintiff upon which stress is laid and upon which an estoppel is sought to be based, is his dispatch to Schepeler & Co.; elliptical and obscure in its terms, but which was understood by the parties to whom it was addressed, and which indicated that the sender had drawn and sold bills on London to the amount of £9,000, at the prices stated, and against the bills so drawn would remit, by the steamer Cleopatra, $60,000 in bills on New York, which had been purchased at the discount stated. The telegram was true in all its parts; and the plaintiff does not seek now to controvert the truth of any of the statements there made. There was nothing in it to indicate the relation of the plaintiff or his correspondents, Schepeler & Co., to the bills, or the title of either to them. There was no statement inconsistent with the absolute ownership, by the plaintiff, of the bills to arrive by the Cleopatra, or with any claim the plaintiff might make to or in respect
But an insuperable difficulty in predicating an estoppel m pais against the plaintiff upon the dispatch is, that it was designed solely for the information of the persons to whom it was addressed, and not to influence the action of any other person ; and the communication was not of a character calculated to or which could, in the usual course of business, influence the action of third persons; and least of all was it calculated to induce any one to part with money upon the credit of the bills referred to, and faith in the title of Schepeler & Co. to them. The plaintiff could not have foreseen that the dispatch would be used as the basis of a credit, or that money could be borrowed on the faith of it. Every element of an estoppel was wanting. A party is only concluded, that is, estopped from alleging the truth by a declaration or representation, inconsistent with the facts asserted and attempted to be proved, when it is made with intent, or is calculated, or may be reasonably expected to influence the conduct of another in a manner in which he will be preju
¡Neither does the rule invoked by Pondir, that when one of two innocent persons must suffer from the wrongful or fraudulent act of another, the loss should devolve upon him by whose act or omission the wrong-doer has been enabled to perpetrate the fraud, avail him. That applies only when • the wrong-doer is invested by the party sought to be charged, with the ordinary indicia of ownership, and jus disponendi of property, or an apparent authority to do the act from which loss must accrue to one of two innocent parties. (Commercial Bank of Buffalo v. Kortright, 22 Wend., 348; Young v. Gróte, 4 Bing., 253.) The evidence of ownership of negotiable bills is their possession, properly indorsed, so as to pass the title to the holder. There is no such thing as a symbolical delivery of negotiable instruments; and the law does not recognize, for commercial purposes, a right of possession as distinct from the actual possession. Had Schepeler & Go. had actual possession, themselves, of the bills, and then indorsed and transferred them to Pondir, the plaintiff would have been remediless. This is not only the legal evidence of ownership, but it is that required in dealing in commercial paper in the ordinary
¡Neither can an authority be spelled out or inferred from the dispatch to Schepeler & Co. to deal with the bills, either as their own or as the agents of the plaintiff or other owner. The apparent authority which will charge the plaintiff rather - than the defendant with loss, under the rule invoked against him, must be found in the terms of the dispatch and not in the declarations and representations of Schepeler & Co. The court has found that the dispatch gave to Schepeler & Co.; and it could give no other or different idea to any other person, the information that he had drawn on London, and sold the bills, “ and against the bills so drawn would remit, by the steamer Cleopatra, $60,000 on bills drawn on New York.” For what purpose or for whose use the bills on New York were to be remitted, was not stated and cannot be implied, except that they were remitted against the London bills. The meaning and purpose of the dispatch, béyond the meager and barren advice of a proposed remittance for some purpose, must be gathered from the course of business of the parties, or from facts not stated in or to be implied from its terms. But, as remarked in considering the question of estoppel, the communication was legitimate, and in the ordinary course of business not calculated to mislead any one as to the relation of the parties to each other or the bills in controversy; and certainly no person, familiar with commercial usage and the law relating to bills of exchange, could anticipate that such a dispatch could avail to enable any one to negotiate the bills as owner, or otherwise, before their arrival, or that money would be advanced upon any supposed title or agency of the receiver of the dispatch to, or in respect to, the bills.
The only remaining inquiry is, as to the right of the plaintiff as against Schepeler & Co., as Pondir occupies precisely their position, and has succeeded to their rights.
It has no direct application; and as the transaction is in its nature entirely distinguishable from the sale of goods upon credit to one who becomes insolvent before they come to his actual possession, or other persons have acquired rights as purchasers for value, and the rules which control in respect to the evidence of title and the modes of transmitting or transferring the title of negotiable instruments, and merchandise or other personal chattels are so entirely dissimilar, that but little advance will be made in arriving at a correct result in this case by reviewing the reported decisions referred to by counsel, elucidating the right and declaring its limits and the cases in which it may be exercised. This is not a case of stoppage i/n transitu. But the principle which lies at the foundation of the right of stoppage in transitu is very directly involved in this action, and upon it the rights of the plaintiff to the bills in controversy, in a great measure, depend. The right of a vendor to follow and reclaim merchandise sold upon credit, upon the happening of the insolvency of the purchaser, is an equitable right and is favored in the law. (Harris v. Pratt, 17 N. Y., 249; Smith v. Bowles, 2 Esp. R., 578.) It had its origin in a court of equity, but has become thoroughly engrafted upon the common law, and is now well established as a legal right; and the same reasons which give to a seller of goods to a distant purchaser, who becomes insolvent, the right to stop them if he can do so before they come into the possession of the purchaser, will give to the plaintiff here the right to retain the bills in suit. Difficulties exist in the way of the seller of merchandise pursuing and retaking his goods, after sale, by which the title had passed to the buyer, which do not exist in respect to these bills; and this right to stop goods m transitu may be lost under circumstances which would not and could not, in the nature of things, apply to dealings in or in respect to commercial papér.
The equities upon which the right of stoppage in transitu
The fact that the credit and the danger of loss arose- from a sale of merchandise, rather than in any other commercial •dealings, had no peculiar force, and added no charm to the -.equity. All that is necessary to bring a case within the pre
It may be remarked that fraud is not a necessary ingredient of the equitable light involved iu this action, and asserted by the plaintiff. Had the court below found as a fact that Sehepeler & Co. fraudulently induced the plaintiff to engage in this transaction, we should have regarded it as abundantly sustained by the evidence. Indeed, it is difficult to see how they could, with honest intent, upon the eve and within three days of an avowed insolvency, so complete and absolute that it is doubtful whether their assets will pay ten per cent of their liabilities, induce an innocent foreign correspondent to assume liabilities for them to an amount exceeding $100,000, under the circumstances and in the form detailed in the case; but it is not necessary to establish actual fraud to enable the plaintiff to assert his right to retain the bills. The plaintiff became the purchaser of the bills in controversy and undertook to remit them to Sehepeler & Co. upon the credit of that firm, and relying upon their solvency and ability to provide for their payment in London, and to indemnify him against them. They were not bought with the funds and were not the produce of the effects of Sehepeler & Co., or bought upon their credit, except as the plaintiff gave them credit. They were bought with the
Whether the proceeds of the London bills were invested in negotiable bills or merchandise cannot affect the rights of the plaintiff. The lien would be as sound and stand upon the same principle in the one case as the other. If the purchase had been of goods instead of bills, a lien would have existed in favor of the plaintiff) which would have given him the rights of a vendor, within the principle decided in Feise v. Wray (3 East., 93). The substance, rather than the form of a transaction, determines the rights and obligations of the parties, and, within the reason of the rule giving a vendor a lien for the price of goods sold, and a right to stop them in i/ransitu to the purchaser on the happening of his insolvency, he, upon whose credit or with whose means the goods are purchased and by whom they are consigned to the purchasers, is the seller of the goods. The lien does not depend upon the character of the property, and is equally valid in respect to negotiable bills in actual possession, or capable of being reached as to chattels. The bills in controversy were at all times, up to the time of the commencement of this action, in the actual oj^omteistiv^. possession of the plaintiffs. The
I am of the opinion that the plaintiff had and has the legal and equitable title to the bills as against Schepeler & Co., and Pondir claiming under them, and that the order granting a new trial should be affirmed and judgment absolute for the plaintiff.
All concur.
Order affirmed, and judgment accordingly.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- George H. Muller v. John Pondir, impleaded, etc.
- Status
- Published