Court Opinion

ID: 8635062
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-24 19:43:51.685255+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:55:54.107697
License: Public Domain

CURTIS, Circuit Justice.
The question is whether the plaintiffs, at the time the attachment was made, had a property in these goods, which would enable them to maintain replevin, against one holding them under an attachment as the property of Daggett & Co. The facts show that the parties intended to vest in the plaintiffs an interest in these goods, as security for the reimbursement of the money, which, by their acceptance they engaged to pay for Daggett & Co. Independently of any particular expressions occurring in the correspondence, such an intention is fairly inferable from the very nature of the transaction. A request made by a principal to a factor to accept a bill, because the principal has placed merchandise in the hands of a third person, to be insured for the benefit of the factor, and forwarded to him for sale, carries with it an implication that the parties intend that the factor, if he accepts, may look to the goods for his reimbursement; and if this implication is not controlled, it is sufficient, so far as the mere intention of the parties can govern, to confer on the factor a corresponding interest in the goods. In the case at bar, this intent, derivable from the nature of the transaction, is not controlled, but is much strengthened by the language of the correspondence. When Daggett & Co. sent the cloths to the defendants, they informed them that they were to be made into cambrics for the plaintiffs, and forwarded to them; that they were to be insured for the plaintiffs’ account, and they requested the defendants to send to the plaintiffs evidence that the goods had been thus received and insured. This was accordingly done, and the bill was accepted because it was done. Now, although it is clear that a mere intent of a consignor to vest a special property in his factor, to secure him for an advance on account of a particular consignment, even if the advance is made on the faith of it, will not create any legal property in the factor, yet it is otherwise when the particular goods have been set apart, in the hands of a third person, who has undertaken to deliver them to the consignee, and the latter has advanced, or accepted, upon the faith of such an arrangement. The decisions of the supreme court of the United States in Gibson v. Stevens, 8 How. [49 U. S.] 384, and Grove v. Gilmor, Id. 429, and of the court of exchequer in Bryans v. Nix, 4 Mees. & W. 775, and of the supreme court of New York in Holbrook v. Wight, 24 Wend. 169, and Grosvenor v. Phillips, 2 Hill, 147, fully support this position, as does also Sumner v. Hamlet, 12 Pick. 76.
It was attempted to distinguish some of these cases from the one now under consideration, because the parties had both agreed that the depositary should act as the plaintiffs’ agent; • but I consider that in this case, although Daggett & Co. originally employed the defendants, and were to pay them for finishing the goods, yet when the plaintiffs were apprised that the defendants held the goods for them and assented thereto, and when the defendants were informed that the goods were to be finished for and sent to the plaintiffs, and by accepting the goods for these purposes gave their assent to execute them, all parties, including the defendants, agreed that the defendants should act as the plaintiffs’ agents so far as respected the custody for, and delivery to, the plaintiffs of these goods. It is true the defendants did not know why the goods were to be delivered to the plaintiffs. The information given to them by Daggett & Co., when the goods were sent, that they were to be finished for and sent to the plaintiffs, and insured for their account, would rather indicate that the plaintiffs were the absolute purchasers. But this is not material. It is not necessary that they should know the inducement which led to the arrangement, or the particulars of the plaintiffs’ title. They knew what they had themselves agreed to do, which was in effect to hold the goods for the plaintiffs, and this was sufficient ' I know of no principle, or decision, which requires more; and In none of the cases referred to above, except the one in 12 Pickering, was notice to the depositary of the nature of the title of the creditor, an element in the decision. If the depositary undertakes to act for a third person, and receives the property under such an undertaking, he must execute it, unless prevented by process of law founded on a superior title, and it is not for him to say he did not know that the person for whom he held the goods had a good title. This would be' otherwise, if notice to the depositary were a necessary element in the title of the consignee; but it is not. That title rests upon the intent of the parties to create and vest a property in the goods, upon the valuable consideration parted with by the factor on the faith of that property, and upon the execution of that intent by setting apart the particular goods in the hands of a third person, to hold for the factor, thus placing them out of the control of the general owner, and within the control of the factor, so that he can exercise and have the benefit of his ownership. And, therefore, I am of opinion that the cases in which it has been held that a delivery to a carrier under a bill of lading, consigning the goods to a factor who has accepted on account of them, vests a property in the factor, are all authorities in favor of the plaintiffs; for they do not depend upon any particular efficacy of a bill of lading, any further than that document manifests the intent of the parties to have the carrier hold the property for and deliver it to the factor. Gibson v. Stevens, and Grove v. Gilmor [supra]; Haille v. Smith, 1 Bos. & P. 564; Anderson v. Clark, 2 Bing. 20; Desha v. Pope, 6 Ala. 690. That the right of a factor to a lien cannot rest on a bill of lading alone, is dear, from Patten v. Thompson, 5 Maule & S. 350; and in Bryans v. Nix, 4 Mees. & W. 791, Mr. *8Baron Parke declares, in terms, what that case required, that there is no difference as respects this question, between a bill of lading and any other competent evidence of the purpose and acts of the parties. Gibson v. Stevens rests on the same ground.
Perhaps some confusibn exists, from confounding the property acquired by such an arrangement as was made in this case, with the lien of a factor. It is correctly said, that actual possession by the factor is necessary to his lien; and when the goods have been placed in the hands of a depositary employed by the owner, to be delivered afterwards into the actual possession of the factor, it can hardly be said that the latter has actual possession of the goods, and so, it is argued, he cannot have a lien as factor. But the property acquired by depositing the goods in the hands of a third person, under an agreement ihat they shall be delivered to one who has advanced money or negotiable paper on account of them, and shall be by him sold, is something more than a lien. The legal title to the property may be considered as passing to him for the pui poses indicated by the agreement Such is the view taken by Byre, C. J., in the leading case of Haille v. Smith, and I perceive no sound reason for doubting its correctness. It relieves transactions of this nature from all difficulty arising from the want of actual possession by the factor, and places them upon the same footing as absolute sales to bona fide purchasers, so far as respects the vesting of the title intended to be created. And in Gibson v. Stevens the court held that, ns respects the legal title, there is no distinction between the person who has made advances and taken security on the goods; and the case of an actual purchaser. In my judgment, this result is in accordance with the interests of trade, and with the usages of commerce, and allows only a just and safe effect to the agreements of parties.
My opinion is, that the plaintiffs had a property in these goods on which the action of replevin may be sustained and the judgment must be in their favor. Judgment for plaintiffs.