Bank v. Shaw

2 F. Cas. 597, 2 W.N.C. 542
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedApril 12, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 2 F. Cas. 597 (Bank v. Shaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank v. Shaw, 2 F. Cas. 597, 2 W.N.C. 542 (uscirct 1879).

Opinion

CADWALADER, District Judge,

[orally charging the jury.] The effect of these transactions and of the letter's and other evidence was that the cotton was appropriated for the security of the bank, not merely until acceptance of the bill in exchange, but until actual payment of it. Such a stipulation is proved, and not disputed. Upon the effect then of what has been stated, the plaintiffs had a special property in the cotton in question for the security not only of the acceptance, but the payment of the bill of exchange. Until, therefore, the plaintiffs voluntarily parted, if they ever did so, with the bill of lading, or bill of exchange, or otherwise lost their title to it, they had a special property in this cotton which authorized them to maintain the present action. As this bill of lading was negotiable, it becomes very important to inquire whether the possession of it was wilfully or negligently parted with by the Bank of North America as agent of the plaintiffs, because if the true owner of property, through himself or his agent, wilfully or negligently allows the muni-ments of title, especially such a muniment as a bill of lading, to get out of his possession and into circulation, so as to enable a wrong-doer to impose himself upon others as the owner, the true owners of the property may be divested of their title, and the wrongdoer able to pass to innocent parties a better title than the rightful owner would then have. It, therefore, becomes very important to inquire whether the Bank of North America wilfully or negligently parted with the possession of the original bill of lading, and as that bank was the agent of the plaintiff, and as the means of knowledge were, we think, peculiarly within their reach, reason and common sense would induce us to expect that the proof of the truth as far as it could be ascertained would come from the party who thus had the means of knowledge. Accordingly, the plaintiffs have undertaken to prove how, as far as they were able to show, this bill of lading got out of their possession, and their proof is very simple, and may probably be very satisfactory to you. In the first place they produce the president and cashier, which is proper if it were a mere formality, and it is a proper formality, to say that there was nothing known to them to authorize any departure from the regular rules of business. They had no right to part with it as between them and the plaintiffs, but, lest innocent persons should suffer, the proof is made that they never authorized nor knew anything about it. Then the subordinates who would have knowledge on the subject are produced, and their testimony is to the same effect.

If the plaintiffs or their agents neither wil-fully nor negligently parted with this bill of lading, but it was surreptitiously abstracted, the court is of opinion that Kuhn & Bro. could not transfer to Miller a better title than they themselves had. The facts of the particular case are with the jury; the law, as the court is at present advised, I have stated. A bill of lading is, in certain forms of it, negotiable at common law, and, in other forms of it, is negotiable by a law of Pennsylvania passed in 1866. [Act Sept. 24, 1806; 1 P. L. 1363.] Other states have passed laws which are somewhat different. Louisiana and Missouri have passed laws which use words making a bill of lading negotiable in the same way that a bank note or bill of exchange is negotiable. The Pennsylvania law omits those words, and the court is of opinion that their omission is to be considered in the interpretation of the act, and that while a bill of lading is to certain intents negotiable, so as to pass the legal title among parties rightfully concerned in it, and so as to enable a wrong-doer, under circumstances such as I have explained, to impose himself on the world as owner, yet the rule that applies to a bank note, or bill of exchange, or promissory note is not in Pennsylvania the standard by which to determine the present question. If the true owner through any fault, omission of duty, or carelessness of any kind, to say nothing of what is not, of course, a wilful parting, enables a wrongdoer to impose upon the world, then the true owner ought to suffer; but, where the bill of [599]*599lading is merely stolen from him, the law does not shift the title through a mere possession of it alone.

The plaintiffs’ case thus far, if wc are right in the law as we state it, and in this view of the facts, stands on a very simple footing. The defendants of record—Shaw & Esrey—appear to have bought here through a broker the cotton in controversy, from Miller & Bro. Now it docs not appear that, when the defendants bought, a bill of lading or any muniment of title or anything of the kind was exhibited to them. They bought on samples, and, while their purchase was an innocent and ordinary one in the market, there was nothing to show title by documents such as a bill of lading or anything else. Their case, therefore, if there was nothing intervening, is simply that of a party who innocently buys what did not belong to the seller, and every man knows that he can get no better title than the seller, so that, as far as the defendants’ personal relations to the property in question are concerned, they could acquire no title as against the present plaintiff; but Shaw & Esrey have the full benefit of whatever title Miller & Bro., from whom they bought, may have had. If, therefore. Miller & Bro. had a better right than the plaintiffs, Shaw & Esrey have the benefit of that right, because whatever right Miller & Bro. had, they sold to Shaw & Esrey.

This brings us to inquire as to the title which Miller & Bro. set up. They allege that they have, by reason of what occurred between them and Kuhn & Bro., a better title than the plaintiffs, and they rest this allegation of title upon the possession by Kuhn & Bro. of the original bill of lading, and the exhibition of it to them, and transfer of it to them, as security for an advance of $8,500. The court is of opinion that if there was no wilful or negligent parting with the bill of lading by the true owners of the cotton, Kuhn & Bro. could transfer no better right than they themselves had. If you should find that there was on the part of the plaintiffs or their agents a negligent, not a wilful parting as alleged, but a negligent, parting with the bill of lading, then the title of Miller & Bro. requires consideration under a different light. Then, if there was nothing more in the case, Miller & Bro. would get a better title than the plaintiffs, and hence, it becomes necessary to consider a question which I will state thus: did Miller & Bro. know any fact or facts from which there was reason to believe that the bill of lading in question was held as a security for an outstanding draft? If they did, they were not innocent takers. I do not mean that they were not innocent, as between them and Kuhn & Bro. I do not mean that there was any moral fraud, but I mean innocent as regards a true owner. It is for you to say how far that Transaction with the Farmers’' & Mechanics’ Bank, and another circumstance which I will mention, may rationally have contributed to induce in the mind of a reasonable person a distrust of the honesty of Kuhn & Bro., in respect of such transactions as that of which you find, in the evidence in question, this is a part. But there is another circumstance, which accordingly as you may view the facts, and they are entirely for you, may or may not induce you to believe not merely that Mr.

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Related

Shaw v. Railroad Co.
101 U.S. 557 (Supreme Court, 1880)

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Bluebook (online)
2 F. Cas. 597, 2 W.N.C. 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-v-shaw-uscirct-1879.