Bullard Bros. v. Bank of Madison

49 S.E. 615, 121 Ga. 527, 1904 Ga. LEXIS 221
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 21, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 49 S.E. 615 (Bullard Bros. v. Bank of Madison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bullard Bros. v. Bank of Madison, 49 S.E. 615, 121 Ga. 527, 1904 Ga. LEXIS 221 (Ga. 1904).

Opinion

Evans, J.

During the cotton season of 1896, Bullard Brothers, a firm doing business at Machen, Ga., engaged in buying cotton on commission. Under an arrangement made with J. D. Tweedy, a cotton buyer of Madison, Ga., Bullard Brothers shipped cotton to him, receiving a commission of twenty-five cents per bale. It was customary for that firm to pay for cotton purchased by it with a draft drawn on Tweedy* in favor of the seller, and for Tweedy to honor the draft as soon as he received the cotton or a bill of lading therefor. At the beginning of tire season, Bullard Brothers took out bills of lading in the name of the firm as consignor, but later adopted the course of having them made out in the name of Tweedy as consignor, as well as consignee. On receiving a bill of lading covering a particular shipment, Tweedy would go to the Bank of Madison and indorse and surrender to it the bill of lading, afterwards substituting therefor another bill of lading covering a shipment of cotton to one of his customers, which the bank would attach to a draft drawn on such customer for the amount of the purchase-price he had agreed to pay. In this way the Bank of Madison, which made advances to Tweedy on the security of the bills of lading indorsed to it, placed itself in a position where it could pay for Tweedy drafts drawn on him by Bullard Brothers and other parties making sales to him. Near the close of the cotton season, Tweedy became involved; the bank declined to make further advances to him; and a number of drafts which had been drawn on him by Bullard Brothers, and which the holders had sent to the bank for collection, were either protested for non-payment or returned by the bank with the statement that the same could not be collected. Subsequently Bullard Brothers were compelled to settle with the holders of these drafts. The purpose of this suit was to require the bank to refund to Bullard Brothers the amount so expended. As showing the liability of the bank, the following allegations were made in the plaintiffs’ petition: The drafts were received [529]*529by the bank for collection and were by it presented to Tweedy for payment, who drew and delivered to the bank his check on it for the aggregate amount called for by these drafts. At the time Tweedy had on deposit in the bank a sufficient sum of money to cover his cheek, and it was accepted by the bank in payment of the drafts. The bank subsequently honored numerous other checks drawn on it by Tweedy; had in Its possession the bills of lading covering the cotton in payment of which the drafts were given, having demanded these bills of lading from Tweedy when he gave his check in payment of the drafts; and subsequently, by virtue of Tweedy’s transfer to the bank of these bills of lading, came into possession of the cotton and received the proceeds thereof on a resale to one of his customers, well knowing that the cotton had not been paid for and that the aforesaid drafts had been drawn against it.

At the trial of the case the plaintiffs offered an amendment to the petition, which the court allowed over the objection of the defendant. In this amendment the following additional allegations were made: The change in the mode of shipping cotton to Tweedy, whereby bills of lading were taken out in his name as consignor instead of in the name of Bullard Brothers, was made at the instance of the bank and upon the faith of its statement that it “was paying for Tweedy’s cotton” and could not protect Bullard Brothers unless the cotton was shipped as directed, but could and would protect that firm provided its shipping directions were complied with. Bullard Brothers relied on this promise and undertaking on the part of the bank and shipped cotton to Tweedy accordingly, looking to the bank to protect the firm in its cotton dealings with Tweedy. In view of this promise and undertaking, the cotton shipped to Tweedy “ was quasi-trust cotton,” and the bank was under legal obligation to pay drafts drawn on him for the purchase-price thereof, and could not appropriate the • cotton or the proceeds thereof to other indebtedness of Tweedy. The legal effect of the bank’s undertaking was “ to make it, as far as petitioner’s cotton was concerned, Tweedy’s paymaster or trustee,” and the bank was “in good conscience and law obliged to appropriate the money arising from the sale of cotton shipped said Tweedy by” Bullard Brothers to drafts which that firm drew on him for the purchase-price, and could not, [530]*530“without a breach of trust, appropriate it to extrinsic debts due it by said Tweedy.” On December 11, 1896, S. H. Bullard, a member of the firm, “came to the City of Madison for the purpose of collecting on bills of lading for something like sixty-one hundred dollars worth of cotton which had been purchased by petitioner and shipped to J. D. Tweedy ; . . said bills of lading were delivered to H. T. Shaw, cashier of the Bank of Madison, who paid to petitioner thereon the sum of fifty-five hundred dollars and inquired of S. H. Bullard whether or not said payment was in full for all cotton represented by said bills of lading. . . S. H. Bullock replied in the negative, stating to said Shaw that there was outstanding- against said cotton small drafts amounting to about $125.00 and for what was known as the Deiter cotton,” so that there were then outstanding drafts for something over $200.00. S. H. Bullard further stated that the draft representing the purchase-price-of the Deiter cotton “was to be sent to a gentleman in New York, and would not be presented for payment until it could be transmitted to New York and from there back to Madison;” áud Shaw then “accepted said bill of lading and said it would be all right,, that when said draft was presented it would be paid.” This draft, which was drawn in favor of one Huntington, was one of those which Bullard Brothers had to pay, as stated in the original petition. During the course of the same conversation, Shaw asked Bullard how much more cotton his firm expected to buy fo'r Tweedy, and Bullard replied, “ between seventy-five and one hundred bales, as this was about all there was left at and around Machen.” Bullard also mentioned the names of certain parties from whom his firm expected to buy some fifty bales, and told Shaw that the members of his firm “would not come again to Madison to collect on their bills of lading, but would draw on J. D. Tweedy for” the cotton as it was purchased. “ Shaw said that was all right. He did not say that he would not pay the drafts as he had been doing; on the contrary he said, in addition to ‘ that was all right,’ that J. D. Tweedy was getting along nicely; that he, Shaw, had succeeded in keeping him from speculating, and he was making money.” For the price of the cotton subsequently purchased and shipped to Tweedy, the drafts referred to in the original petition as having been drawn on Tweedy after December 11th and as having been [531]*531returned to the holders with notice of dishonor were given by Bullard Brothers to the parties from whom the cotton was bought and with.whom that firm was thereafter forced to settle. By another amendment to the petition the plaintiffs alleged that “ Shaw was cashier of the Bank of Madison and acting within the scope of his authority as such cashier, and had authority to’ make the statements and .enter into the transactions” above set forth.

A trial was had on the merits, the defendant bank having by its answer denied all liability to respond to the plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
49 S.E. 615, 121 Ga. 527, 1904 Ga. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bullard-bros-v-bank-of-madison-ga-1904.