Casey v. Cavaroc

96 U.S. 467, 24 L. Ed. 779, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 1686
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 15, 1878
Docket181
StatusPublished
Cited by156 cases

This text of 96 U.S. 467 (Casey v. Cavaroc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Casey v. Cavaroc, 96 U.S. 467, 24 L. Ed. 779, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 1686 (1878).

Opinion

Me. Justice Beadley,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

The substance of the agreement in this case, so far as neces.sary tó be considered, was, that the Credit Mobilier should accept the drafts of the banking association to the amount of ■a million of francs at ninety days, the bank agreeing to furnish funds to pay the drafts at maturity, with the privilege of a renewal; and it was stipulated that this obligation of the bant should be guaranteed by Cavaroc & Co., and by a deposit witl them, for the use of the Credit Mobilier, of first-class securities of which deposit the latter was to be advised.

This arrangement was immediately telegraphed to New Orleans, and the drafts were drawn on the 12th of July; but the weight of the evidence is, that none of the collateral securities were delivered until the 19th of August, — which might raise a question whether the accommodation acceptances of the Credit Mobilier could be considered as a contemporary, consideration therefor; or, if not, whether the bank was at that time, *476 in the apprehension of Cavaroc (the common agent), in a condition of solvency ancf good credit, — as to which ah affirmative answer could not well be given, since the proof is quite clear that the bank was then struggling with serious financial difficulties, from which it never recovered.

Waiving this question,-however, for the present, we will proceed to examine whether, supposing, that no objection arises from the time when this transaction took place, it amounted to such a transfer or pledge of the' securities in question as to entitle the Credit Mobilier to a preference upon them over, the other creditors of the bank at the.time of its failure. Was there such a delivery and- retention of possession of the collateral securities as to constitute a valid pledge by' the la\v of ■ Louisiana ? Clearly they were never ' out of the possession of the officers of the bank, and were never out of the bank for a single moment, but were always subject to its disposal in' any manner whatever, whether by collection, renewal, substitution, or exchange; and collections, when made, were made for the benefit' of the bank, and not that of the Credit Mobilier.

The case has some features in common with, though differing in others fróm, that of Clarke v. Iselin (21 Wall. 360), in which this court held that collateral securities transferred by the borrower to the lender at the time of the loan were not divested out of the latter by the mere fact of his depositing them with the borrower for collection. The court say: “ Obviously this deposit in no degree affected the title of the defendants to the notes. It merely facilitated collections.''’ The court then cited White v. Platt, a New York case in 5 Denio, 269, in which it ■ was said: “Where promissory notes are pledged by a debtor to secure a debt, the pledgee acquires a special property in them; That‘property is not lost by their being redelivered to the pledgor to enable him to, collect them, the principal debt being still unpaid. Money which he niay collect upon them' is the specific-property of the creditor. It is deemed collected by the v debtor in a fiduciary, capacity.”

The case of Clarke v. Iselin, being a New York case, and governed by New York law, or the common law as understood in. New York,, the authority cited- was necessarily of great *477 weight, if not. controlling. When, as in that case, the title has been transferred to the creditor, and the collections are made for his benefit, the pledgor merely acting as his servant or agent in making them, the character of the security is not affected at the common law by the debtor having actual possession of the collaterals, there being no fraud in the transaction. In such case, they are held by the creditor by way of mortgage as well as pledge; and a mortgage is valid notwithstanding the mortgagor has the possession.. The difference ordinarily recognized between a mortgage and a pledge is, that title is transferred by the former, and possession by the latter. Indeed, possession may. be considered as of the very essence of a pledge (Pothier, Nantissement, 8); and if possession be pnce given up, the pledge, as such, is extinguished. The possession need not be actual: it may be constructive as where the key of a warehouse containing the goods pledged is delivered, or a bill of lading is assigned. In such case, the act done will be considered as a token, standing for actual delivery of the goods. It puts the property under the power and control of the creditor. In' some cases, such constructive delivery cannot be effected without doing what amounts to., a transfer of the property also. The assignment of a tíill of lading is of that kind. Such an assignment is necessary, where a pledge is proposed, in order to give the constructive possession required to constitute a pledge; and yet it formally transfers the title also. In such a. case, there is a union of two distinct forms of security, — that of mortgage and that of pledge; mortgage by virtue of the title, and pledge by virtue of the possession.

This advantage exists when notes and bills are transferred to a creditor by way of collateral security. His possession of them gives them the character of a pledge. Their indorsement if payable to order, or their delivery if payable to bearer, gives him the title also, which is something more than a pledge. This double title existed in White v. Platt and in Clarke v. Iselin. lienee the actual possession of the securities by the creditor was a matter of less, importance in those cases.

Whether constructive possession in the creditor can be affirmed, where an article to which his only title is that of pledge is actually, re-delivered to the debtor, with general *478 authority to dispose of it and substitute another article of equal -value in its place, is the question which we have to meet in this case. Such a redelivery for a'mere témporary purpose, as for shoeing a horse which has been pledged and is owned by the farrier, or for repairing a carriage which has been pledged and is owned by the carriage-maker, does not .amount to an interruption of the pledgee’s possession. The' owner is but a mere special bailee- for the creditor. So, when the debtor- is employed in the creditor’s service, his temporary use of the pledged- article in the creditor’s business does not effect a restoration of the possession to the debtor. -This is in accordance ' both with the common and the civil law. Reeves v. Capper (5 Bing. N. C. 136) was a case of this kind. A sea-captain pledged his ■ chronometer for a debt. He was afterwards em- • ployed by. the pledgee as. master of one of his ships, and the chronometer was placed in his charge, to be used on the voyage. It was held that the possession of the pledgee was not lost. He recovered the chronometer against a person to whom the master pledged it a second time.

In Hays v. Riddle (1 Sandf. (N.

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Bluebook (online)
96 U.S. 467, 24 L. Ed. 779, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 1686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casey-v-cavaroc-scotus-1878.