Hong Kong & Shanghai Banking Corp. v. Cooper

21 N.E. 994, 114 N.Y. 388, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 787, 69 Sickels 388, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1107
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 4, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 21 N.E. 994 (Hong Kong & Shanghai Banking Corp. v. Cooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hong Kong & Shanghai Banking Corp. v. Cooper, 21 N.E. 994, 114 N.Y. 388, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 787, 69 Sickels 388, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1107 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Vann, J.

The question presented for decision by the written agreement of the parties, as well as by their pleadings, is whether the defendant hád the right, as against the plainvbiff, “ to deliver to the purchasers of said hemp, under the contracts aforesaid, other hemp than that received from Martin, Dyce & Co. or Martin, Turner & Co. from Manilla, to wit, hemp not- received by the said ship Polynesian, but purchased by” the defendant “in the New York market at some time after the said bankmptcy of the said Martin, Turner & Co., and after the 1st of March, 1884; or whether, on the other hand, the said ” plaintiff “ was entitled to demand, as against the defendcmt, that the 4,000 bales of hemp received by the Polynesian from Manilla, aforesaid, should be delivered under and in fulfillment of the said contracts of sale and the proceeds thereof applied in satisfaction of their advances against such hemp % ” The agreement further provided that in case the court should finally decide that the defendant “ had the right, as against the ” plaintiff, “ to substitute such other hemp purchased by him in open market after the times aforesaid for the hemp received from Martin, Dyce & Co., as aforesaid, judgment shall be in his favor for the amount so deposited with the trust company, and in case the court shall finally decide that he had not such right of substitution, judgment shall be rendered in favor of the ” defendant “ for the amount so deposited.”

The parties by thus defining the question and prescribing the remedy have confined discussion to narrow bounds. The rights of third persons, however apparent or important, are expressly excluded from consideration. We are asked to pass upon the right of the defendant, simply as against the plaintiff, to substitute other hemp in performance of the contracts ; and, conversely, upon the right of the plaintiff, simply *395 as against the defendant, to demand that its hemp only should he used for that purpose. The agreement of the-parties to thus limit judicial inquiry is binding upon the courts, as it is not unreasonable nor against good morals or public policy. “Parties by their stipulations may in many ways-make the law for any legal proceeding for which they are parties, which not only binds them, but which the courts are bound to enforce.” (Matter of Petition of New York, L. & W. R. R. Co., 98 N. Y. 447, 453.) The defendant admits that his principals are entitled to the benefit of the sum which he seeks to recover in this action, but he claims the right to apply it upon their indebtedness to him, rather than to permit it to be applied by the plaintiff upon their indebtedness to it. He denies that the plaintiff had any interest in the contracts made by him, but claims that he had such an interest in them as would have enabled him to enforce them in his own name, and to account for the profits by offsetting the amount thereof against the sum owing him by his insolvent principals. The claim of the plaintiff seems to be that Martin, Turner & Co. had so appropriated the shipment of hemp to the contracts for the sale of hemp as "to operate as an equitable assignment of the profits or of the fund in controversy. The ultimate question, therefore, is what interest, if any, had the plaintiff in said contracts at the time the stipulation was made ? The plaintiff practically owned the hemp, as was held in an action between these parties in relation to a cargo of sugar shipped and received at about the same time and under similiar circumstances. (Cooper v. Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, 107 N. Y. 282, 289.) But if not the unqualified owner, it was the pledgee, in actual possession, with absolute power to sell the hemp “ at such times and in such manner ” as it saw fit. It was its duty to apply the proceeds, less expenses, upon the five drafts and, it was its privilege to apply the remainder, if any, upon any other debt owing it by Martin, Dyce & Co. Ho interest in the contracts was ever assigned to it. There was no agreement in relation to them between plaintiff and the defendant *396 •or his principals. It neither acted nor contracted on the strength thereof. It did not even know of their existence until its rights were as complete as they ever became. It accepted the hemp without notice of any intended application or appropriation by Martin, Dyce & Co. Its title, therefore, was free from the effect of said contracts, and it had the right to sell when and to whom it chose, without reference thereto. It is true that Martin, Dyce & Co. intended, when they .shipped- the hemp, to use it to fulfill the contracts made by the defendant, their agent, but they did not notify the plaintiff of their intention, nor do anything to carry it into effect from 'which they could not recede at pleasure.

On January 22,1884, they requested the plaintiff to deliver "the bills of lading to him in exchange for his trust receipt. They did not, however, even then notify the plaintiff of said contracts, or of their intended use of the hemp, or of their object in making said request. It was a naked request which they could cancel or withdraw at discretion, and with which 'the plaintiff could comply or not as it saw fit. It could bind neither party unless acted upon to the detriment of the other. The bills of lading, with a copy of the letter containing said request, were received by the plaintiff’s agent at Hew York on February third, but no action was taken by him until March fifth, when he wrote to the defendant asking if the hemp had been sold. He made no offer to comply with said request, but simply asked for information. The defendant at once replied, stating that “the hemp ex ‘Polynesian’ is sold at .something like 4,000 pounds over its present value, the con"feracts being made in my name.” Still no offer to comply with the request was made. March tenth defendant wrote the .agent of the plaintiff rescinding his letter of the fifth instant, and stating that his relations with Martin, Dyce & Co., who had in the meantime failed, demanded that he should treat the sales of hemp made in his name as for his own account. March eleventh plaintiff’s agent wrote defendant saying that he considered that the sales applied “ to the 4,000 bales of "hemp per Polynesian,” but making no tender of the bills of *397 lading nor any offer to comply with said request. When the hemp arrived on the eighteenth of March, plaintiff’s agent-asked defendant to take it and deliver it to his purchasers, but he declined, stating that he did not know the plaintiff in the matter. This is, substantially, all that was done by the-plaintiff or its agent, or by the defendant or his principals, between the date of said request and March nineteenth, the-date of the agreement which created the fund in question. It does not appear that the plaintiff relied upon the request in anyway, or that it did or omitted to do anything to change its-position in consequence thereof.

We do not think that the plaintiff acquired any additional right by contract, estoppel or otherwise after it discounted the drafts and accepted a transfer of the bills of lading as collateral. Assuming that the contracts for the sale of hemp, although made in defendant’s name, were the acts and property of his principals, still the plaintiff had no interest in them.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.E. 994, 114 N.Y. 388, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 787, 69 Sickels 388, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hong-kong-shanghai-banking-corp-v-cooper-ny-1889.