National Bank of Commerce of Boston v. Merchants' Nat. Bank of Memphis

91 U.S. 92, 23 L. Ed. 208, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1338
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 18, 1875
Docket15
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 91 U.S. 92 (National Bank of Commerce of Boston v. Merchants' Nat. Bank of Memphis) 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
National Bank of Commerce of Boston v. Merchants' Nat. Bank of Memphis, 91 U.S. 92, 23 L. Ed. 208, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1338 (1875).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stbong-

delivered the opinion of the court.

The fundamental question in this case is, whether a bill of lading of merchandise deliverable to order, when attached to a time draft and forwarded with the draft to an agent for collection, without any special instructions, may be sur *94 rendered to the drawee on his acceptance of the draft, or whether the agent’s duty is to hold the bill of lading after the acceptance for the payment. It is true, there are other questions growing out of portions of the evidence, as well as one of the findings of the jury; but they are questions of secondary importance. The bills of exchange were drawn by cotton-brokers residing in Memphis, Tenn., on Green & Travis, merchants, residing in Boston. They were drawn on account of cotton shipped by the brokers to .Boston, invoices of which were sent to Green & Travis; and bills of lading were taken by the shippers, marked in case of two of the shipments “ To order,” and in case of the third shipment marked “ For Green & Travis, Boston,. Mass.” There was an agreement between the shippers and the drawees that the bill of lading should be surrendered on acceptance of the bills of exchange; but the existence of this agreement was not known by the Bank of Memphis when that bank discounted the drafts, and took with them the bills of lading indorsed by the shippers. We do not propose to inquire now whether the agreement, under these circumstances, ought to have any effect upon the decision . of the case. Conceding that bills of lading are negotiable, and that their indorsement and delivery pass the title of the shippers to the property specified in- them, and therefore that the plaintiffs, when they discounted the drafts and took the indorsed railroad receipts or bills of lading, became the owners of the cotton, it is still true that they sent the bills with the drafts to their corr'espondents in New York, the Metropolitan Bank, with no instructions to hold them aftér acceptance; and.the Metropolitan Bank transmitted them to the defendants in Boston, with no other instruction than that the bills were sent “ for collection.” What, then, was the duty of the defendants ? Obviously, it was first to obtain the acceptancé of the bills of exchange. But Green & Travis were not bound to accept, even though they had ordered the cotton, unless the bills of lading were delivered to them contemporaneously with their acceptance. Their agreement with their vendors, the shippers, secured them against such an obligation. Moreover, independent of this agreement,' the drafts upon their face showed that they had been drawn upon the cotton covered by the bills of *95 lading. Both the plaintiffs, and their agents the defendants, were thus -informed that the bills were not. drawn upon any funds of the drawers in the hands of Green & Travis, and that they were expected to be paid out of the proceeds of the cotton. But how could they be paid out of the proceeds of the cotton if the bills of lading were withheld? Withholding them, therefore, would defeat alike the expectation and the intent of the drawers of the bills. Hence, were there nothing more, it would seem that a drawer’s agent to collect a time bill, without further instructions, would not be justified in refusing to surrender the property against which the bill was drawn, after its acceptance, and thus disable the acceptor from making payment out of the property designated for that purpose.

But it seems to be a natural inference, indeed a necessary implication, from a time draft accompanied by a bill of lading indorsed in blank, that the merchandise (which in this case was cotton) specified in the bill was sold on credit, to be paid for by the accepted draft, or that .the draft is a demand for an advance on the shipment, or that the transaction is a consignment to be sold by the drawee on account of the shipper. It is difficult to conceive of any other meaning the instruments can have. If so, in the absence of any express arrangement to the contrary, the acceptor, if a purchaser, is clearly entitled to the possession of the goods on his accepting the bill, and thus giving the vendor a completed contract for payment. This would not be doubted, if, instead of an acceptance, he had given a promissory note for the goods, payable at the expiration of the stipulated credit. In such a case, it is clear that the vendor could not retain possession of the subject of the sale after receiving the note for the price. The idea of a sale on credit is that the vendee is to have the thing sold on his assumption to pay, and before actual payment. The consideration of the sale is the note. But an acceptor of a bill of exchange stands in the same position as the maker of a promissory note. If he has purchased on credit, and is denied possession until he shall make payment, the transaction ceases to be what it was intended, and is converted into a cash sale. Everybody understands that a sale on credit entitles the purchaser to immediate possession, of the property sold, unless there be a special agreement that it may be retained *96 by the vendor; and such is the well-recognized doctrine of the' law. The reason for this is, that very often, and with merchants generally, the thing purchased is needed to provide means for the deferred payment of the price. Hence it is justly inferred that the thing is intended to pass at once within the control of the purchaser. It is admitted that a different arrangement may be stipulated for. Even in a credit sale, it may be agreed by the parties that the vendor shall retain the subject until the expiration, of the credit; as a .security for the payment of the sum stipulated. But, if so, the agreement is special, something superadded to an ordinary contract of sale on credit, the existence of which is not to be presumed. Therefore, in a case where the drawing of a time draft against a consignment raises the implication that the goods consigned have been sold on credit, the agent to whom the draft to be accepted and the bill of lading to be delivered have been intrusted cannot reasonably.be required to know, without instruction, that the transaction is not what it purports to be. He has no right to assume and act on the assumption that the vendee’s term of credit must expire before he can have the goods, and that he is bound to accept the draft, thus making himself absolutely responsible for the sum named therein, and relying upon the vendor’s engagement to deliver at a future time. This would be treating a sale on credit as a mere executory contract to sell at a subsequent date.

If the inference to be drawn from a time draft accompanied by a bill of lading is, not that it evidences a credit .sale, but a request for advances on the credit of the consignment, the consequence is the same. Perhaps it is even more apparent. It plainly is, that the acceptance is not asked on the credit of the drawer of 'the draft, but on the faith of the consignment. The drawee is üot asked to accept on the mere assurance that the. drawer will, at a future day, deliver the goods to reimburse .the advances : he is asked to accept in reliance on a security in hand, To refuse to him that security, is to deny him the basis, of his requested acceptance: it is remitting him to the personal credit of the drawer alone.

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Bluebook (online)
91 U.S. 92, 23 L. Ed. 208, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-bank-of-commerce-of-boston-v-merchants-nat-bank-of-memphis-scotus-1875.