Newhall v. Vargas

13 Me. 93
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 15, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 13 Me. 93 (Newhall v. Vargas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newhall v. Vargas, 13 Me. 93 (Me. 1836).

Opinion

[103]*103Tho action was continued nisi, and the opinion afterwards drawn up by

Weston C. J.

Joseph Vargas, having due authority therefor, furnished for the intestate’s barque a return cargo of molasses, in part payment of which the net proceeds of the outward cargo were applied. It is insisted, that in this business ho acted as factor; and as such could not exercise the right, upon which the defendants’ title depends. The circumstance of his having purchased the molasses specially for this purpose, can make no difference. It was paid for out of his own funds; and he stood in relation to the intestate in the character of a vendor, as much as if it had been supplied from his owm warehouse. And it has been directly adjudged that a factor or agent, who purchases goods for his principal, and makes himself liable to the original vendor, is so far considered in the light of a vendor, as to be entitled to stop the goods. Feise et al. v. Wray, 3 East, 93. Every reason, upon which this right is founded, applies with equal force to a purchaser so circumstanced.

The b'lls drawn by the master, payable to Vargas, for the amount due on the purchase of the return cargo, were not equivalent to payment. They were the evidence of the debt due to Vargas; and did not deprive him of any other remedy, authorized by law, where the vendor becomes insolvent. This further remedy, arising from the right of stoppage in transitu, is analogous to the lien, which the vendor of real estate has in equity upon the estate sold for the purchase money. It is not affected or impaired, by taking the bond, bill or note of the purchaser. 4 Kent, 153. The master, in drawing the bills on the owner, was acting on account of the latter; and although sufficiently authorized thereto before, his doings have been since ratified, by the representatives of tho owner, in claiming the molasses thus purchased. It was the usual mode of doing business of this sort. And although by the form of the bills, the master may have made himself personally liable, there is no reason to suppose that his security was relied upon by Vargas, or that, by accepting it, he waived other remedies. Descadillas et al. v. Harris, 8 Greenl. 298. The master was not acting for himself. He was the mere [104]*104agent of the owner. In the case before cited from East, where the right of stoppage was recognized, bills had been drawn for the merchandise sold, which had been accepted and negotiated.

Nor do we perceive, that the commissions charged by Vargas, for doing the business and negotiating the bills, can deprive him of the right he claims. As indorser of the bills, he became conditionally liable to the holder, if protested for non acceptance, or for non payment. And this business done for the owner, together with the purchase of the molasses, well entitled him to a commission. He became liable upon the bills, not for the benefit of the drawer, but of the holder. It is not easy to conceive how this liability could have the effect to impair any of his remedies against the owner, who was bound to accept and pay the bills. There is very little analogy between this case and that of a factor, who receives a del credere commission. The factor there guaranties to his principal the solvency of others, who are the purchasers of his goods. Here Vargas became responsible to others, if the principal, for whom he bad purchased and who had purchased from him, did not duly honor his bills. In either case, every legal remedy remains in full force against the purchaser. In the case cited from East, which in many of its points has a near resemblance to the one under consideration, the party who purchased and supplied the cargo, and who negotiated the bills, charged and was allowed a commission.

The right of stoppage in transitu, upon the insolvency of the purchaser, has been well settled in the commercial world. It had its origin in the civil law ; was first recognised in England in equity, and was subsequently adopted by the courts of common law. It is analogous to the common law right of lien, being an equitable lien, which enables the vendor, after he has parted with his possession, to resume it at any time before the vendee has acquired it, and to retain the goods, until the price has been paid or tendered. The leading principles in relation to the doctrine, have been established by judicial decisions. There is very little conflict of authority, as to who may exercise the right. The principal difficulty has been in some of the cases, as to when the transit ends, upon which the right ceases. In regard to this point, there is not entire harmony in the decisions; and there has [105]*105been much refinement in some of the distinctions, upon which they have turned. The right of stoppage is a favored claim ; and in general it continues until the goods have come to the possession, or under the direction of the vendee.

It is contended, that the right ceased in this case upon the delivery of the goods on shipboard, because the vessel belonged to the vendee, and because the master was his agent. On the other hand it is urged, that as the goods were destined to be delivered to the vendee at Portland, the transit continued, until they were received by him or his representatives at that port. It is conceded that such would have been the fact, had the vessel been a general ship. The decision of the cause will mainly depend upon the question, whether the vessel in this case belonging to the vendee, and in his employment, a different rule is to be applied.

In Fowler et al. v. McTaggard et al. cited in Inglis v. Usherwood, 1 East, 515, it was ruled by Grose J., that upon the delivery of a quantity of tobacco on board a ship, chartered for three years by the vendee, the transit was at an end, and the right of stoppage ceased. And it appears in Hodgson v. Loy, 7 T. R. 436, where the case was again cited, that a motion for a new trial was overruled. In the case last cited from East, Grose J., recognizes it as a general rule, that the delivery of goods by the vendors, on board a chartered ship of the vendee, is a delivery to the vendee himself. Lawrence J., expressed himself to the same effect, but the right of stoppage was there allowed, upon the construction put upon the law of Russia, where the goods were delivered. In the case before Grose J., the tobacco was not shipped to be delivered to the vendee, but for a foreign destination.

Where goods are shipped on board a vessel, appointed by the vendee, to be transported not to his residence or to he received by him, but to other markets, there is a termination of the transit, and the right of stoppage by the vendor ceases. Noble v. Adams, 7 Taunton, 59; Stubbs v. Lund, 7 Mass. 453; Rowley v. Bigelow, 12 Pick. 307. And this is the true principle, upon which Fowler v. Taggard turned, as stated in the opinion of the [106]*106court, delivered by Lawrence J. in Bohtlingk v. Inglis, 3 East, 381, in which Grose J. who tried the former ease, concurred» Lawrence J. disclaims, for himself and for Grose, any intention in Inglis v. TJsherwood, to state, that a delivery on board the

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13 Me. 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newhall-v-vargas-me-1836.