Sproule v. McNulty

7 Mo. 62
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 15, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 7 Mo. 62 (Sproule v. McNulty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sproule v. McNulty, 7 Mo. 62 (Mo. 1841).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Napton, Judge.

This was an attachment by appellants against McNulty, Sháw & Mitchell, which was levied upon a cargo of lead. The appellees, Crawford & Carson, at the return term of the writ, filed their interpleader, claiming the property attached. On the trial of the interpleader, an agreed case was submitted, and the court found for the interpleaders [63]*63and gave judgment accordingly. From that judgment an appeal has been taken to this court. The agreed found on the record in the following words : “On the July, 1840. the defendants shipped on board the steamboat Omega, 700 pigs of lead, weighing 49,000 lbs. to the inter-pleaders William Crawford, jr., and Th. J. Carson, at Baltimore, Maryland, for the express purpose of paying in part a note part due and unpaid, from defendants to interplead-ers. The lead was assigned to Kennet, White & co., commission and forwarding merchants of St. Louis, with in-struetions accompanying it to forward the same to the inter-pleaders at Baltimore, through Hugh C. Hasson, their agent, a commission and forwarding merchant at New Orleans, Louisiana, as early as possible. Four bills of lading were executed for the lead between the defendants and the carriers, at the time of shipment; one of which was retained by the shippers, the defendants; another was forwarded to said Hugh C. Hasson; another was forwarded to Kennett, White & co., and another to the interpleaders, accompanied with a letter informing them of the shipment of the lead, and requesting them to receive the same, dispose of it for the interest of defendants, and apply the proceeds in liquidation of the aforesaid note due and unpaid. That accordingly the interpleaders immediately insured the lead on their own account. When the lead arrived in St. Louis, on its passage to Baltimore to the interpleaders, and came into the possession of Kennett, White & co., and before it was forwarded by them to interpleaders, as above directed, it was attached by the plaintiffs in this suit. The only question arising in this case is, who were the owners of the lead, at the time it was attached, the shippers, or the interpleaders 1 A great many authorities have been presented to the court, consisting of decisions made both in England and in this country. These decisions, and the opinions of learned jurists, have satisfied me, at least, that the lex mercatoria, is of a very plastic nature, adapting itself very much to the peculiar circumstances of each case. It appears impossible to draw any general rule of a binding and conclusive character, as applicable to the class of cases under which the present [64]*64CaSe included. There is no settled and determinate of ownership, either in England or this country. To complete a contract of sale, there must be a delivery, either actual or implied. A delivery to the carrier, where there has been an order for the goods, is undoubtedly a delivery to the consignee. Where a debtor consigns property to his creditor, in payment of his debt, and there is any assent on the part of the creditor, a delivery to the carrier in this case, has also been held a delivery to the creditor. So far the doctrine appears very reasonable. But it has also been held, both in England and in some of our State tribunals, that if a debtor consigns property to his creditor, though the creditor be entirely ignorant of the fact, the delivery to the carrier is a delivery to the creditor, and his assent will be presumed. This was, for the first time I believe, declared to be law by the judges in the case of Atkyn v. Barwick, (1 Strange, 165.) The same doctrine was recognised by Lord Mansfield in the case of Anderson & others v. Temple, (4 Burr. R. 1768.) In this case Lord Mansfield maintained the following doctrine: “The most desirable object in all judicial determinations, especially mercantile ones, (which ought to be determined upon natural justice and not upon the niceties of the law,) is to do substantial justice. And therefore I will avoid laying the stress that might properly be laid upon the assent being necessary to complete the contract, or the want of a delivery; the solid ground of which is, that a contract shall be presumed complete upon any distinction where the justice of the case requires it, though there is no actual delivery. And it is settled, that if a man sends bills of exchange, or consigns a cargo, and the person to whom he sends them has paid the value before, though he did not know of the sending them at the time, the sending of them to the carrier will be sufficient to prevent the assignees from taking these goods back, in case of an intervening act of bankruptcy: but if goods or bills of exchange are sent, and the consideration has not been received, the court of chancery always interposes. In the case in Strange, theie is no doubt but the honesty of the case inclined the court to the judgment they gave, the reason given [65]*65turns upon a subtlety. I think the case was well supported upon other grounds than those mentioned in the

The case turned upon a question of fraud, but the other three judges, though concurring with Lord Mansfield in the disposition of the cause, agreed that an assent was necessary to complete every contract, that the act of bankruptcy occurring on the 8th November, and the defendant having never accepted until the 10th, the contract-yras incomplete, and upon the whole circumstance, pronounced the transaction fraudulent and void.” The English authorities then, to establish the very broad proposition that the property vests- in the consignee, who happens to be a creditor, upon delivery to the carrier, without any assent upon the part of the consignee, appear to rest entirely upon the decision in Strange, and upon the opinion of Lord Mansfield in Anderson v. Temple.

The case of Wood v. Roach, (2 Dall. 1 & 1,) is cited in support of the same doctrine. In that cash the opinion of the court is very brief, but clearly assumes th'e position that when the bills of lading are signed, the property is gone from the consignor, and that fact was accordingly left to the jury. The rule is stated by the judge, delivering the opinion, to be founded on mercantile principles, and the inconvenience of the opposite doctrine. In the case of Summerville v. Elder, (1 Binney R. 106,) it was held, that if an agent, indebted to his principal, ship property to him on board a vessel belonging to a third person, and the captain signs a bill of lading deliverable to the principal, the property thereupon vests in the principal, and the agent cannot countermand .or disturb the shipment.

This decision, however, may very well rest upon principles, other than those embraced in the previous cases, and is only applicable to the principle now under consideration, so far as it determines the effect of signing a bill of lading.

These are the only cases, which I have seen, that sustain the proposition in the unconditional manner I have mentioned.

In the case of D. & G. Ludlow, v. Bourne & Eddy, (1 Johns. R. 1,) the opinion of the supreme court of New York [66]*66is given upon this question. Judge Thompson in that case _ says, “ I do not think it necessary to controvert the general proposition, that when goods are shipped on account of, and consigned to a foreign merchant, the property shall prima facia be deemed vested in the consignee, subject to the right of stopping in transitu in case of insolvency.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Mo. 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sproule-v-mcnulty-mo-1841.