Thomas H. Allen & Co. v. John S. Hornor & Son

2 McGl. 177
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 1, 1884
DocketNo. 248
StatusPublished

This text of 2 McGl. 177 (Thomas H. Allen & Co. v. John S. Hornor & Son) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas H. Allen & Co. v. John S. Hornor & Son, 2 McGl. 177 (La. Ct. App. 1884).

Opinions

Rogers. J.

On the 11th day of December, 18S2, a man representing himself as W. B. Reeves, of W. B. Reeves ,& Bro., entered the banking house of defendants, Hornor & Son, in Helena Ark., and asked the senior member of the house if the bank would discount a draft drawn by him (Reeves) on the house of Thos. H. Allen & Co., of New Orleans, offering a bill of lading for twenty-one boles of cotton as collateral security. The firm of Hornor & Son declined to discount his draft, not knowing Reeves, unless he first obtained authority from said Thos. H. Allen & Co. to do so. Reeves volunteered to obtain authority from either the house of Thos. H. Allen & Co., in Memphis, or the one in New Orleans. He left the bank, and in about the time necessary to send and receive a telegram from New Orleans, returned with the following:

“ Will pay draft of $700 against twenty-one bales.

(Signed) Thos. H. Allen & Co¡”

This being an answer to Reeves’ telegram, which read :

“ Thos. H. Allen & Co.:

“ Have shipped you twenty-one bales of cotton per steamer Chouteau. “Will you honor our draft for $700?

(Signed) W. R. Reeves & Bro.”

Hornor «fe Son, recognizing the bill of lading to be property Bigned — as they held at that time other bills of lading signed on that trip by the clerk of the Chouteau, the clerk using a fac-simile stamp — and considering Reeves as a correspondent of Thos. H. Allen <fe Co., with limited authority to draw upon them, took the bill of lading and telegram, discounted the draft in good faith, and forwarded all together to Burbridge & Co., by whom said draft was presented to Thos. H. Allen & Co., and by them paid without hesitation or comment. Some days afterwards, upon the arrival of the Chouteau, it was for the first time discovered that the bill of lading had been altered, the only thing shipped being a box of cotton seed consigned to Thos. H. Allen & Co. [179]*179Demand was then made by Allen & Co. upon Burbridge & Co. for the money paid when the draft was taken up, and said demand was refused; there was no tender by Thos. H. Allen & Co. of the draft, bill of lading, or box of cotton seed at the time said mone\r was demanded, or at any time since.

Plaintiffs bring suit against Hornor <fc Son and J. W. Bur-bridge & Co., who endorsed the draft and collected it from plaintifls.

The facts disclose, that Reeves & Co. were unknown to either party — that this was the first transaction of any character ever had with them. It is evident that the dispatch of Allen & Co. was induced by no faith whatever in Reeves, but by the shipment to them of twenty-one bales of cotton.

Their agreement, therefore, was not properly an acceptance of the draft of Reeves ; it was a promise to pay a drát't against twenty-one bales of cotton shipped by steamer Chouteau, or an authority to Reeves to draw on them on the condition that twenty-one bales of cotton were shipped to them by said steamer. None of the essential elements of negotiability attached to a draft or bill of exchange could be implied, that would bind an acceptor under the rules of commercial law — nothing to indicate that faith in the drawer, which excludes all theory of a claim for indemnity against or recourse to the holder of the instrument. Strictly speaking, therefore, conditional drafts, or conditional acceptances, are not commercial paper, their payment is due upon condition, and not in any event; the general rule of commercial law is not therefore applicable; the very condition they express disposes of the privileges granted in favor of commerce to negotiable instruments, which closes the avenues of defence open to all other and ordinary transactions.

The defendants are not third persons, they are primarily the real parties. They received from Reeves the bill of lading, the representative of the twenty-one bales of cotton, knowing .full well that the condition upon which plaintifls would pay the draft discounted by them, was the shipment of the cotton, and besides inserting in the body of the draft a reference to the [180]*180bill of lading and telegrams, attached them to the draft, as evidence that they had seen to the performance of the condition stipulated by the plaintiffs. It will not do, therefore, to say that this holder of the draft is absolved from all responsibility from acts of negligence and indifference, and that responsibility and liability shift to the shoulders of the one who has agreed to pay. It is not a question of equal negligence or a division of responsibility — for one might have refused the discount, it is true— or that the other might have refused payment, is equally true —but a consideration of condition precedent having been assumed and the belief of its performance having been impressed and regarded, does not alter the fact that the condition was not performed and the money paid in error.

We have fully discussed and determined our view of the law governing bills of lading in the case of John Phelps & Co. vs. Mechanics’ & Farmers’ Bank, 2 McGloin, 11, and in adhering to those views, do not consider it necessary to determine the proposition; that the delivery of the bill of lading to plaintiffs was a fulfilment of the condition imposed by their dispatch.

The law as held by us in Agnel vs. Ellis, 1 McGloin, 61, is applicable to this case, and we must be governed by the laws of Louisiana.

The present action is not brought to rescind a contract under Arts. 2045, 2047 C. C. It is based on Arts. 1898, 2302 C. C.

The position of the plaintiffs is, that we paid to you seven hundred dollars on the delivery to us of twenty-one bales of cotton; that you transferred to us what purported to represent said, property — a bill of lading; in fact, you transferred to us nothing — neither the cotton specified, nor a bill of lading. The inducement for the payment to you was the supposition that you transferred the property; that was the cause and motive for our payment. You must return to us the money paid you in error.

The plea urged by defendants, that this action mu3t be dismissed because no tender was made of the box of cotton seed, or the draft or the bill of lading, is made on erroneous views of the conditions of this controversy. As to the box of [181]*181cotton seed, there is no evidence that it was ever received at this port — certainly nothing to indicate that plaintiffs received it. Defendants certainly placed it beyond the power of plaintiffs to obtain it, as the bill of lading delivered purported to be for entirely different articles, and was a worthless piece of paper as it purported to represent property. The draft was plaintiffs’ voucher for the paj'ment to defendants, and there was no reason to return it, no right in defendants to claim it. The bill of lading, as already stated, was a mere worthless paper and evi" denced nothing but the crime admitted to have been perpetrated and was attached to the draft with the telegram as a part, and setting forth its consideration. The necessity of putting in default, under Arts. 1912, 1913 and 1914 C. C., arises from the principle based upon the benefit derived by the one who has received and the consequent loss or disadvantage to the other who has made the delivery or parted with the thing.

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17 La. 386 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1841)
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2 McGl. 11 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1884)
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Bluebook (online)
2 McGl. 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-h-allen-co-v-john-s-hornor-son-lactapp-1884.