Thompson v. Perkins

23 F. Cas. 1066, 3 Mason C.C. 232
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 15, 1823
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 23 F. Cas. 1066 (Thompson v. Perkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Perkins, 23 F. Cas. 1066, 3 Mason C.C. 232 (circtdma 1823).

Opinion

STORY, Circuit Justice.

In this case the sole question is, whether the notes taken in payment for the goods of the plaintiff, upon the ‘ sale by Messrs. Winslow, Channing & Co. were the property of the latter at the time of their failure. If so, then they passed by the assignment to the defendants; if not, then the present action is completely sustained. Nothing is better settled at the present day than the doctrine, that the principal is entitled to recover, whenever he can trace his own property and distinguish it, or its proceeds, from the mass of the property of his factor. If it has been sold and notes taken in payment, and these can be specifically ascertained, they remain the property of the principal, and he has a right to receive them, discharging at the same time any lien of the factor. I need not cite authorities on this point. They are very numerous, and have ably collected in Mr. Livermore’s very valuable treatise on Agency, and in Mr. Montague’s on the Bankrupt Laws. 1 Liverm. Princ. & Ag. (1818) p. 267, c. 7; Mont. Bankr. Laws (1819) p. 577, c. 40. The case of Scott v. Surman, Willes. 400 (see, also, Taylor v. Plumer, 3 Maule & S. 562), is a leading ease on the subject; and in it, Lord Chief Justice Willes, with his accustomed diligence, accuracy, and learning, has summed up and expounded the general, principles and authorities. That case completely disposes of this, for there the factor took the notes payable to himself, or order, unless the fact, that the factors were acting under a commission del credere, or, in other words, were guarantees of the payment, changes the legal posture of the parties. And it is insisted, that the guaranty made the'notes the absolute property of the factors. That is a proposition, however, extremely difficult to be maintained upon principle, and as little consonant with authority.

It is true, that in Grove v. Dubois, 1 Durn. & E. [Term R.] 112, which was the ease of a policy broker. Lord Mansfield lays down the doctrine, that a commission del credere is an absolute engagement to the principal from the broker, and makes him liable in the first instance without any necessity of resorting to the purchaser, or other contracting party. And Mr. Justice Buller, in the same case, sn: 1. that a previous demand and refusal of the debtor had never been in practice required. WThether this doctrine can now be supported is matter of great doubt. It has been questioned by a very acute reporter, (7 Taunt. 480, note a), and seems utterly at variance with the decision of Lord Chief Justice Gibbs, in a recent case. Peele v. Northcote, 7 Taunt. 478. He there said, speaking of a policy broker, that he “was to guarantee all the underwriters for a del credere commission, and was therefore, it was quite clear, liable only in the second instance to make good the loss, in case a loss should arise.” Lord EUenbor-ough too, in delivering the opinion of the court, in Morris v. Cleasby, 4 Maule & S. 566, expressly declared, that the court could not accede to the proposition laid down in Grove v. Dubois. “The doctrine so laid down,” says he, “appears to us to reverse the relative situations of principal and factor, and to have a tendency to introduce uncertainty and confusion into the law on this subject.” See, also, Gall v. Comber, 7 Taunt. 558. But it is not necessary to consider this point, because Lord Mansfield, in the same breath admits, that the law allows the principal, in such a case, for his benefit, to resort to the debtor, as a collateral security. This is a plain admission, that the property in the policy is not, by the guaranty, vested absolutely in the broker, but that the assured might control it. It tacitly concedes, that a guaranty does not vest any title in the broker, which the law would not otherwise vegt in him. In truth, the case before his lordship did not call his attention to the rights of the principal in this respect, but merely to the right of set-off by the broker against the underwriter, as a case of “mutual credit” under the bankrupt acts. And for the same reason we may dismiss the later cases, which have turned upon similar discussions. See Baker v. Langhorn. 4 Camp. 396, and note. 399; Koster v. Eason, 2 Maule & S. 112; Morris v. Cleasby, 4 Maule & S. 566. Lord Ellenborough, in one of them, uses this strong language, “that the broker, with a del cre-dere commission, may be looked upon as the owner of the policy, and he being answerable to the insured for the loss, the amount may be considered as due to him.” Wienholt v. Roberts, 2 Camp. 586. It may be so as between the broker and underwriter on a set off of “mutual credit;” but it is quite a different question as between the broker and his principal. For, as between the latter, the cases abundantly show, that the insured is the real owner, subject only to the lien of the broker. See Cumming v. Forester. 1 Maule & S. 494; Peele v. Northcote, 7 Taunt. 478. The analogy, therefore, so far as it bears upon the present question, is against the distinction, which the defendants attempt to set up.

The case of Mackenzie v. Scott. 6 Brown. Parl. Cas. 280. has also been cited in support of this distinction; but upon examination it [1068]*1068will not be found to apply. It is not very easy to ascertain upon what precise point that judgment turned, as no reasons are given by the house of lords. But it may be gathered from the facts, that the principal controversy was, whether a factor, with a del credere commission, was discharged from liability by remitting the amount to his principal in an unproductive bill, payable to and endorsed by the factor. It was decided, that he was not; and as it may be fairly presumed, either upon the common ground, that the factor was liable upon his indorsement, or, that the bill was not received as an absolute payment, so as to extinguish the guaranty. At all events, it is no rashness to assert, that it steers wide of the present question.

The case of Gall v. Comber, reported in 1 Moore, C. P. 279, and 7 Taunt. 558, turned upon this point, that at all events the principal'could not maintain a suit of indebita-tus assumpsit for goods sold and delivered against his factor del credere, after a sale of the goods; for if the factor was strictly liable to the principal, it was not as purchaser of the goods, but as making a contract of a peculiar nature, and that it ought to be specially laid in the declaration, as arising from the del credere commission. And at the trial, Lord Chief Justice Gibbs considered it as merely a guaranty, that the price should bo paid. So far as this case goes, it shows that the factor does not become the purchaser of the goods by a sale under a del credere commission. The view thus taken of a del credere commission is confirmed by what fell from Lord Ellenborough, in Morris v. Cleasby, 4 Maule & S. 566, 574. His language is: “The guarantee is to answer for the solvency of the ven-dee, and to pay the money, if the vendee does not; on the failure of the vendee he is to stand in his place, and to make his default good. Where the form of the action makes it necessary to declare on the guaranty. application to the principal must be stated on the record.”

No other cases have been cited by the defendants, that require any particular observation. 1 will now shortly advert to those, which establish a doctrine wholly inconsistent with the argument of the defendants. And first, the case of Scrimshire v. Alderton, 2 Strange, 1182. There the plaintiff consigned some goods for sale to a factor, with a del credere commission. After the sale, and before payment by the purchaser, the factor failed, and the plaintiff brought his action after notice and demand against the purchaser to recover the amount.

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Bluebook (online)
23 F. Cas. 1066, 3 Mason C.C. 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-perkins-circtdma-1823.