Wills v. Brown

118 Mass. 137, 1875 Mass. LEXIS 325
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 26, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 118 Mass. 137 (Wills v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wills v. Brown, 118 Mass. 137, 1875 Mass. LEXIS 325 (Mass. 1875).

Opinion

Endicott, J.

The goods in question were purchased by Parrott with credit furnished by the defendants, who, as provided in their letters of credit, took the bills of lading in their own names as security. On arrival, the bills which ran to the defendants or their assigns were indorsed to Parrott, who gave the defendants a trust receipt, wherein he agreed to sell the goods, and hand over the proceeds to the defendants in payment for their advances. The receipt also recites that the intention of the arrangement was to protect and preserve unimpaired the lien of the defendants on the property.

These facts were known to the plaintiffs, and there was evidence that they refused to deliver the goods to Parrott, and so discharge their lien for the freight, unless the defendants would agree to pay it; and at an interview with the defendants’ agent he promised orally that the defendants would pay the freight, and the plaintiffs thereupon delivered the goods to Parrott.

It is clear that the defendants had an interest in these goods, a right to the possession under their bills of lading, and could enforce their lien for advances. They could do this by an agent, and Parrott could properly be their agent. The goods were as [138]*138much theirs for the protection of their lien after they had made Parrott their agent, as before. Thayer v. Dwight, 104 Mass. 254. Under these circumstances, the promise to pay the freight, if the plaintiffs would deliver the goods to Parrott, was not for the mere purpose of paying the debt of Parrott, but to obtain a transfer of the goods, in which they had an interest, in order that Parrott might sell them and devote the proceeds of the sale to the payment of their debt. By the delivery, a benefit enured directly to the defendants. The case falls within the rule stated in repeated decisions of this court: that when the plaintiff has, in consideration of the promise by the defendant, relinquished some lien, benefit or advantage for securing his debt, and transferred that interest, or some equivalent benefit, to the defendant, it is a new and independent contract between the parties, although the result is that the payment of the debt of another is incidentally and indirectly effected. Nelson v. Boynton, 3 Met. 396. Curtis v. Brown, 5 Cush. 488. Alger v. Scoville, 1 Gray, 391. Jepherson v. Hunt, 2 Allen, 417. Dexter v. Blanchard, 11 Allen, 365. Furbish v. Groodnow, 98 Mass. 296. Ames v. Foster, 106 Mass. 400. See also Williams v. Leper, 3 Burr. 1886; Castling v. Aubert, 2 East, 325; Edwards v. Kelly, 6 M. & S. 204; Fitzgerald v. Dressler, 7 C. B. (N. S.) 374.

The ruling at the trial was correct, that, if the jury should find that the defendants promised to pay the freight, if the plaintiffs would release their lien for the same, and the plaintiffs, relying on the promise, did so, and delivered the goods to Parrott, the promise was binding, though not in writing.

Exceptions overruled.

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Bluebook (online)
118 Mass. 137, 1875 Mass. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wills-v-brown-mass-1875.