Woolen v. New York & Erie Bank

30 F. Cas. 597, 12 Blatchf. 359, 1874 U.S. App. LEXIS 2005
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York
DecidedOctober 13, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 30 F. Cas. 597 (Woolen v. New York & Erie Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woolen v. New York & Erie Bank, 30 F. Cas. 597, 12 Blatchf. 359, 1874 U.S. App. LEXIS 2005 (circtndny 1874).

Opinion

WALLACE, District Judge.

This action was tried before the court, without a Jury. The plaintiffs, bankers at Indianapolis, Indiana, sent to the defendant, a bank at Buffalo, New York, on the 28th of October, 1872, a letter, stating that they enclose, for collection and remittance of proceeds, a draft upon one Bugbee, and bills of lading for eight car loads of lumber. The draft enclosed is dated October 2Gth, 1872, is drawn by Coder & Co. upon Bugbee, is payable fifteen days from date, and is endorsed by one Mayhew, and then, by special endorsement, by the plaintiffs, to the defendant’s cashier, “for collection.” By the terms of the draft, the drawers, endorsers, and acceptor severally waive presentment for payment and notice of protest and non-payment. The bills of lading respectively set forth, that Coder & Co., at times two or three days prior to the date of the draft, have shipped, at places therein specified, certain car loads of lumber, to be delivered to them at Albany, New York, and are severally endorsed upon the back by Coder & Co., by Mayhew, and by the plaintiffs. No business dealings had ever taken place between the plaintiffs and the defendant prior to this transaction, except a few days previously, when the plaintiffs had sent to the defendant a similar draft, drawn by and upon the same parties, with similar bills of lading and endorsements, with instructions, by letter, to “deliver the shipping bills on acceptance of the draft.” Bugbee, the drawee, resided at Buffalo. Upon receiving the draft first mentioned, the defendant presented it for acceptance to Bugbee, he accepted it, and thereupon, at his request, the defendant delivered to him the bills of lading. Bugbee failed before the maturity of the draft. It is admitted, that the lumber mentioned in the bills of lading had been purchased by Bugbee, of Coder & Co.; and that the draft was drawn for the purchase price of the lumber, and was discounted by the plaintiffs for Coder & Co., on the security of the bills of lading, as collateral. It is also admitted, that, by the ordinary course of transportation, the lumber was due at its destination eight days prior to the maturity of the draft. The plaintiffs insist that the defendant violated its duty by delivering the bills of lading before the collection of the draft, and bring this action to recover of the defendant the amount of the draft.

Bills of exchange are negotiated upon the security of bills of lading appended to them, so frequently, and the rights and obligations of parties thereto constitute such an important subject of consideration in commercial communities, that it seems remarkable that the questions involved in this case have not been settled by numerous adjudications. Such, however, does not seem to be the fact, and the case must be determined as res nova. By receiving a draft for collection, the band receiving becomes the agent of the owner, and, in the discharge of its obligations as such, is bound to present the same for acceptance without unreasonable delay, and to present the same for payment at its maturity; and, if not accepted, or not paid when presented, it must take such steps, by protest and notice, as are necessary to charge the drawer and endorser. While, ordinarily, it is not necessary to present a draft for acceptance, presentment and demand of payment at maturity, with due notice and protest, if not paid, being sufficient to hold the drawer and endorser, this rule does not obtain as to a collecting agent, but prompt presentment for acceptance is required, so that, in case of non-acceptance, the owner can resort immediately, and before maturity, to the drawer. Allen v. Suydam, 17 Wend. 368, 20 Wend. 321. Upon failure to discharge this duty, the receiving bank becomes liable as for negligence, for any damages resulting from the default.

in the present case, the defendant was absolved from the duty of presenting for payment, and of protesting and giving notice of non-payment of the draft, these steps having been waived by the express terms of the draft, to which waiver the plaintiffs, as endorsers, were parties.

The rights and obligations of the parties, if the draft alone had been forwarded, having been ascertained, it remains to consider how far they are changed by the instructions [599]*599contained in the letter, and those implied from the transmission of the bills of lading in conjunction with the draft. As between the parties here, the facts, that the lumber had been sold by Coder & Co. to Bugbee, that the draft they had drawn on Bugbee was for the purchase price of the lumber, and that the plaintiffs had discounted it for Coder & Co., upon the bills of lading as collateral security, are not material, except so far as notice of these facts was furnished to the defendant by the letter and its contents, because, except from this source, the defendant had no knowledge of them.

The instruction in the letter, to collect the draft and remit its proceeds, is not controlling. Had the draft alone been enclosed with such instructions, the duty of collecting it would not have devolved on defendant. Its duty would only have been to present it for acceptance, and, if acceptance was refused to protest and give due notice, and, if paid, to remit its proceeds. If its duty in the premises had not been restricted by the terms of the draft, it would not have been obligatory upon the bank to enforce collection by legal proceedings, but only so to ful-fil its trust as to enable the owner of the draft to enforce promptly and completely his cause of action against the drawer and endorser. And if, instead of delivering them to Bugbee, it had retained the bills of lading until default in payment of the draft, its whole duty in regard to them would have been discharged by returning them to the plaintiffs. That some duty in reference to the bills of lading was imposed on the defendant, which would- not have been required had the draft alone been sent, is evident; otherwise, their transmission is deprived of all significance; but, whether that duty was to retain them until payment of the draft, or only until it was accepted by Bugbee, cannot be determined from the language of the letter. The direction to collect is, in legal effect, not one to enforce collection, but to return the bills of lading to the plaintiffs; and upon what contingency is not specified. Resort must, therefore, be had to the instruments enclosed in the letter, to ascertain the rights of the parties and the duty of the defendant in regard to them. These instruments are to be read and construed together.

The draft is drawn by a person who has consigned lumber to himself at Albany, and transferred his title to it by endorsing the bills of lading to another, who has likewise endorsed the draft and bills of lading to the plaintiffs, who have endorsed both instruments to the defendant. The drawee resides at the city where the defendant transacts its business, and the lumber, by ordinary course of transportation, will reach a distant market several days before the draft matures. It is evident that the draft originated from the shipment of the lumber, was negotiated on the credit of that shipment, and that the parties to it intended that the defendant should deliver the bills of lading to the drawee upon his compliance with the conditions of the agreement under which the lumber was shipped. What those conditions were must be determined by the draft and bills of lading only, and must resolve themselves into one of two alternatives.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sumitomo Bank of Hawaii, Ltd. v. Hawaii Nosan Shokwai, Ltd.
26 Haw. 517 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1922)
W. & A. McArthur Co. v. Old Second National Bank
81 N.W. 92 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1899)
Walters v. Western & A. R.
63 F. 391 (U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Georgia, 1894)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 F. Cas. 597, 12 Blatchf. 359, 1874 U.S. App. LEXIS 2005, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woolen-v-new-york-erie-bank-circtndny-1874.