Wright v. Solomon

19 Cal. 64
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 19 Cal. 64 (Wright v. Solomon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. Solomon, 19 Cal. 64 (Cal. 1861).

Opinion

Field, C. J. delivered the opinion of the Court

—Baldwin, J. and Cope, J. concurring.

That a factor cannot pledge, as security for the payment of his [72]*72individual debt, the goods of his principal consigned to him for sale, has been the established doctrine of the common law for more than a century. It was first declared in Patterson v. Task (2 Strange, 1178) as early as 1748, and has been uniformly adhered to ever since in the Courts of England, except where it has been modified by Acts of Parliament. It is also the settled law in all our sister States of the Union, where the Legislature has not interfered to make a change. In this State, without any legislative action on the subject, a limitation in the application of the doctrine to a special class of factors has been asserted by this Court, which we shall hereafter particularly notice. The doctrine of the common» law results from the fact that the factor is but an agent, and as such j can only bind his principal when his acts are within the scope of his j authority. A power to sell for the benefit of his principal, can in no way be stretched into a power to pledge for his own benefit. Nor does it make any difference whether the party taking the pledge was ignorant as to the extent of the factor’s authority, or that the factor was not the real owner of the property. “ Whoever deals with an agent constituted for a special purpose,” says Kent, “ deals at his peril, when the agent passes the precise limits of his power.” (2 Com. 621.) “ The doctrine,” says the same distinguished jurist, “ that a factor cannot pledge, is sustained so strictly that it is admitted that he cannot do it by indorsement and delivery of the bill of lading, any more than by delivery of the goods themselves. To pledge the goods of the principal is beyond the scope of the factor’s power; and every attempt to do it under color of a sale, is tortious and void. If the pawnee will call for the letter of advice, or make due inquiry as to the source from whence the goods came, he can discover (say the cases) that the possessor held the goods as factor, and not as vendee; and he is bound to know, at his peril, the extent of the factor’s power.” (See Daubigny v. Duval, 5 T. R., 604 ; McCombie v. Davies, 6 East. 538 ; 7 Id. 5 ; Pickering v. Busk, 15 Id. 38 ; Warner v. Martin, 11 How. U. S. 224 ; Buckley v. Packard, 20 Johns. 421 ; Stearns v. Wilson, 3 Denio, 476 ; Kinder v. Shaw, 2 Mass. 398 ; Hoffman v. Noble, 6 Met. 74 ; Holton v. Smith, 7 N. H. 446 ; Skinner v. Dodge, 4 Hen. and Munf. 432 ; Howes v. Doddridge, 1 Rob. Va. 143 ; Benny v. Rhodes, 18 Mo. 147 ; and Benny v. Pegram, Id. 191.)

[73]*73The limitation in the application of the doctrine in this State to which we have referred, xvas first distinctly asserted in Hutchinson v. Bours (6 Cal. 385). It was there held that the doctrine is only applicable where the party pledging is “ technically a factor,” that is, “ where his only business is to sell goods consigned to him for that purpose.” In Glidden v. Lucas (7 Cal. 26) the same limitation is recognized, and in Horr v. Barker (11 Cal. 393) it is directly affirmed. In none of these cases are any authorities cited by the Court in support of the limitation. In the last case, Mr. Justice Burnett states that the harshness and injustice of the rule, as originally established in England, induced the Court in Hutchinson v. Bours to confine the rule to a technical factor. But Justices Ellenborough and Le Blanc, from whose observations in Martini v. Coles (1 Maule & Selwyn, 145) Mr. Justice Burnett concluded that they considered the rule a hard one, expressly held that the law was too firmly settled against- the right of the factor to pledge to be disturbed by the Court. “ Perhaps,” said Ellenborough, “it would have been as well if it had been originally decided that where it was equivocal whether a person was authorized to act as principal or factor, a pledge made by such person free from any circumstances of fraud was valid. But it is idle now to speculate upon this subject, since a long series of cases has decided that a factor cannot pledged

The case of Martini v. Coles was decided in 1813, and with “ the long series of cases ” which preceded and have since followed it, all recognizing and affirming the rule, it may be said with equal truth now as then, that it is “ idle to speculate ” as to any different rule which might have been originally established. Judges of great distinction have not hesitated to declare their approbation of the existing rule. Thus, Mr. Chief Justice Abbott, in Quieroz v. True-man, (3 Barn. & Cress. 349) expressed the opinion that “ it is one of the greatest safeguards which the foreign merchant has in making consignments of goods to be sold” in England. And in the same case, Mr. Justice Bayley said, that he could not help thinking that the rule had operated much to increase the foreign commerce of the kingdom, by holding out to consignors that if the factor went beyond the authority vested in him, it should not work a prejudice [74]*74to his principal. “ I entirely concur,” continued the Justice, “ in saying that in my judgment this, as a measure of policy, ought not to be altered. The rule is founded upon a very plain reason, viz : that he who gives the credit should he vigilant in ascertaining whether the party pledging has or has not authority so to deal with the goods. That knowledge may always be obtained from the bill of lading and letters of advice.”

Whatever doubts may have been expressed by different Judges as to .the expediency of the rule against the power of factors to pledge, there have been none as to the existence of the rule as we have stated it. It is as well settled as any rule of law can possibly be, and in no instance have we found any departure from it, except in cases cited from this Court. The limitation sought in those cases to be engrafted upon the doctrine—in other words, the distinction sought to be made between “ a technical factor,” that is, one whose “ only business is to sell goods consigned to him for that purpose,” and a factor who at the same time does business on his own account— is not recognized in any of the authorities in England or America, but is repudiated, either expressly or impliedly, in all of them, wherever the point arises. In Martini v. Coles, which we have already referred to, the factor. Vos was a general merchant, and as such had been in the habit of employing the defendants as brokers in the sale of West India produce. The plaintiff consigned to him a quantity of coffee for sale, and sent him a bill of lading for the same in the usual form, providing for the delivery of the coffee to him or his assigns, he or they paying freight. The factor indorsed the bill of lading, and delivered the goods to the defendants; and on the faith of these and other goods placed in their hands, they advanced various sums to him. And at the time, they had no knowledge that the factor was not the owner of the coffee. Trover having been brought for the coffee, the defendants urged that, as the factor was also a general merchant, and as such had usually employed them, and as the bill of lading was made out to himself, he might reasonably be mistaken for the owner of the goods.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Cal. 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-solomon-cal-1861.