Citation Numbers: 66 Barb. 617, 1873 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 133
Judges: Davis
Filed Date: 11/3/1873
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/2/2024
By the Court,
When this case was here before, the only question presented arose upon the construction to be given to the following clauses of defendant’s letter of 24th December, 1859 : “This credit is intended for advances on consignments of merchandise to my address, and yon will please keep the same in force for the coming year 1860. It is not, however, required,
On that- trial the court “required that the plaintiffs should first prove that the several bills were actually drawn against shipments consigned to the defendant,” and the plaintiffs not having given such proof their complaint was dismissed. (See case reported 59 Barb. 250, 252.) That decision fully, and, as we think, correctly, settles the law of the case, upon the question then presented.
Upon the trial of the case now under review, it appears that on the 18th of January, 1860, the defendant wrote to the plaintiffs, from Bremen, a letter recalling his former letter of credit, and revoking the authority of the plaintiffs to accept the drafts of Rodewald & Co., and requesting the plaintiffs to communicate to Rodewald & Co. the revocation. This letter contains the' following clauses: “If, however, in the meantime, up to the arrival of this letter, acceptances should have been made against it, this, as a matter of course, is for my account, and your drafts for reimbursement will be promptly honored on my part.”
The letter of revocation was received, it appears, on the morning of the 6th of February, 1860, and on the same day the plaintiffs wrote to Rodewald & Co. informing them that according to instructions that morning received from the defendant, the credit opened in their favor had been recalled, and was therefore can-celled. This letter was sent on the same day, by mail, to New Orleans. None of the drafts in suit had at that time been accepted by the plaintiffs. On the 8th of February, a draft of $3,000, drawn at New-Orleans on
The recall of the letter of credit and consequent revocation of the authority of the plaintiffs to accept, was complete on the 6th day of February, at which time the letter of the defendant, written for that express purpose, was received. An acceptance subsequent to such revocation cannot stand alone upon the revoked authority, but must have connected with it such extraneous circumstances as show that the plaintiff had the right to charge the defendant by their acceptance, notwithstanding his recall of the letter of credit. When called upon to respond the defendant had a right to say your acceptances were made after I had revoked your power; and to this there could be but one answer: “We were bound to accept because we had put ourselves, in pursuance of your letter and directions, in a position which was in law equivalent to an acceptance, or which would subject us to damages for refusing to accept.” If the plaintiffs establish this position their right to be made good by defendant is clear; but it is one upon which, in my judgment, the plaintiffs hold the affirmative. They assert a right to exercise an authority after its revocation, and must show the facts which justify the assertion.
To do this it was necessary to establish that what had taken place between themselves and Eodewald & Co. was of such a character that parties who had received the drafts of the latter firm upon the plaintiffs had a legal right to insist upon an acceptance, or to sue as
It was shown that after receiving the letter of the defendant by which the credit to be drawn against, was created in which the defendant indicated that the drafts were to be drawn against consignments of merchandise, but relieved the plaintiffs, as the court has held, from the duty of inquiring whether drafts presented under the authority had been so drawn, the plaintiffs wrote to Rodewald & Co. advising them of the credit. Their letter is as follows:
“New York, 17th January, 1860.
Messrs. Henry Rodewald & Co.,
New Orleans, La.:
We hereby have the pleasure to inform you that our mutual friend, Wm. Ed. Quentell, Esq., of Bremen, has opened a credit with us in your favor, for the sum of $50,000—say fifty thousand dollars, to be used by your drafts, sixty days’ sight, against shipments of consignments to the address of said friend. In confirming this credit, we hope you may have soon occasion to make use of it.
Your drafts will meet with prompt protection.
Meanwhile, we are, gentlemen,
Yours respectfully,
G-elpcke, Keutgen & Reichelt.”
This letter, so far as the case discloses, contains the
One who was simply told by Bodewald & Co. that they had the authority to draw may perhaps claim the benefit of whatever promise the actual authority contained, although he did not in fact see it; but can he claim any more than the authority would have disclosed to him if shown to and read by him % The holders of the drafts must be deemed to have seen and acted upon the letter; for their waiver or neglect to see it cannot interject another promise than those actually contained in or implied from it. When Bodewald & Co. drew the • drafts for $25,000 which it appears in the case were made to pay a like amount of their own previously dishonored drafts upon other parties in favor of the person to whom these were delivered, nothing more could be claimed by that drawee, as against the plaintiffs, than that he saw and acted in full reliance on their letter to his drawers. He must therefore be held to have seen that the promise of the plaintiffs to Bodewald & Co. was
The question now before us is not the one that would have arisen had the drafts been accepted by the plaintiffs prior to the revocation of the letter of credit. In that case the plaintiffs, acting in good faith, could say, as before held by this court, that they were not bound to inquire whether the drafts were drawn against consignments of merchandise to the defendant’s address, because he had himself waived that duty. But an acceptance after the authority itself had been revoked must stand upon the ground of the plaintiffs’ personal liability created by the authority with which they had armed the drawers in Hew Orleans. I see no good reason why the plaintiffs might not have required the drafts to be drawn against consignments of merchandise to the defendant although he did not require them to have bills of lading accompany the drafts ; nor why they might not refuse any draft not so drawn, because not within their instructions to Rodewald & Co. The waiver of accompanying bills of lading was a personal matter between the plaintiffs and defendant. It would not have justified the acceptance of a draft known to the plaintiff's not to be drawn against consignments. Glood faith was still required, although acceptances in good faith without certain evidences of the character of the draft, were to bind the defendant. Hence there can be no sound reason, as it seem to me, why plaintiffs could not limit their obligation to accept to the very kind of drafts which the defendant advised
And when the question is one as to what sort of promises to accept the plaintiffs had outstanding at the time of the revocation of the letter of credit, which bound them to go on and accept notwithstanding such revocation, that question is to be solved by the authority they had given, and with reference to which dealers with Rodewald & Co. may be assumed to have acted.
I think the evidence offered by the defendants should have been received, to show that the drafts were not of the kind which the plaintiffs were bound to accept. That the defendant was clearly entitled to a verdict in •respect of the five $5,000 drafts drawn on the 7th of February, on the evidence which was received showing the purpose for which the drafts were given. There should be a new trial, with costs to abide the event.
New trial granted.
Davis and Ingraham, Justices.]