* FAIRCLOTH, J., did not sit on the hearing of this case. READE, J., dissenting. This is an action by the plaintiff to recover from the defendants the sum of $2,541.98, the proceeds of the sale of 1,003 barrels of rosin, sold by them. The plaintiff corporation bases its right of recovery upon two alternative propositions; first, that it had acquired the legal title to the rosin under a mortgage executed by Moffit Co., to the *Page 110 plaintiff, bearing date 6 May, 1873; and second, under an equitable assignment of the proceeds of the sale of the rosin alleged to have been made to the plaintiff by Moffit Co., on 10 September, 1873.
We will first dispose of the claim under the mortgage. By sec. 11 of the charter of the plaintiff corporations, it is provided: "That to aid planters, miners, manufacturers and others the said bank shall and may have power to advance or loan to any planter, farmer, miner, manufacturer or other person or persons, any sum or sums of money and to secure the repayment of the same, taking in writing a lien or liens on the crop or crops to be raised, even before planting the same, or upon the present or prospective products of any mining operation, or upon any article or articles then existing or thereafter to be made, purchased, manufactured, or otherwise acquired, and any lien so taken shall be good and effectual in law," etc.
The mortgage under which the plaintiff claims was executed 6 May, 1873, and registered 9 July, 1873, and the rosin claimed under it in this action was purchased by Moffit Co., the mortgagors, on 10 (134) September, 1873, thereafter, and by Moffit Co., was on the same day consigned to the defendants, commission merchants in New York for sale. Moffit, the mortgagor, was neither a planter, miner nor manufacturer, but was a merchant only. The act therefore does not expressly embrace a merchant, and it is by construction only that he can be included in this section of the charter.
We by no means decide that any of the classes expressly named, can execute a mortgage of property, indefinitely thereafter to be acquired, which shall be valid as to third persons. Such a provision in the charter is so obviously an "exclusive privilege" within the meaning of the constitution, and so opposed to common right and the general law of the land if it could be enforced by law would be such an incubus upon that freedom of commerce which it is the policy of this State and country to foster and encourage, that this Court would long hesitate before affirming its validity. Simonton v. Lanier, 71 N.C. 498. We waive that discussion and confine ourselves to the construction of the section.
1. The language of the section does not embrace merchants, and we can not by implication extend it to them. They are a class distinct from the producing class. Merchants are not producers, and it was the manifest purpose, at the time this charter was granted by the legislature, to benefit that class. The persons expressly described are planters, miners and manufacturers, who are producers. If it were necessary to give effect to the words "others" and "other persons" to make complete *Page 111 sense, as is contended by the plaintiff, those words might be extended so as to embrace persons occupied in the fisheries, for instance, as an important producing class. This would satisfy the letter without violating the spirit and purpose of the act, by giving it the universal and dangerous application contended for.
2. The section of the charter we are considering provides that to aid planters, etc., "advancements may be made," etc. "taking (135) liens," etc., plainly contemplating that the "lien" and the "advancements" — the one is consideration of the other — should be contemporaneous acts. It was never intended under this section that the bank could at any subsequent period of time after the advancements had been made, take a lien upon all future purchases for a general balance on such advancements. The mortgage under consideration was made by Moffit Co. to the plaintiff, not to secure advances then to be made or thereafter — like the mechanics' or farmers' lien — but it was made to secure a general balance of an indefinite past indebtedness. This is an improper construction of this section of the charter, when under this mortgage a legal title is set up to property purchased in the usual course of mercantile trade subsequent to the execution of the mortgage. The mortgage nevertheless is not invalid, for under the first section of the charter, the bank is endowed with "capacity to take, hold and coney real and personal property and with all the powers, rights, and privileges granted to any bank by that or any preceding legislation," etc. Under this provision it was competent for the bank to take this, or other mortgage to secure a present or past indebtedness. But it can not be contended that such a mortgage expressly securing a past debt of $20,000, and that only, can be extended so as to vest in the mortgagee the legal title of 1,003 barrels of rosin, purchased by Moffit Co., four months after the execution of the mortgage. Unless it can have this effect (and it certainly can not) for the purpose of this action the mortgage must be put out of the way.
Failing to recover upon the mortgage the plaintiff falls back upon the claim of an equitable assignment by Moffit Co. of the anticipated proceeds of the sale of the rosin. To this new cause of action the defendants make a preliminary objection, that to constitute an equitable assignment the intent and agreement to make the (136) transaction such, must appear, and that such intent and agreement, not only do not appear but are here rebutted; because when the plaintiff received notice on 22 September that the defendants had protested the draft of Moffit Co., payable to S.D. Wallace, cashier, it dispatched to the defendants a telegram in these words: "We hold registered *Page 112 mortgage on the rosin shipped you by Moffit, and must follow it. if draft is not accepted." From this telegram it appears that the plaintiff did not then claim or rely upon the agreement and promise of Moffit Co. as constituting an equitable assignment or other contract which could be enforced, but on the contrary relied solely upon its rights as derived from and under the mortgage. This is a strong view of this part of the case, for if the parties themselves intended to make on such contract as is now insisted on, the law will not step in and make one to the prejudice of intervening rights of persons dealing with the property in the usual course of trade.
The exact transaction between the plaintiff and Moffit Co., as found by the jury was this: "That the said draft was discounted by the plaintiff and the money advanced for the purchase of said 1,003 barrels of rosin, at the request of Moffit Co., upon the understanding and agreement that the proceeds of the sale of said rosin so purchased should be applied to the payment of said draft for $2,947.98." This contract did not vest in the plaintiff any title in the rosin when purchased, either legal or equitable.
An agreement to pay a debt out of a particular fund is not an equitable assignment of that fund. The distinction is between promise and performance; a promise is something to be done, an assignment is something done and finished, leaving nothing more in the assignor to do, to complete the right. For the breach of promise the aggrieved party must proceed against the promisor for damages or specific performance, while upon the assignment he may proceed for the fund itself (137) against the party in possession. 3 Lead. Cases in Eq., notes to Row v. Dawson, 230; Trist v. Child, 21 Wall. 447; Christmasv. Russell, 14 Wall. 84.
The plaintiff, however, does not so much rely upon this particular agreement between it and Moffit Co. to have constituted an equitable assignment of the fund, as upon the subsequent draft and letter, construed together, amounting to such an assignment. If the draft and letter constituted an instruction that the proceeds of the sale of the rosin should be applied to the payment of the draft, we might concede for the purposes of this case that such an instruction was an equitable assignment, and that the defendants could not receive the consignment without incurring the obligation to pay the draft, the one thing being the complement of the other. This proposition was the plaintiff's chosen battle ground, and without at all admitting that the affirmative of it would establish the plaintiff's right to recover, the defendants joined issue upon it. It became material, therefore, to ascertain the *Page 113 commercial construction of the terms employed in the letter and draft, by commercial men in the course of their business, as constituting or not constituting the "instruction" contended for by the plaintiff.
It was admitted that the meaning and effect of these instruments were to be arrived at by the commercial usage. The question was submitted to a jury in the first issue, and upon the evidence of merchants it was found by verdict that by the custom of merchants such a draft and letter do not constitute an instruction to appropriate and apply the proceeds of the sale of the rosin to the payment of the draft. This finding of the jury would seem to be decisive of the case, for if no appropriation of the proceeds of the sale had been made by Moffit Co., and regarding the equities of the parties as equal, the one who acquires the possession or legal title will not be compelled to yield it unless his claim is satisfied. This would be so apart from the rights of the defendants as the factors of Moffit Co. But it was (138) further insisted by the defendants that even if the consignment of the rosin had been accompanied by the instruction, as contended for by the plaintiff, yet if there had been a long series of shipments and drafts, in the course of which Moffit Co. became indebted to the defendants, then by the general commercial usage in New York the defendants were entitled to refuse the draft and apply the proceeds of the shipment to their own balance.
This question of a general commercial usage, though objected to by the plaintiff, was also submitted to the jury as one of fact, and it was found by their verdict upon the second issue that such was the custom of merchants in New York. This issue and finding do not seem to us to be material, after the jury upon the first issue had found that by the law merchant, the shipment had been made to the defendants without instruction as to the application of the proceeds of sale; for in the absence of such instruction a factor has the undoubted right to apply such proceeds of sale to the payment of a general balance due from his customer. So that the jury by their verdict upon the second issue in connection with their finding upon the first only declared what the law was without such finding. Such an issue and verdict can not be assigned for error. "Factors and brokers to whom goods are consigned to be sold," says Addison, "have a lien for the general balance due to them from their employers, or principals in the ordinary cause of their business as factors, and for their occupations on behalf of such employers, upon the goods whilst in their possession and on the moneys realized by the sale of them. This right exists universally by the custom of the trade. It is part of the law merchant, and as such is judicially *Page 114 taken notice of by the Courts, no proof ever being required as a matter of fact that such general lien exists." 2 Addison Cont., sec. (139) 932.
To such an extent are the rights of lien of the factor protected by the law merchant that even where he has made advances on the credit of a deposit, not knowing the depositor to be an agent, he can retain for a general balance due by such agent, against the true owner; and the same rule applies to insurance brokers, 2 Add., sec. 933, and note. The rights of the factor are well illustrated in the late case of Bank v. Rice, 107 Mass. 37, which is directly in point. There, a merchant consigned twelve bales of cotton to a factor and on the same day drew a bill of exchange upon him expressed on its face to be drawn "against twelve bales of cotton," procured its discount by a bank, and advised the factor of the consignment and the draft. Upon presentment of the draft the factor refused to accept it and advised the merchant by letter that he did so because he had not received the bill of lading, and that he would accept when the bill was received. Two days later he received the bill, and a few days afterwards the bank to which his letter in the meantime had been shown, again presented the draft to him together with his letter and a duplicate bill of lading, and requested his acceptance, which he again refused. Upon the subsequent receipt of the cotton, the factor sold it and credited its proceeds to the merchant, who was his debtor to a large amount. It was there contended, as it has been here, that the plaintiff had an equitable lien upon the cotton to the extent of the draft discounted by the bank, that it had brought the draft with the memorandum ("against twelve bales of cotton") upon it and in reliance upon the cotton as security for its payment; that under these circumstances the defendant could not accept the consignment without accepting the draft. But the Court decided otherwise, and held that the plaintiff had acquired no title to the cotton against which the draft was drawn; that the bill of lading was (140) not attached to the draft or made payable to the holder thereof, or delivered to the plaintiff. The cotton was not of sufficient value to pay the draft, and the balance of account between the defendant and drawer was largely in favor of the defendant. There was no ground, therefore, for implying a promise from the defendant to the plaintiff to pay either the amount of the draft or the proceeds of the cotton.
"The plaintiff," said the Court, "did not take the draft or make advances upon the faith of any promise of the defendant or of any actual receipt by him of the cotton or the bill of lading, but solely upon the *Page 115 faith of the drawer's signature, and implied promise that the defendant should have funds to meet the draft. The whole consideration for the defendant's promise moved from the drawer and not from the plaintiff. And the defendant made no promise to the plaintiff." See also Tiernan v.Jackson, 5 Pet. 588; 1 Sandf. 416; 1 Seld. 525; 3 B. Ald. 643; 3 Sand. 285; 18 Wend. 319.
So that whatever may be the rights and the remedies of the plaintiff and Moffit Co. between themselves, and arising out of their contracts and promises, the one with and to the other, the defendants, who were not parties or privies thereto, and made no promise to the plaintiff, have not made themselves liable for the claim of the plaintiff, but are left free to enforce their factor's lien against the proceeds of the rosin consigned to them by their debtor, and in execution of the contract with Moffit Co., upon the faith of which the advancement was made. Robey Co. v. Ollier L.R., 7 Ch. App., 695 (3 Moak, 571).
We are aware that there are dicta in some of the elementary writers upon this subject, that when one writes to his factor that he has sent him certain goods for sale, and drawn on him to a certain amount, the factor if he receives the consignment would be bound to accept the bill. 1 Pars. Bills and Notes, 281; 2 Story Eq. Jur., sec. (141) 1045.
But it will be found on examination that the authorities they cite do not support them, or are explained away or overruled by subsequent decisions, and that the law is correctly stated in Bank v. Rice,107 Mass. 37. See also 1 How. 239; Sweeney v. Easter, 1 Wall, 166; 1 Smith L. C. 635, 417; 5 Sandf. 267; 1 Sugden on V. P. 381.
If the finding of the jury upon the second issue had not become immaterial by the finding upon the first, it would seem to be settled by the highest authority that the Courts in administering the commercial law have the power, and it is proper to submit to the jury as a question of fact, as well what is the meaning of commercial terms, as what was the established commercial usage in respect of a certain course of dealing; as for instance, the meaning of the words "please protect," and whether factors can refuse to accept a draft in a case like the present and apply the proceeds of sale in payment of a general balance.
Merchants dealing in a particular kind of merchandise, and bankers discounting bills of persons in particular trades are presumed to know and make their contracts in reference to the custom of the trade. In Ex ParteWatkins, L. R., 8 Ch. App. (6 Moak, 466), SIR G. MELLISH, L. J. said: "I must always say I think it extremely desirable that as far as can be done consistently with the rules of law, the law should *Page 116 be so interpreted as to be in accordance with the custom of trade. To make the law needlessly conflict with the customs of any trade causes the greatest inconveniences and injustice to persons in that trade." AlsoAshforth v. Redford, L. R. 9 C. P. 20 (7 Moak, 135)
In conclusion the plaintiff here had a well known and usual means of protection which he refused or neglected to take, to wit, either to take the bill of lading deliverable to its own order, or to attach the bill of lading to the draft, not to be delivered to the drawee until (142) he accepted the draft; and it was in evidence that such was the custom where the drawer was weak. The plaintiff well knew that Moffit Co. were weak, for it had a mortgage upon all they had then, or should ever thereafter acquire by the terms of it. The plaintiff at the date of the draft knew that the firm of Moffit Co. were insolvent and it is evident put a mistaken reliance upon the effect of the mortgage, or upon the personal promise of the firm.
PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.
Cited: Blalock v. Clarke, 137 N.C. 142.