Argued October 14, 1927. Plaintiff sued under the act of June 8, 1881, P.L. 86 for the value of property delivered to defendant by mistake and retained. Defendant appeals, because after verdict, the court granted plaintiff's motion for judgment n.o.v. The evidence in part documentary and in part oral, discloses no dispute in essential facts; a question of law only is raised.
February 21, 1922, Emerson Overstreet shipped a car of eggs from a point in Texas consigned to themselves at Philadelphia, taking from the carrier a straight or non-negotiable bill of lading. A straight bill as distinguished from an order bill, is one "in which it is stated that the goods are consigned or destined to a specified person"; Sec. 2, Act of August 29, 1916, C. 415, 39 Stat. 539, Barnes' Fed. Code, sec. 7979. The bill of lading stood for the shipment; it was the "symbol of ownership of the goods covered by it, — a representative of the goods": Shaw v. R.R. Co., 101 U.S. 557, 564. February 23, the shippers wrote Nice and Schreiber at Philadelphia that they had shipped this car of eggs and had drawn on Nice and *Page 498 Schreiber for $3,000. They deposited the draft with the bill of lading attached in their local bank for collection. The draft was paid February 28 at the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia by Nice and Schreiber, who then received the bill of lading endorsed by the consignees; while something is said in argument that the draft was not paid until several days later, the difference is immaterial in reaching our conclusion. The transferee's right to receive the eggs from the carrier, under the evidence, was complete when they paid the draft and got the bill of lading: sections 8, 22 and 32, federal act cited above: Hinrichs Inc. v. Standard Trust and Savings Bank, 279 Fed. 382; Williston on Sales (2d Ed.) sec. 283; see too, sec. 20, par. 4, Sales Act 1915 P.L. 543.
Plaintiff was bailee of the eggs in transit; the car arrived March 1st or March 3rd — it is immaterial which, as defendant first heard of the arrival late on March 3rd. The bailee was bound to perform the contract of bailment, in this case, to deliver to the transferee of the bill of lading. Instead of so delivering the car, plaintiff by mistake of a delivery clerk late in the afternoon of March 3rd, delivered 229 cases of the eggs to defendant who had no evidence of title. The next morning plaintiff notified defendant of the mistake and advised it that the car "was for Nice and Schreiber." Notwithstanding that, as well as the evidence of the defendant that it never had the title to or right to possession of the car which the shippers had retained in themselves by the method stated, defendant sold the eggs and credited the proceeds to an old claim it had against the shippers. It was not a purchaser for value: Callendar v. Kelly, 190 Pa. 455.
The plaintiff bailee was entitled to assert against anyone except the owner its interest in the shipment in order that it might comply with the terms of the bailment: King v. Richards, 6 Wharton 418; P.R.R. v. *Page 499 Farrell, 64 Pa. Super. 296. Defendant has shown no right to detain the shipment against plaintiff's demand. Appellant says there is evidence that this car was intended for it and that a draft was drawn on it for $3,000, and that it refused to pay it because the amount was in excess of the market value of the eggs and that it sought by telegraph to induce the shippers to reduce the amount of the draft. That means only that appellant never got the right to have the car because it never accepted the only terms proposed by the owners for the transfer of possession. The undisputed documentary evidence shows that the transferees of the bill of lading did pay the draft on them dated February 23 and received the bill of lading which represented the goods. If, as appellant seems to interpret the record, the shippers were dealing at the same time with two prospective purchasers of, or parties who were expected to make cash advances on the shipment, that fact confers no right to the car on defendant, who parted with nothing nor otherwise became possessed of any equity, nor does it diminish the right acquired by the transferees of the bill of lading. What stands out in the record is that appellant refused to accept the draft alleged by it to refer to this car; it therefore never had the slightest right to take the eggs. It is not without interest that there is no evidence that on March 4 defendant made any protest to plaintiff, or asserted any right to receive the shipment, when plaintiff notified it of the true situation.
Appellant contends that "along in the summer of 1922" it notified plaintiff not to settle with Nice and Schreiber for the value of the eggs wrongly delivered to appellant, and that if plaintiff had heeded the warning it would have sustained no loss. But that amounts to nothing; for plaintiff was bound to perform its contract to deliver the shipment to the lawful holder of the bill of lading or pay for the default. There is no *Page 500 evidence that appellant estopped or precluded itself from asserting its interest as bailee.
Appellant also contends that after plaintiff refused to make further delivery to it, it notified Nice and Schreiber not to settle with the shippers. If appellant did so, it was apparently after the transferee had already paid the draft, though whether it was or not, is immaterial, because appellant had declined to comply with the condition imposed by the owner on the performance of which, and not otherwise, the right to take the eggs would pass; by refusing the draft in the circumstances stated it disqualified itself from obtaining any right to the car: Hinrichs Inc. v. Standard Trust Savings Bank, 279 Fed. 382 and cases cited 388, 389.
Judgment affirmed.