The facts in this ease are not seriously disputed. Plaintiffs are engaged as manufacturers and merchants in the city of Mew York, and defendants are engaged in conducting a warehouse in said city. During the year 1903 a domestic corporation known as the James Freeman Brown Company was engaged in business in such city as the selling agent for mills which manufactured cotton goods in the United States. On March 28, 1903, the James Freeman Brown Company sold to the plaintiffs 50,000 yards of cotton duck and delivered to them a memorandum describing the goods as the brand “ Carson,” the description of the goods as “ 37'J-" 2.15 yard duck,” quantity “ 50,000 yards,” and price “ 6-J- cents per yard,” providing the terms were cash ten days less three per cent, or two per cent ten days, sixty extra; goods to be delivered “ 5,000 yards promptly; balance about April 15, 1903,” and to be shipped “ first 5,000 yds. to Aspinook Co., Jewett City, Conn.” It was also stated that a memorandum of the sale was sent to a mill in which the words “ sold for ” were substituted for the words “ sold to ” in the contract sent to the plaintiffs, and the words “ we have sold the above for your account” substituted in place of the words “we lecord your order as above, same to be mutually binding” in the *276contract sent to the plaintiffs. There was also a difference in the time of payment, “ 2 off 10 days ” being substituted for “ cash 10 days less 3%P Subsequently and on April twentieth the James Freeman Brown Company sent an invoice to the plaintiffs which stated that the 5,000 yards had been shipped to Jewett City, Conn., as required in the memorandum of sale and for that the plaintiffs paid the James Freeman Brown Company’s assignee on June 27, 1903. Subsequently invoices for the balance of the 50,000 yards were sent to the plaintiffs at various times between June thirteenth and July eighteenth, the statement in these invoices being that the merchandise had been shipped to Hew York, and for these various invoices 'as the bills came due under the contract the plaintiffs paid the James Freeman Brown Company’s assignees or pledgees. When the goods arrived in Hew York they were stored in the warehouse of the defendant company and thereafter the James Freeman Brown Company obtained advances from the defendant company upon the faith of this merchandise, amounting to $2,599.45. The defendants acted in good faith, took from the James Freeman Brown Company promissory notes specifying the merchandise as security for' their payment and without notice of any claim of the plaintiffs to the merchandise. These advances by the defendant were made prior to the time that the plaintiff paid for the merchandise. The action was in replevin to recover the possession of this merchandise, and the court has found that title to the goods passed prior to the 19th of December, 1903.
It seems that the advances that were made by the defendants to the James Freeman Brown Company were made on July 6 and July 11, 1903, and that the James Freeman Brown Company subsequently paid to the mills the price for this merchandise. The payments by the plaintiffs for the merchandise were made in August and September, the last payment apparently having been made on September 26, 1903. It appeared from the evidence that in the latter part of June, 1903, the James Freeman Brown Company sent a truckload of bales of the merchandise sold under this contract to the plaintiffs’ establishment in White street; that the plaintiffs told them that they could not then take the goods on account of lacking storage space, and that the truckman should deliver them to the Brown Company to keep them in their place *277for the plaintiffs. On the same day the plaintiffs telephoned to the representative of the Brown Company stating that the plaintiffs had not space to store the merchandise and that the company should keep it in its place for the plaintiffs. Subsequently atan interview with the representatives of the Brown Company the plaintiffs said that the company would have to keep the merchandise for them ; that the Brown Company’s representative said that it would have to charge the plaintiffs storage which plaintiffs said they were not bound to pay and that was the end of the conversation. One of the plaintiffs testified that it was the custom in the business for the sellers to keep the goods until delivery is ordered by the purchasers; that these cotton goods were bought on contract and the sellers or the mill agents held them until the purchasers notified them where they are to be shipped. These bales all appear to have been marked with the number of the bale which corresponded with various invoices sent by the Brown Company to the plaintiffs and for which the plaintiffs paid. The Brown Company was adjudged bankrupt about the 10th of December, 1903, and on December 16 and 17, 1903, the goods were located in defendants’ warehouse when plaintiffs demanded them, at the same time offering to pay the storage on the merchandise. Defendants refused to accept the storage charges and demanded the amount of their advances which plaintiffs refused to pay, whereupon this action was commenced.
The substantial question in this case is whether the Brown Company had title to this merchandise when the loan was made by the defendants upon the merchandise. It is quite clear that no title passed by the original sale for the merchandise was not then in existence as it had to be manufactured. The sale was in form made by the Brown Company and there was an executory contract to manufacture and sell this merchandise. The Brown Company had acted, in' its relations to the plaintiffs in regard to this sale of the merchandise, as an agent for an undisclosed principal. The mills which accepted the order to manufacture the merchandise being the principal. The Brown Company was described in the memorandum note as the agent of the mills. It made a contract to sell to the plaintiffs certain merchandise to be manufactured. It gave the order to the nulls which accepted it and, when manufactured, shipped the merchandise to the Brown Company in compliance with the contract, and itnme*278diately upon the receipt of the invoices from the mills it invoiced the manufactured merchandise to the plaintiffs, transferred the right to receive the payment for the merchandise to the bankers, and subsequently the plaintiffs paid the mills the contract price. It is doubtful whether any title to these marfufactnred articles ever vested in the Brown Company, or that it was anything more than the agent of the mills to receive and deliver the manufactured articles to the purchaser. In the invoices sent to the plaintiffs it was stated that the payment was to be made to the assignees, and on the same day duplicate invoices were sent to the assignees who at once gave notice to the plaintiffs and made the advances to the Brown Company. The arrangement between the Brown Company and the assignees was testified to by the representative of Ladenburg, Thalmann & Co. It was that Ladenburg, Thalmann & Co. received the invoices from the Brown Company on the same or the following day as the itemized invoice was sent to the customer, and the assignees made the. advances to the Brown Company the day that this invoice was received by them. The identical merchandise sold to the plaintiffs was identified by these invoices, and it was then or shortly after-wards in the possession of the Brown Company. I think the effect of this transaction was to identify the merchandise then in the possession of the Brown Company, or as having been shipped to it by the manufacturers as the particular merchandise that had been sold to the plaintiffs, and there was then transferred to the bankers who had made the advances the right of the Brown Company to the goods so as to enable the bankers to complete the title of the plaintiffs to the goods upon payment of the purchase price. Clearly the Brown Company had no further interest in the merchandise sold. They contracted to sell the merchandise to the plaintiffs. It was in their possession or under their control for the purpose of delivery. It was to be paid for by the purchasers within a time fixed by the contract, and the purchasers then became liable to the Brown Company or to the mill which had manufactured it for the purchase price. The Brown Company then transferred to the bankers the right to receive payments and necessarily whatever title remained in the goods with the Brown Company was transferred to the bankers to enable them to assure to the purchasers a complete title upon payment of the purchase price. The Brown Company then held *279the merchandise as simple bailee, without authority to sell or pledge it, and the subsequent pledge to the defendants was, therefore, ineffective. It is not necessary to determine whether the title to the merchandise- vested in the plaintiffs at the time of their receipt ■ of the invoices, or at the time of the final payment to the bankers. It is sufficient to say that the Brown Company had lost title to the merchandise before they attempted to pledge it to the defendants. Under this arrangement, if the goods had been delivered by the Brown Company to the plaintiffs, there would then have been a legal liability in favor of the bankers, and against the plaintiffs, to pay the purchase price of the merchandise (Thalmann v. Capron Knitting Co., 100 App. Div. 247; affd., 182 N. Y. 525); and it seems to me quite evident that under the contract with the plaintiffs and the contract with the bankers the Brown Company had lost not only the title to the merchandise, but any interest in it, except to hold it under a naked bailment for the benefit of the plaintiffs to whom they had sold the merchandise, and the bankers to whom they had sold the right to receive the purchase price. (See Saltus v. Everett, 20 Wend. 267; Kimberly v. Patchin, 19 N. Y. 330.)
Thei-e is no question of estoppel presented, as neither the plaintiffs nor the bankers invested the Brown Company with an apparent title, or made any representation, or did any act, as to the title of the Brown Company to the property upon which the defendant relied. (Barnard v. Campbell, 55 N. Y. 462; Collins v. Ralli, 20 Hun, 246; affd., 85 N. Y. 637.) I do not consider that a tender of a portion of this merchandise to the plaintiffs at the end of June has any effect upon the title to the property. It does not appear what merchandise was tendered, or whether it was included within that invoiced to the plaintiffs prior to that time; but the only question that was then involved was whether the plaintiffs were bound to receive the merchandise, or whether it was the duty of the Brown Company to care for it, and charge the plaintiffs with the expense of caring for it until shipping orders had been received. The refusal of the plaintiffs was not a denial of title, or a refusal to accept the merchandise as a compliance with the contract, or which in any way involved the title to the merchandise, but was the result of a dispute in relation to the question of posses*280sion. The Brown Company apparently acquiesced in the demand of the plaintiffs, except in relation to the liability for charges for storage, and when the Brown Company subsequently stored the merchandise in the defendants’ storehouse it had complied with its contract, and the plaintiffs could not then have obtained possession of the merchandise without paying the storage charges; but all this was without effect upon the question of title which had been divested by the Brown Company’s delivery of the invoice to the plaintiffs and a transfer of the right to collect the purchase price to the bankers.
The appellants also claim protection under the Factors’ Act (Laws of 1830, chap. 179), hut it seems to me clear that the defendants cannot claim a lien under that act, for the Brown Company was not a factor or agent of the plaintiffs, and, so far as appears, was not intrusted with the possession of any hill of lading, custom house permit or warehouse keeper’s receipt for the delivery of this merchandise. All that the Brown Company had was the simple possession of the merchandise, and that was not sufficient under the act to protect a person dealing with it
My conclusion, therefore, is that the judgment was right, and it should he affirmed.
Patterson, P. J., and Clarke, J., concurred; McLaughlin and Houghton, JJ., dissented.