The draft mentioned and now in question was in fact drawn by Poggio on the defendants, in favor of Baring Brothers, at sixty days sight, and which the referee finds Poggio was not authorized to draw on the defendants, Poggio Brothers having at that time no funds with them. It was drawn on the 15th of February, 1882, and was presented for acceptance on or about the first of March following. It was again presented on the 9th of May, 1882, when payment was refused and the bill protested for nonpayment. On the sixth of March the vessel sailed from Cadiz, with a cargo of salt, for. Gloucester, Mass., arriving at that port about the fourteenth of April. On the second of May and after the plaintiff had heard that the defendants refused to pay or accept the draft, he gave a receipt for nineteen hundred and twenty dollars in full for round charter of bark “ Bessie,” and subsequently the owners of the bark, it would seem, took up the protested draft and produced it upon the trial for surrender and cancellation. The plaintiff made no efforts to collect the amount of the draft from Poggio.
The referee, in a very elaborate opinion, arrives at the conclusion that as the draft was drawn by the defendants’ agent in Cadiz upon the defendants themselves it was not a payment of the freight, which, by the charter, was payable at Cadiz in gold coin, as we have seen. In his opinion he collates and comments upon a number of cases establishing certain legal principles which, if applicable to the facts in this case, would afford abundant reasons for sustaining the judgment founded upon his report. But it is thought that he has failed to give sufficient significance to facts which distinguish the adjudications referred to and make them inapplicable.
It seems to be settled by a series of cases that when by a charter party provision is made for payment in a particular place and in a particular manner, and the debtor provides the requisite funds at the place named, if the creditor does not accept payment in the manner agreed upon he assumes whatever risk is attendant upon his omission to do so. (Abbott on Shipping, 414, 420; McLaughlin on Shipping [2d ed.], 484; 1 Parsons on Shipping and Adm., 305 ; *3861 Maude & Bollock’s Merchant Shipping, 387.) In this case it is to be noted that, according to the charter party, payment was to be made at Cadiz by the agent of the defendants, and that the draft which was taken by the plkintiff, in lieu of money, was drawn at. his request that he might make remittances, and of course without the knowledge of the defendants; and it is to be further noted that the plaintiff, relying upon the statement of the agent that the bill was drawn upon Baring Brothers, made no personal inspection of it and thus enabled the defendants’ agent to practice what appears to-have been a fraud. The draft, therefore, was not only for his convenience but at his request, and his mode of procedure was a voluntary departure from the terms of the contract.
In the case of Marsh v. Pedder (4 Camp., 262), to which the learned referee refers in his opinion, a case somewhat kindred to this, the court said: “ Circumstances may vary the effect of taking a bill of exchange either from the agent or the principal. If the party having the offer of cash merely for his own accommodation prefers a bill of exchange, upon that he must seek his remedy.”' So in the case of Strong v. Hart (6 B. & C., 160), Bailey, J.r said: £‘ If the master of a vessel is to get payment in the best mode that he can and has no power to get anything but a bill he must take that. But if he can get paid in any better mode he should do so, otherwise he will be bound by taking a bill.”
According to the doctrine of these cases it would be incumbent upon the plaintiff to show that he attempted to get the money from ■the defendants’ agent at Cadiz, and failed, and took the draft for that reason, that being the best mode in which he could obtain payment, because cash was refused or he was unable to obtain it, and of course the opposite proposition, namely, that ,he must take the money if he can get it, or assume the consequences, is necessarily eliminated. Darnell v. Morehouse (45 N. Y., 64) is a Case illustrative of the principle. There, after the sale of the cattle, the defendant went with the plaintiff to a banker and paid to the teller the purchase-price. The plaintiff being asked how he would have it replied in two drafts, specifying the amount. The Court of Appeals reversed-the judgment in favor of the plaintiff. Grover, J., said that the judge ought to have submitted to the jury the question whether the defendant did not provide the banker with funds with *387which to pay for the cattle, and whether the banker did not pay the plaintiff in such funds as he elected to receive, and whether the draft was not received by the plaintiff, because he preferred that to currency, with instructions that if they so found the plaintiff was entitled to recover.
The same doctrine- was declared in Strong v. Hart (supra). Lord TeNTkbdeN told the jury that if they thought the master took the bill voluntarily and for his own convenience, without insisting upon paymeut in cash, they were to find for the defendants.
It must be noted that the argument thus presented in favor of the reversal of the judgment appealed from rests solely and entirely upon the fact that the defendants’ agent, Poggio, had the funds in his hands with which to discharge their liability at Cadiz, and that the plaintiff, if he had chosen to do so, could have received his money in cash, which he omitted to do, taking a draft for his own convenience without the knowledge of the defendants, and without any authority from them to change the mode of payment. And in this lies the distinction between this case and the decisions cited by the referee, and seemingly in antagonism, in which the elements of omitting to obtain the cash provided and taking a remittance for convenience sake do not appear.
The converse of this rule, as illustrated in this case, would enable a dishonest agent, in a foreign port, to appropriate' the funds expressly provided for a payment regulated by express stipulation between the debtor and creditor, arid subject the debí,or to a double payment as the result of a voluntary omission by the creditor to avail himself of such funds and of adopting another mode of payment for his own convenience, if the agent be irresponsible. We-think this is not within the spirit of maritime law and cannot be upheld.
Indeed, by taking the draft of Poggio Brothers the plaintiff made them the depositories of his funds and substituted them as his debtors. It does not at all affect the question that the draft was upon the defendants. They had no funds of the agent in their hands and he had no authority to make the draft. If the plaintiff had exercised ordinary caution he would have discovered the apparent trick practiced upon him, and thus protected himself from loss. He relied upon the statement of the agent as to the character of *388tbe draft, however, and should not be permitted to take advantage of his own mischance.
The judgment appealed from should, for these reasons, be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to abide the event.
Davis, P. J.:By the terms of the charter-party the freight unpaid was payable at Cadiz by the consignees of the cargo, Poggio Brothers, “ in Spanish gold coin, at the rate of four dollars and eighty cents to the pound sterling,” * * in cash, without credit, discount or commission. The freight to an amount 'exceeding the sum due to the plaintiff was collected by Poggio & Brothers, and was known to the plaintiff to be in their hands.
The defendants had thus put into the hands of Poggio Brothers, as their agents, the funds with which to discharge their obligations under the charter. The plaintiff had only to demand and receive them. He did receive a portion of them but the .residue he desired, for his own purposes, to remit to Baring Brothers “ as soon as possible.” The defendants were under no obligation to do that for him, and Poggio brothers were not their agents to make such a remission. In undertaking to make the remission at plaintiff’s request, they became his agents, and if they had honestly carried out his wishes 'and bought and sent the draft on the Barings’, the obligation of the defendants would have been fully discharged to plaintiff by the application of the amount due him to the purchase of the draft. The act of leaving the money due him in the hands of Poggio Brothers to purchase such draft was solely that of the plaintiff, voluntarily performed without the knowledge or request of defendants ; and that act transferred the title of the money in the hands of the defendants’ agents into the hands of plaintiff’s agents. If a draft had been purchased on Baring Brothers as requested and directed and in fact sent forward as represented, the defendants would have been under no legal obligation to have followed and protected tbe draft if dishonored on due presentation. But the Poggios’, it seems, deliberately defrauded and deceived the plaintiff by representing that they had purchased the draft and made the remission as he directed, when in fact they had themselves drawn an unauthorized draft on the defendants in *389favor of plaintiff, without his knowledge and without having any funds in the hands of defendants against which they were entitled to draw. By this fraud they kept in their own hands and converted the funds supplied by defendants to pay .plaintiff, and which he had chosen to have remitted for him by draft on Baring Brothers as his more convenient and safe mode of transferring them to his own country. Surely no one can claim that Poggio Brothers were defendants’ agents for the commission of the fraud they perpetrated on the plaintiff. Nor were the defendants under any legal or moral obligation to take upon themselves the consequence of the fraud, which resulted from the plaintiffs own act in changing the mode of paying his freight, and thereby lose the money in Poggio Brothers’ hands, of which by their cunning scheme they had defrauded plaintiff. The cases cited by my brother Beady show that under such circumstances the law will hold the defendants discharged from liability to plaintiff, leaving him to his remedy against the fraudulent parties who have got his money by false promises to obey his orders in respect to its transmission.
I concur with the conclusion of Beady, J.