The appellee is engaged in the jewelry business, ' and appellants, Templeton & Adams, are merchants at Kerr, in Lonoke County. Their freight station is the town of Lonoke. The appellee’s place of business is Iowa City, la., and its factory is at Alliance, Ohio. Appellee sold appellants a lot of jewelry, and a written contract was entered into between them. One clause is as follows: “On your approval of this order please deliver to us at your earliest conyenience f. o. b. transportation companies, either at the distributing point or at the factory point, the above assortment of goods on the terms and conditions herein set forth and no other.” The “above assortment of goods” began with: “1 revolving show case free with the order.” The show case was shown to be a material part of the contract and an inducing element. The goods, except the show case, were duly received at Eonoke, but appellants would not take them until the show case came. The uncontradicted evidence is that the show case was promptly delivered to a railroad company at Alliance, Ohio, the factory point; a bill of lading was issued to the appellee showing the show case was consigned to the appellants at Lonoke. This bill of lading was not sent to appellants. After waiting more than a reasonable time for the show case to reach them after the other goods arrived, the appellants had the jewelrv shipped back. Later the show case came, and appellants would not receive it. Appellee did not accept the returned goods, and say they are held subject to appellants’ orders, presumably by the express company, as they were returned by express, charges prepaid.
The appellee sued for contract price of the jewelry, $150, and recovered judgment, and appellants bring the case here.
It is seen from the foregoing statement that the only point in the case is whether the delivery of the show case to the railroad company at Alliance, Ohio, was a delivery to Templeton & Adams. If it was a delivery to them, then appellee had a right to stand on its contract, and refuse. to accept the goods tendered back in rescission of the contract. If it was not a good delivery, then Templeton & Adams were within their rights in rescinding the contract after waiting a reasonable length of time to receive the show case, a material part of the goods to be furnished under it.
If a vendor undertakes to make delivery to a distant place, the carrier becomes the agent of the. vendor, and the property will not pass until actual delivery; if the goods are to be delivered to a carrier specially designated by the vendee, the carrier becomes the agent of the vendee, and delivery to it is delivery to the vendee; if the contract is silent as to the mode of delivery, then a delivery by the vendor to a common carrier in the usual and ordinary course of business constitutes delivery to the vendee1; where no carrier is specified, and a choice is open to the shipper, the selection of any one in good faith in the due course of business is sufficient. The effect of the delivery in proper manner to the carrier is to transfer the title and to fix the time and place when the title passes. Mechem on Sales, § § 73^, 739- This subject has recently been considered by this court in Gottlieb v. Rinaldo, 78 Ark. 123, and Garner v. St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co., ante, page 353. This contract specified that the delivery to appellants was to be to a transportation company at appellee’s distributing or factory point. The undisputed evidence is that it was delivered at the factory point in the due course of business in apt time to a railroad company properly consigned to appellants pursuant to the direction in the contract. Therefore it follows that the delay in actually receiving the show case at Lonoke was the delay of the agent of Templeton & Adams, the railroad company; and consequently afforded no cause of rescission against the vendor. Templeton & Adams could have contracted for delivery at Lonoke, and it is probable, judging from their conduct, that they so understood their contract; but it is not so written. Unfortunately for them, they 'contracted that this delivery should be made to them free on board the transportation companies, either at the distributing point or at the factory point; and that was done, and the default was the default of the railroad after the title of the show case passed to them.
It is said that appellee did not send appellants the bill of lading, and therefore the title did not pass. The bill of lading should have been sent, but it was not, and Templeton & Adams made no demand for it. It was settled in Nebraska Meal Mills v. St. Louis S. W. Ry. Co., 64 Ark. 169, that a carrier is justified in delivering to the consignee pursuant to the shipping directions in the bill of lading, even though the bill of lading is in fact attached to a draft sent for collection, if the latter fact is not known to the carrier. Under the bill of lading in this case the carrier would have been justified in delivering to Templeton & Adams without forwarding the bill of lading. In other words, the failure to send the bill of lading to Templeton & Adams put no obstacle to the delivery of the goods to them. While a bill of lading is both a receipt and a contract, and is a muniment of title (Garner v. St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co., supra), yet it had no influence in this case, as the goods were not sent to shipper’s order, but consigned directly to Templeton & 'Adams, and the bill of lading was not negotiated.
The case turns simply on whether the show case was delivered to Templeton & Adams at Alliance, Ohio, when there delivered to the common carrier. The contract so stipulated, and it is not for the courts to change it.
The judgment is affirmed.