On the date therein named the plaintiffs in error executed the following instrument in writing:
“South Omaha, Neb., April 19, 1888.
“Chas. B. Bice, Endicott, Neb.: Until further notice we will pay H. C. Dawson’s drafts for cost of stock consigned to us, bill of lading attached when presented.
“Yours truly, Palmer, Richman & Co.
“ Blanchard.”
The evidence shows that anterior to the above date Palmer, Richman & Co. had given a more unlimited letter of credit to the Endicott Bank in favor of H. C. Dawson, which-was superseded by that above set out, upon the suggestion of Mr. Blanchard, a member of said firm, upon its date; that after April 19, 1888, H. C. Dawson bought and shipped cattle and hogs to Palmer, Richman & Co., a live stock commission firm doing business at South Omaha, *846Nebraska; that the Endicott Bank, which was but another name for Charles B. Rice, advanced the money to pay checks issued by H. C. Dawson for stock purchased by him; that the commission upon handling said stock at South Omaha was divided between said firm and H. C. Dawson; that upon the purchases being completed it was usual for H. C. Dawson to draw upon Palmer, Richman & Co. for the amounts expended to make such purchases for each shipment, in favor of the Endicott Bank, by which such drafts were forwarded accompanied by a bill of lading, upon which the same were paid by Palmer, Richman & Co.; that upon one occasion the bill of lading was omitted, whereupon Palmer, Richman & Co. expostulated with said bank in respect to said omission. These shipments were continued until August 13, 1888, when there was drawn a draft as follows:
“$1,400. “The Endicott'Bank,
“Endicott, Neb., Aug. 13, 1888.
“ Pay to the order of the Endicott Bank fourteen hundred and no/100 dollars. H. C. Dawson.
“To Palmer, Richman & Co., South Omaha, Neb.”
The advances covered by the above draft, it is claimed by defendant in error, were made previous to and ending with August 10, 1888. It is certain that the car of cattle and car of hogs shipped on August 10, 1888, were received by the plaintiffs in error at 6 o’clock in the forenoon of the next day, and were sold the same day for $1,604.45 net. The proceeds of this sale the plaintiffs in error applied toward the payment of a draft for $1,700 drawn upon them by H. C. Dawson, of date August 6, 1888, and accepted August 8. This draft is marked paid August 11, 1888. To this draft no bill of lading was attached. When this application of the net proceeds of the sale of the cattle and hogs had been made it left Dawson overdrawn with plaintiffs in error $656, according to the evidence of Mr. Blanchard.
*847About the 13th day of August, 1888, the defendant in. error procured from the agent of the railroad company over whose line the above two cars of stock had been shipped, a bill of lading for the same, which, with the aforesaid draft for $1,400, was forwarded to South Omaha. On the 15th day of August, 1888, the said draft, accompanied by said; bill of lading, was presented to the plaintiffs in error for payment, and payment was refused; whereupon suit was brought upon the letter of credit aforesaid for the amount of said draft and protest fees. On the 22d day of May,, 1890, a verdict was found by the jury in favor of the defendant in error for the sum of $1,573.49, upon which judg~ ment was duly rendered.
Plaintiffs in error contend that as this suit was in effect upon an agreement to accept drafts to be drawn on certain conditions, it must be shown, as a condition precedent to the right of recovery, that said condition has been fully and exactly complied with by the party claiming its benefits. Without doubt this.position is correct. To entitle plaintiff to recover upon an agreement to accept future drafts for stock purchased with bill of lading attached it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to show affirmatively that the draft was for stock purchased, and such draft must have be.cn accompanied by a bill of lading. The contract of the-parties required the concurrence of these conditions — nothing could dispense with either of them — and the jury was so informed in the instructions of the court. There was evidence sufficient to sustain the verdict of the jury as to, these conditions precedent; their finding, therefore, settled this fact in favor of the defendant in error.
Plaintiffs in error, however, strenuously insist that having paid the draft of $1,700 drawn by H. C. Dawson on August 6, they should be protected as against the-draft of date August 13, even though the latter draft alone was accompanied by a bill of lading. It is also contended that plaintiffs in error should have been permitted to show what *848was the state of the account between Palmer, Richman & Co. and Dawson just prior to the receipt of the two car loads of stock on the morning' of August 11, as to which party was owing the other.
These contentions lose sight of the fact that the rights and liabilities of all the parties to the letter of credit are to be measured strictly by its terms. As counsel for plaintiffs in error has justly insisted, the plaintiff in the district court was entitled to recover only upon a strict compliance with the terms of the instrument upon which suit was brought. It devolved upon him to show affirmatively that the draft was for the cost of the stock shipped to Palmer, Richman & Co., and that a bill of lading accompanied the same. On the other hand, there was by the same agreement, devolved upon plaintiffs in error, the correlative duty of providing for payment of such drafts as should be drawn upon them within the strict terms of the letter of credit. The acceptance of all such drafts in advance was burdened with only two conditions: one that the draft should be for the cost of the stock shipped to Palmer, Richman & Co., the other was that a bill of lading should accompany this draft. Upon the one hand, plaintiffs in error could not be held to payment without strict compliance with each condition; on the other hand, upon compliance with said conditions by the defendant in error, the liability of the plaintiffs in error for the amount of the draft became absolute. If they paid a draft without requiring the bill of lading, they did not release themselves from payment of one accompanied by such bill, if it was for the cost of the stock shipped to them. Any other rule would engraft upon the letter of credit auother condition. In the case at bar the engrafted condition which must of necessity be implied from the proof offered to be made as to the condition of the accounts on August 11, just before these two .cars were received, was, that Dawson would not, on a general balance of account, be *849found owing plaintiffs in error. The same condition must be implied if the draft for $1,700, drawn by H. C. Dawson on the 6th day of August, 1888, should have been taken into account by the jury to postpone the rights of defendant in error upon the draft of $1,400 for the cost of stock, accompanied as it was by a bill of lading. The district court properly held that the terms of the letter of credit should alone determine the rights of the parties thereto, as between themselves, regardless of whatever advances plaintiffs in error may have made to Dawson independently of compliance with such conditions precedent as they themselves had prescribed. These considerations meet the contentions of the plaintiffs in error, without cumbering the record with details which would merely serve to show how the questions arose rather than what they were. It follows that the judgment of the district court must be and is
Affirmed.
The other commissioners concur.