This action was instituted by the appellant against the appellees and one T. E. Alford. The appellant alleged that he purchased from T. E. Alford 214 bales of cotton; that at the time he purchased the cotton Alford furnished him with samples on which he relied in making the purchase; that T. E. Alford was the agent of Horn Bros., in the sale of 76 bales of the cotton, which they refused to deliver to the appellant; that he purchased the cotton for resale and sold the same at 32% cents a pound; that Alford and Horn Bros, refused to deliver to appellant, or his vendee, the cotton, which resulted in his damage in the sum of $1,140, for which sum he asked judgment.
The appellees and Alford filed answers in which they denied all material allegations of the complaint and pleaded the statute of frauds. The facts are substantially as follows:
Alford was the owner of 141 bales of cotton stored in a warehouse in Little Rock, and appellees owned 76 bales of cotton also stored in a warehouse in Little Rock. Alford lived at Glenwood and Horn Bros, (appellees) were in business at Caddo Gap. Appellant was in the cotton business at Hope, Arkansas. Alford met the appellant in Little Rock. Ten or fifteen days before Alford went to Little Rock, the appellees had requested him to sell their cotton when he sold his. Alford sold his cotton to appellant for 32 cents per pound and sold the cotton of appellees at 31% cents per pound.
Alford testified in regard to the delivery substantially as follows:' He had never seen the samples. He told appellant where they were. When he made the sale, he considered that it was the other man’s cotton. Witness did not go to see the samples. Appellant knew where they were. He called at the bank and took up the samples of witness ’ cotton and made the remark that he knew where Horn Bros, samples were. Witness carried out the contract he made with Horn Bros, in perfecting the sale to appellant the way that he thought it would be agreed upon. As soon as witness got in commuication with the appellees, they objected to the sale. It was about the second or third day thereafter. Witness further testified regarding the delivery that, as far as he knew, the warehouse receipts were not delivered to the appellant. Witness understood'that the receipts were at the Bank of Grlenwood. Appellant never paid witness anything on appellee’s cotton. Witness remarked to the appellant at the time he sold him appellee’s cotton that if he couldn’t get but 31% cents, he would let appellant have it, but didn’t know what appellees would think about it. He did not wire the appellees on that day and tell them what he was offered for the cotton before selling the same to the appellant. There was other testimony corroborating the testimony of Alford to the effect that the appellees had requested Alford to sell their cotton when he sold his.
The appellant testified that it was the custom in most towns, especially in Hope, where he was in business, for cotton to be sold by samples; that it was impossible to sell it in any other way; that delivery was made by a delivery of the sample; that where country cotton is bought the cotton is bought by sample and paid for by drawing a draft on the man for whom you buy. Appellant met Alford in Little Rock and went down to look at his cotton. Alford told witness where the appellees’ samples were. He examined the two lots of cotton thoroughly. Alford told witness that the cotton belonged to him, appellees, and a man named Byrd. He made Alford a price, and Alford sold witness his cotton, and remarked, “I oug*ht to sell Horn’s. He told me to, but I don’t know about it. ” Witness replied, “All right, if you don’t want to sell, maybe you’d better not.” Later Alford told witness that he wished to sell Horn’s cotton, and witness said lie wonld take it. Alford told witness that the tickets to appellees’ cotton were at the Bank of Glenwood. Witness told Alford that “the cotton would have to be ‘kicked clear;’ known in cotton terms, ‘clear of compress, Little Rock, 1, 2 and 3.’ ” He asked Alford when he went home to tell Mr. Hallman (of the Bank of Glenwood) to have appellees’ tickets there and witness would see that it was loaded out of Little Rock properly. In regard to the delivery of the samples the witness further testified as follows: “He (Alford) told me where to find the samples. I went up to Block-Stevens Company, brokers. I handed their negro $1 and told him to go get the samples. He brought them back and I had them sacked and sent to Hope. Each sample has a sample and a coupon in the middle. There is a sample on both sides and coupon in the middle. That represents ■ the number and bale of cotton. The coupon corresponds with the number on the bale. The samples represent one bale and they were delivered to me and I shipped them to Hope, and in the meantime I sold the cotton to E. C. Brown & Company. I delivered Mr. Brown the samples. The tickets to me were to be drawn by draft from the Bank of Glenwood and from the German National Bank of Little Rock. When the tickets to the Alford cotton came I delivered them to Mr. Brown.” Witness then states that the Horn cotton was never delivered to witness. Witness paid Alford all that he drew on him for. He had sold the cotton and delivered the samples and when witness settled with Brown & Company he paid him the difference caused by the failure of appellees to deliver their cotton. The loss and the profit he would have made had the same been delivered would have been $1,140.
Witness Anderson testified that he worked for E. C. Brown & Company. The company bought 214 bales of cotton from appellant. The cotton turned up short 72 or 73 bales. The samples were sent in by express to appellant and appellant brought the samples and sold to E. C. Brown & Company. Cotton is delivered by sampies. Witness didn’t know anything about the appellees’ cotton. It was delivered to E. C. Brown & Company by samples. The company shipped what it got, but it didn’t get all of it. The appellant made the loss good to E. C. Brown & Company. Witness further testified that when a man buys cotton it is delivered to the purchaser by warehouse receipts. A man may sell cotton and not have the warehouse receipts with him. When the seller draws on the purchaser by draft, the only way for the purchaser to get possession of the cotton is to pay the draft and get the warehouse receipt. The warehouse receipts are kept by the owner in his possession. Every bale of cotton has a ticket. The sample has a coupon and represents the bale and the number. The tickets— compress receipts—come attached to a draft, or if they are there and delivered by the seller in person, the purchaser gives the seller a check for them, and they take it to the bank, and it is paid. The cotton tickets represent every tag in those samples; the coupon is in the sample representing the ticket. The man that owns the cotton has the ticket. If the selle.r lives out of town, he draws on the purchaser with the tickets attached to the draft. The purchaser doesn’t get possession of the cotton until the tickets are delivered.
The court instructed the jury to return a verdict in favor of the appellee, which was done. Judgment was then entered dismissing the appellant’s complaint, from which judgment is this appeal.
The testimony tended to prove, and it may he conceded for the purposes of this case, that Alford was the agent of appellees and had authority to sell their cotton. Nevertheless, the undisputed testimony shows that there was no completed sale. The alleged contract for the sale was void under the statute of fraud, for the undisputed evidence shows that there was no memorandum of the sale signed by the appellees or their agent; that the cotton was not delivered by the appellees, or their agent; that nothing was paid by the appellant to the appellees, or their agent on the purchase price. Nor was there any actual or symbolic delivery of the cotton by the appellees, or their agent, to appellant. Section 3656. Kirby’s Digest.
“A receipt and acceptance of goods under an oral contract of sale to satisfy the statute of frauds implies a delivery; and there must be such a delivery by the vendor and receipt by the vendee of the goods sold as shows an intention on the part of the parties to vest in the vendee the possession and right to possession discharged of all lien for the price.” Devine v. Warner, 96 Am. St. Rep. 216. See, also, Rogers v. Jones, 129 Mass. 422; Taylor v. Godbold, 76 Ark. 395; Hodges v. Nall, 66 Ark. 135; Walnut Ridge Mercantile Co. v. Cohn, 79 Ark. 338.
The undisputed evidence shows that warehouse receipts had been issued for this cotton, and these receipts were in possession of the Bank of G-lenwood. They had never been endorsed and delivered to the appellant. Under these circumstances, there could be no actual or constructive delivery of the appellees’ cotton to the appellant. See sections 5229-5230, Kirby’s Digest.
The judgment is in all tilings correct, and it is there- ' fore affirmed.