This suit was instituted in the circuit court of St. Louis county by plaintiffs, to recover of defendants the value of 150 barrels of highwines, and the following are the facts on which the controversy arose: Skilling, Carter & Ahrenz were bankers at Beardstown, Illinois, and the Beardstown Distillery Company was a corporation doing business at the same place. In 1874, and subsequent years, said bankers had loaned large sums of money to the distilling company, amounting in February, 1876, to.about $20,000. On the 25th of that month, the distilling company shipped to St. Louis, by steamboat, 200 barrels of highwines, and triplicate bills of lading were executed by the boat to the order of the distilling company, of which two were delivered to Blumb, its secretary, one of which he placed ' and locked in his desk, but Sheber, the vice-president and general manager of the company, also had a key to the desk, and furtively took the bill of lading, *668and, under the false pretense of going elsewhere, took passage on the boat and accompanied the highwines to St. Louis, where he sold and delivered 150 barrels to t'he defendants. The boat arrived at St. Louis on the 26th of February, and between nine and ten o’clock a. m. of that day, Sheber sold and delivered 100 barrels, and subsequently fifty barrels to the defendants. On the same day, and about the same hour, Blumb indorsed the bill of lading in his possession, ordering the delivery of the wines to Gregory & Stagg, of St. Louis, and drew two drafts on them, against the wines, for $7,000 each, payable to plaintiffs, to whom, at the same time, the bill of lading and drafts were delivered. Gregory & Stagg refused to accept the drafts, and plaintiffs, who, on receiving them, had credited the amount on the distilling company’s account, re-charged it against said company.
The evidence proved that Sheber was vice-president and general manager of the business of the distilling company, and as such, authorized to sell the wines; and that, by the by-laws of the corporation, Blumb had no authority to draw checks, or notes, or drafts, or indorse bills of lading, for the corporation, but there was evidence that he did so, in all transactions with the plaintiffs, with the knowledge and acquiescence of the corporation, and the question of his authority to draw the drafts, and to indorse and dispose of the bill of lading in question, was properly submitted to the jury.
That the bill of lading was delivered to the plaintiffs as collateral security for a pre-existing indebtedness cannot be controverted, and we are of opinion that the controlling question for determination by the jury, on the evidence as preserved in the bill of exceptions, is, whether the delivery of the bill of lading to plaintiffs, or the sale to defendants, was prior in point of time. “Bills of lading, by the law merchant, are representatives of the property for which they have been given, and the indorsement and delivery of a bill of lading transfers the property from the *669vendor to the vendee ; is a complete legal delivery of the goods ; divests the vendor’s lien.” Benjamin on Sales, § 813. In Meyerstein v. Barber, L. R., 2 C. P. 42, Erle, C. J., said : “ While the goods are afloat, it is common knowledge, and I should not think of citing authorities to prove it, that the hill of lading represents them, and the indorsement and delivery of the hill of lading, while the ship is at sea, operate exactly the same as the delivery of the goods themselves to the assignee after the ship’s arrival would do.” In M. C. R. R. Co. v. Phillips, 60 Ill. 198, the court said: “ The bill of lading was the documentary evidence of the shipper’s property in the hands of the carrier; it represented the property, and the delivery of the bill of lading to the bank was a symbolical delivery of the high wines, so as to vest the property in the bank. It was as effective in transferring the possession, as the delivery of the keys of a warehouse is of the goods contained in it, or a storekeeper’s receipt of the goods described in it, or a warehouseman’s receipt of the property it embraces.” To the same effect are Burton v. Curyea, 40 Ill. 320, and W. U. R. R. Co. v. Wagner, 65 Ill. 198; and numerous other authorities might be cited in support of the proposition, but we forbear incumbering this opinion with references to sustain a doctrine nowhere controverted.
If, therefore, the delivery of the bill of lading to plaintiffs occurred before the sale to the defendants, it makes no difference, that it was for a pre-existing debt, or whether it was an absolute sale of the goods, or intended as a collateral security for the debt. On the other hand, if the defendants’ purchase was prior to the delivery of the hill of lading to the plaintiffs, their title is superior to that of the plaintiffs. “ When several bills of lading have been signed, the person who first gets one of them by a legal title from the owner, or shipper, has a right to the consignment.” Caldwell v. Ball, 1 Durn. & E. 205. Inserting in the bill of lading the name of a consignee, gives him no property in the goods until a delivery of the bill *670to him by some one authorized. Allen v. Williams, 12 Pick. 297; Buffington v. Curtis, 15 Mass. 528. In the present instance, the property, by the bill of lading, was deliverable to the order of the shipper, and, therefore, no question can arise as to the ownership of the highwines by the distilling company, at the time of the sale at St. Louis, if prior to the delivery of the bill of lading to plaintiffs, or at the time the latter occurred, if prior to the sale at St. Louis.
Conceding that Blumb represented the company, and had a bill of lading which was documentary evidence of the company’s property in the goods, and the delivery of' the same to plaintiffs was sufficient to pass the title to thehighwines in transitu as against the company and subsequent purchasers, it could not have that effect against a prior purchaser of the goods, who either claims under an assignment and delivery of one of the triplicate bills of' lading, or under a purchase and actual delivery of the-goods by the shipper and owner. The delivery of a bill of lading passes title to the property only because it represents it, and the sale and delivery of the property itself,, by the person authorized to sell it, is at least equally as-effectual to pass the title as the delivery of one of the bills of lading. As the bill of lading represents the property,, and its delivery to an assignee has the same effect as the actual delivery of the property, and as a mortgage or pledge for a pre-existing debt, is valid against subsequent purchasers, there is no ground for holding if the bill of lading was delivered to plaintiffs before the sale at St. Louis, that, their title is not superior to that of defendants. Unquestionably an actual delivery of the goods in pledge, for a prior indebtedness, would vest a title in the pledgee, which could not be successfully assailed by a subsequent purchaser.. Hence, whether plaintiffs received the bill of lading as collateral for a pre-existing debt or for an advancement then made, is a matter of no consequence in this casé.
Eminent jurists and judicial tribunals hold that one-who for a prior indebtedness receives a bill of lading of *671goods, either as collateral security or in payment of such indebtedness, has no such title as will avail even against the vendor’s right of stoppage in transitu; in other words,, that such an one, in such a controversy, is not to be regarded as a bona fide purchaser for value. Loeb v. Peters, 63 Ala. 243; Harris v. Pratt, 17 N. Y. 249; Lessassier v. Southwestern, 2 Woods 35; O’Brien v. Norris, 16 Md. 122; Naylor v. Dennie, 8 Pick. 199. And Goodman v. Simonds,19 Mo. 106, and Logan v. Smith, 62 Mo. 455, recognize the-principle announced in the foregoing cases. There is here, however, no question which, makes a resort to the doctrines-on that subject necessary to the determination of this-cause.
If it should be found that Blumb had authority'to-draw the drafts and transfer the bill of lading in question,, then the right to the property depends upon the priority of the transaction, under which the parties respectively claim. Without inserting the instructions given by the-circuit court to the jury, it is sufficient to say that they are not in harmony with the doctrines herein announced, and,, therefore, the judgment of the court of appeals, reversing-the judgment of the circuit court and remanding the cause, is affirmed.