The defendant, under the general denial in its answer, had the right to introduce proof controverting any fact that the plaintiff was required to prove to establish his cause of action. For this purpose, it must show a conversion of the wool by the defendant. To do this it proved a demand of the wool from the defendant, and its failure to deliver. This was evidence tending to show a conversion, which, unexplained, would justify finding that fact. The defendant, under the answer, had a right to explain this by showing an excuse for its failure to deliver, and thereby repel any inference of a conversion deducible therefrom. This it endeavored to do, by evidence tending to show that it had previously delivered the wool to Logan, under circumstances constituting a good delivery to the plaintiff. This was competent, under' the answer. The defendant received the wool, as a common carrier, from the Hew York Central railroad, at Albany, with bills of charges, etc., accompanying the same, as follows : “ Order Ontario Bank (the plaintiff), deliverable at Coen ties’ slip (city of Hew York), and advise R. Logan, 6 South William street, Hew York.” The duty of the defendant, upon the receipt of the wool, was to carry it to Hew York, and then deliver it as directed by the bill of charges, having, so far as appears, no other information as to the ownership of the property. A delivery to a party not entitled to receive it would constitute a conversion. (Redfield on Carriers, § 318 ; Hawkins v. Hoffman, 6 Hill, 586.) The defendant in fact advised Logan of the arrival of the wool in question, and delivered the same to him at the place specified. The question is
It further appeared that Logan was a commission merchant in Hew York, and was employed by the shipper to make sales of wool shipped by him, and was his correspondent in Hew Y"ork, and that these facts were communicated to the plaintiff by the shipper. The facts alone would not, I think, constitute a defence to the action. I think it sufficiently appeared upon the bill of charges, or paper received from the Hew York Central with the property, that it was deliverable to the plaintiff or its order, and that the direction to advise Logan did not authoi’ize a delivery to him by the defendant, but implied nothing more than an understanding with him to give information to the party entitled to receive delivery or to enable him to procure authority from the plaintiff therefor. The fact that he had accepted drafts drawn by the shipper did not give him any title to the property in the absence of an agreement to that effect. The title to the property, we have seen, was transferred by the shipper to the plaintiff as security upon the discount of the drafts, and the plaintiff had a right to retain this title until actual payment of the bills. It was not obliged to transfer it to Logan upon acceptance of the drafts by him. Ho such agreement was shown. Indeed the inference from the facts shown is that the drafts had been accepted by Logan at the time of this discount by the plaintiff. Had no further proof been given, I should have been of opinion that the plaintiff was entitled to recover for the conversion of the wool. But it was proved that prior to the delivery by the defendant of the wool in question,
Ho question appears to have been made upon the trial, but that all the wool in question had been delivered by the defendant to Logan. The judge must be assumed to have so found, and there is no exception to his finding in this respect. The fact that the witness, in enumerating packages delivered, omitted to specify some, his attention not being called to the point whether there had been a failure to deliver any, was immaterial.
The judgment appealed from must be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.