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Bank of Montreal v. Recknagel

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Jun 5, 1888
109 N.Y. 482 (N.Y. 1888)

Summary

In Bank of Montreal v. Recknagel (109 N.Y. 482) it is said that to make a provision in a contract a condition precedent, it should be obvious from a reading of the writings of the parties that such was the understanding.

Summary of this case from Speare's Sons Co. v. Casein Co.

Opinion

Argued April 23, 1888

Decided June 5, 1888

George De Forrest Lord for appellant. Charles M. Da Costa for respondents.



If Vogel Co., in drawing upon plaintiff's London agents, complied with the terms and conditions of the cable credit, then the defendants are liable to the plaintiff; for that credit was extended in pursuance of the terms of their request. But if Vogel Co., in any material matter, failed to comply with those terms and conditions, the plaintiff's London agents accepted the drafts at their peril, and defendants could not be held liable unless there were, in fact, consignments of Manilla hemp, or unless, by the provisions of the letter of credit and the defendants' agreement respecting the same, the terms of the preceding request and of the cable credit were modified or changed, in such wise as to allow of drafts by Vogel Co. without such restrictions or conditions. The defendants' request was to "telegraph authority to Vogel Co. to draw at six months for our account against consular invoice and full set bills of lading of 2,500 bales manilla hemp, per Robinson, at £ 4 per bale," etc., etc., and the telegram to Vogel Co. was: "Credit 608, six months, issued Recknagel, £ 10,000, documents 2,500 bales manilla hemp, per 'Robinson,' at £ 4 per bale," etc., etc. There is no doubt that both bankers and shippers plainly understood the word "documents," used in the telegraphic credit, as calling for consular invoices and bills of lading; for the former cabled on the basis of the defendants' written request to that effect and the latter sent forward their drafts, accompanied by such documents. The difficulty has arisen from the failure to specify in the bills of lading the kind of merchandise which the defendants had authorized the plaintiff to accept against for them; and in the acceptance of drafts which were not against shipments of that kind of merchandise at all. We do not see that the letter of credit and the agreement to provide for acceptance and to indemnify, alter the conditions imposed by the cable credit, or change the relative obligations of the parties. The letter of credit authorized Vogel Co. to draw on plaintiff's London agents "against goods shipped per 'Robinson' for £ 10,000 to be used for invoice cost of 2,500 bales of manilla hemp, at £ 4 per bale, * * * filled up in a bill of lading," etc. It required the advice of the bills drawn "to be accompanied by bill of lading * * * with abstract of invoice indorsed thereon for the property shipped as above." The agreement of indemnity was to provide for bills "drawn and accepted" under the letter of credit.

Letters of credit are governed by the same general legal principles as are all contracts. In Orr v. Union Bank of Scotland (1 Macq. H. of L. Cases, 513) Lord BROUGHAM said of them: "I am inclined to think that there is no very great novelty or peculiarity in letters of credit to take them out of the general law applicable to mandates. I am not aware that there is anything in the mercantile law or the custom of merchants to distinguish letters of credit from any other authority to pay money." In this case the peculiarity of the credit extended by the plaintiff to Vogel Co., at the defendants' request, is that, besides being special, in that it was addressed to a particular banking agency, was confined to it and gave no other party a right to act upon it ( Union Bank v. Coster, 3 N.Y. 203), it restricted the drafts drawn under it to a particular purpose, which should be vouched for in a certain manner, to authorize acceptance and payment. Under the arrangements effected between the plaintiff and the defendants for the extension of the credit to Vogel Co., the defendants only became liable to plaintiff to provide for drafts accepted by its London agents, within the precise terms upon which the credit was opened. The credit was authorized upon certain conditions, prescribed by the parties to be ultimately bound; which they not only had the right to make, but which were assented to by the plaintiff.

It is difficult to see how parties could more particularly define the terms of their engagements than was done in this case. By the proper construction of the agreement between them, the plaintiff was not bound to accept any drafts unless they were against manilla hemp, shipped by Vogel Co. to defendants, by the ship Robinson; vouched for as to each of those facts and the stipulated cost, etc., by documents, consisting of a letter of advice and a bill of lading; and the defendants were not bound to provide for or take up any other kind of drafts. Each party was held to either accept, or to provide for drafts, as the case might be, if they were accompanied by those mercantile documents evidencing the consignment of manilla hemp, in the particular manner and at the rates of cost and freight specified.

In making their arrangements with the plaintiff, the defendants had the right to surround themselves, as to their advances through the plaintiff's agency, with all the safeguards which the nature of the case admitted. The effect of their stipulating in respect of acceptances by plaintiff of Vogel Co's drafts, was to protect themselves, as far as was possible, against any unauthorized acts of Vogel Co. Every lawful provision or condition in the contracts of parties should control and should not be disregarded in the determination of their rights, if it can be deemed to have entered into the contract with any definite or perceptible purpose. In interpreting their agreements and in determining the respective obligations based upon their writings, courts should look at the surrounding circumstances, the situation and relations of the parties, and the subject-matter of their negotiations.

In that way the intention, where there is any uncertainty, is better given effect, and their undertaking is more certain to receive a reasonable and fair interpretation. But when the agreement is determined, into which the parties have entered, it is but just and fair that they should be held strictly to it, and all their stipulations we should assume to have been made for a purpose and to have been considered important by them, and therefore cannot be dispensed with. ( Hill v. Blake, 97 N.Y. 216. )

In Germania Bank v. Taaks ( 101 N.Y. 442) ANDREWS, J., speaking of the effect of a letter of the defendants, undertaking to accept the drafts of certain parties, said (p. 449): "Assuming that it was a general letter of credit, * * * it, nevertheless, amounted simply to a contract on the part of Taaks Lichtenstein to pay advances made in conformity therewith. They had a right to stand upon the very terms of their contract and they were not bound unless the condition upon which their obligation depended was fulfilled."

In Merchants' Bank v. Griswold ( 72 N.Y. 472), CHURCH, Ch. J., said (p. 479): "It is doubtless true that when the right to draw is limited in amount, or is dependent upon the condition of the performance of some act, or that certain facts exist, it must appear that the draft was within the limit, or that the act constituting the condition has been performed, or the facts exist."

Whether a provision shall have the effect of a condition, absolute in its nature, is often a question of much difficulty. It should be obvious from a reading of the writings of the parties that it was the understanding of the parties it should have that effect. It was said by Chief Justice TINDAL, in Glaholm v. Hays (2 Man. G. 257, 266), that the decision of the question must "depend upon the intention of the parties, to be collected, in each particular case, from the terms of the agreement itself and from the subject-matter to which it relates." I do not think it depends upon the arrangement of words in the writing, but on the reason and sense of the thing, as it can be collected from whatever constitutes the agreement sought to be enforced. That which is a condition must be some provision which cannot be severed from the agreement and leave it, within a fair interpretation, as their contract. Applying these rules here, we find, in the transactions between these parties, a certain purpose, or object, which the defendants sought to attain and which the plaintiff undertook to carry into effect. That purpose seems plain enough. It was to advance money to obtain a consignment of a certain article of merchandise, known as manilla hemp, and to secure, so far as possible, that the advance should be made upon that particular article and upon no other. When the authority to accept a draft, for which another is to be bound, depends upon conditions, reasonable in their nature and readily capable of being ascertained or performed, it seems but just that the existence or performance of such conditions should be shown in order to enforce the obligation of the party.

In this case the defendants' promise to indemnify the plaintiff was coupled with a condition which, I think, was material and important. It was an integral part of the agreement of the parties that the bills of lading should contain a statement that manilla hemp was shipped. The defendants had agreed to advance against specific consignment of that article of hemp; such consignments to be evidenced to the acceptors by bills of lading, in form for such a shipment. The words "for our account," in the defendants' request, refer to the drafts and not to the purchase. The purpose of making the advance was not only specified, but the authority to accept was limited to the event of the fulfillment of that purpose being evidenced in a certain way. The plaintiff's agent, in accepting against a shipment of merchandise in general, or against hemp generally, departed from an important condition of the credit and of the agreement. It accepted and paid drafts, which, on their face, purported to be drawn against "bales of hemp," and were accompanied by bills of lading, filled up for "bales of merchandise," "weight and contents unknown," and by letters of advice for "bales of hemp." No mention is made in those documents, which were the warrants for the acceptance of drafts, of the kind of hemp or merchandise. The indorsement of an abstract of the invoice was made by Vogel Co., the shippers, and amounted merely to their own representation. This fact appellant concedes, and also that the indorsement was made after the captain had signed and delivered the bills of lading and without his knowledge and consent. The general expression, in the drafts and bills of lading, of "hemp" or "merchandise" in no respect met the requirements of the credit. They include the article which defendants agreed to advance against, as the greater always does the less; but that was not enough, the article itself was not stated which was the subject of the arrangements entered into in providing for a financial credit. It is quite obvious that had plaintiff's agents followed the instructions of the cable credit, no loss could have happened and Vogel Co. would not have been enabled to carry out their fraudulent scheme. It cannot be pretended that Vogel Co. exercised any authority under the cable credit to draw upon plaintiff; for the authority therein contained was predicated upon the drafts being accompanied by full sets of bills of lading of 2,500 bales of Manilla hemp and other documents evidencing such a shipment.

In Woods v. Thiedemann (1 Hurlst. Colt. 478), cited by the appellants, the bill of lading accompanying the draft was a forgery. It was held that the acceptors need only look to the bills of lading and that they did not take the risk of their genuineness. That, at most, would only be authority for the proposition that if Vogel Co. had forged bills of lading as called for in the telegraphic credit, defendants would be bound as between themselves and the plaintiff.

The case of the Merchants' Bank v. Griswold ( 72 N.Y. 472) was unlike the present one. There the defendant had empowered his agent to draw upon him for the purchase of lumber. The writing, which he gave to that effect, was in the nature of an instruction to the agent, and parties were warranted in relying upon the agent's representations that his drafts were in the course of his principal's business. But in the present case, the defendants' agreement was simply to provide for all the acceptances by the plaintiff of drafts of a certain description, accompanied by vouchers evidencing the application of the drafts to a specified purpose. There was no arrangement for the advance, through the plaintiff, of moneys to Vogel Co. to buy hemp generally, or any merchandise, in Vogel Co's discretion as agents of defendants.

The principle is urged by the appellant that all commercial instruments are to be liberally interpreted so as to protect persons who give credit on the face of them. ( Lawrence v. McCalmont, 2 How. [U.S.] 426, 449; Gates v. McKee, 13 N.Y. 235; White's Bank v. Myles, 73 id. 341.) But that principle only applies where the provisions of an agreement are ambiguous, loose or susceptible of more than one fair interpretation, and we do not think that is the case here.

We do not see the force in the argument that no other bill of lading could be demanded than was given here. The master of a ship is the general agent of the owners to perform all things relating to the usual employment of his ship, and, amount other things, to sign bills of lading for goods put on board and acknowledge the nature, quality and condition of the goods. (1 Parsons on Contracts [5th ed.] 45.) That was possible to be done in this case; for a bale of manilla hemp is not covered, as the trial court found on the evidence, and the shipper might have procured a bill of lading which would have indicated the kind of hemp put on board the ship. But, whether the master could be compelled, or not, to identify in the bill of lading the merchandise shipped as manilla hemp, that fact cannot control the disposition of this case. The agreement of the parties called for a particular statement in the bill of lading to accompany the drafts, and that statement, or the existence of facts which would have authorized it, is a condition precedent to defendants' responsibility to respond to plaintiff's demand.

To further consider the elaborate argument of the able counsel for the appellant is unnecessary.

The views I have expressed lead to an affirmance of the judgment appealed from.

All concur.

Judgment affirmed.


Summaries of

Bank of Montreal v. Recknagel

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Jun 5, 1888
109 N.Y. 482 (N.Y. 1888)

In Bank of Montreal v. Recknagel (109 N.Y. 482) it is said that to make a provision in a contract a condition precedent, it should be obvious from a reading of the writings of the parties that such was the understanding.

Summary of this case from Speare's Sons Co. v. Casein Co.

In Bank of Montreal v. Recknagel (109 N.Y. 482, 490) the court held that in determining the respective obligations of the parties, based on their writings, the court should look at the surrounding circumstances, the situation and relation of the parties and the subject-matter of their negotiations, and that where there is any uncertainty the intention of the parties is so to be derived as to give the contract a fair and reasonable interpretation.

Summary of this case from Page Belting Co. v. Parker
Case details for

Bank of Montreal v. Recknagel

Case Details

Full title:THE BANK OF MONTREAL, Appellant, v . CARL S. RECKNAGEL et al., Respondents

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Jun 5, 1888

Citations

109 N.Y. 482 (N.Y. 1888)
16 N.Y. St. Rptr. 398
17 N.E. 217

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