Okla. Stat. tit. 12A, § 7-601
Oklahoma Code Comment
Prior Statutory Provisions:
2 O.S. §§ 9-29, 9-30, 9-73, 9-113.
Text and derivation of prior provisions, see Appendix at end of this title.
Comment:
( 1) This somewhat changes previous Oklahoma law as in the prior statutory provisions. A court may order delivery of the goods or issuance of a substitute document. Under Section 7-402 a duplicate issued without court order, does not confer title to the goods represented by an outstanding document, and the issuer must mark the document "Duplicate" to avoid personal liability.
Former 2 O.S. § 9-73 contained provisions for judicial action to compel the delivery of the goods, but not for the issuance of a substitute document, and was limited to cases in which the original receipt was lost or destroyed. The Commercial Code extends the remedy to stolen documents.
There is no previous Oklahoma law on duplicate or substitute bills of lading.
(2) Former 2 O.S. § 9-113 imposed heavy criminal sanctions [maximum of 20 years imprisonment and $10,000 fine] upon a warehouseman who delivered goods without surrender of the receipt. This had been held applicable in some states, but not all, even though the bailee in good faith delivered to one claiming the original receipt had been lost, and even though the one taking possession posted sufficient security to protect the owner of the receipt .
This Section of the Code is to avoid the harsh results of those cases: a bailee is permitted to deliver the goods to one claiming under a missing document. However, if he delivers in bad faith, the bailee is liable to the true owner in conversion, but if delivery is made in good faith, he is liable only for damages caused by the misdelivery.