eLaws of Florida

  SECTION 677.503. Document of title to goods defeated in certain cases.  


Latest version.
  • 1(1) 2A document of title confers no right in goods against a person that before issuance of the document had a legal interest or a perfected security interest in the goods and that did not:
    36(a) 37Deliver or entrust the goods or any document of title covering the goods to the bailor or the bailor’s nominee with:
    581. 59Actual or apparent authority to ship, store, or sell;
    682. 69Power to obtain delivery under s. 75677.403; 76or
    773. 78Power of disposition under s. 83672.403, 84s. 85680.304(2), 86s. 87680.305(2), 88s. 89679.320, 90or s. 92679.321(3) 93or other statute or rule of law; or
    101(b) 102Acquiesce in the procurement by the bailor or its nominee of any document.
    115(2) 116Title to goods based upon an unaccepted delivery order is subject to the rights of any person to which a negotiable warehouse receipt or bill of lading covering the goods has been duly negotiated. That title may be defeated under the next section to the same extent as the rights of the issuer or a transferee from the issuer.
    175(3) 176Title to goods based upon a bill of lading issued to a freight forwarder is subject to the rights of any person to which a bill issued by the freight forwarder is duly negotiated. However, delivery by the carrier in accordance with part IV of this chapter pursuant to its own bill of lading discharges the carrier’s obligation to deliver.
History.-s. 1, ch. 65-254; s. 640, ch. 97-102; s. 18, ch. 2001-198; s. 47, ch. 2010-131.

Note

Note.-s. 7-503, U.C.C.; supersedes s. 678.43.

Bills Cite this Section:

None

Cited by Court Cases:

None