116 Mo. App. 214 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906
(after stating the facts). — No bill of lading or contract of affreightment was put in evidence, nor was there any proof regarding that contract. The
A statute of this State gave a lien on a steamboat to a person furnishing supplies or stores under contract with a master or owner of the boat. [R. S. 1845, p. 98.] In defense of an action to enforce such a lien, it was contended that the party who contracted for the supplies was not the master or owner of the boat; but the Supreme Court held that the person furnishing them was not bound to investigate that matter on pain of forfeiting his lien. [Steamboat Lehigh v. Knox, 12 Mo. 508.] The decision is germane to the point in hand.
In White v. Vann, 6 Humph. 70, Vann had received from persons operating a railroad as lessees, property belonging to White, to be carried from the terminus of the railroad to Knoxville. Vann paid said lessees certain charges, claimed by them against the goods,, for freight transportation. There was proof of a custom on the part of interstate common carriers in the United States, to advance, for the benefit of the owners of the goods in transit, previous charges for freight and storage. But it appeared White had a contract with the lessees of the railroad, according to which said lessees had already been paid for transportation of said property. For this reason White asserted the lessees were entitled to no lien and that Vann was not justified in ad
In Bowman v. Hilton, 11 Ohio 303, the action was replevin. Bowman shipped a lot of goods from Cleveland consigned to himself care of Forsyth & Hull, Maumee City, Ohio. Forsyth & Hull had relinquished business before the goods reached Maumee; wherefore they were deposited with another firm at that place, and by said firm sent to a firm at Providence, and thence shipped by a boat, of which Hilton, the defendant, was master, to Brunersburg. Hilton paid the charges from Cleveland to Brunersburg; that is, for transportation over the entire route. When the goods were taken from Hilton’s possession, they were found to- be damaged about one-third their value. Hilton claimed the right to retain them for the advances made by him. The trial court instructed, in effect, that Hilton was liable for such damage as occurred by his own negligence or that of some one with whom he was in partnership, but not for damage done by anybody else while transporting the goods. The court declared that, from the general course of business and the directions on the goods, Hilton had the right to receive them from his immediate consignor and presume the owner had authorized the consignment; and to entitle him to a lien for a commission and advances, the law imposed on him no duty beyond what a prudent man, under like circumstances, would have done in the management of his own business. The judgment of the lower court was affirmed.
In Bissell v. Price, 16 Ill. 408, Price, the plaintiff
In Pearce v. Wabash R. R., 102 U. S. 179, it appeared that the plaintiff had shipped some boxes of curios from Japan to St. Louis in bond, the boxes not to be opened until they reached St. Louis, their destination. The purpose was to' protect the articles from frontier custom house inspection. A bill of lading accompanied the shipment, by which the different carriers were notified of the terms of the contract requiring the goods to be carried to St. Louis, the port of destination, before they were opened. An intermediate carrier, the Canadian Pacific Eailroad Company, for its own convenience, diverted the shipment to St. Paul where the custom house
Accepting this as the law when the previous charges are for freight or other common services, we come to 'the ultimate question of whether a good reason exists for modifying the rule when the lien asserted is one of general average. Now, instead of there being any reason for modifying the rule in a case of the latter kind, there is this additional reason for upholding it; at least in the present case. The execution of a general average bond by the owner of part of the cargo of a vessel, does not conclude such owner from setting up in defense of liability on the bond, that the wreck occured from the negligence of the owner of the vessel and is not the subject of general average. This was directly held by
We have been cited by respondent to certain cases in which carriers were denied a lien for transportation charges as against the owners of the freight, when the goods had been received for carriage, not from the owners or persons acting by authority, but from a tortfeasor who delivered the property for shipment contrary to the will and rights of the owners. [Firch v. Newberry 1 Doug. (Mich.) 11; Robinson v. Baker, 5 Cush. 137; Stevens v. R. R. Co., 8 Gray 262; Gibson v. Gwinn, 107 Mass. 126, Saltus v. Everett, 20 Wend. 267.] In our opinion the present controversy does not present the proposition determined in those adjudications.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded to be disposed of in accordance with this opinion.