52 Ky. 239 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1852
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action of replevin- was brought by Martin against Boggs & Russell for ninety-three barrels of pitch and rosin.
The property sued for was shipped at New Orleans on the steamboat Cincinnatus, to be delivered at the port of Louisville, to the plaintiff, he paying fright for the same at the rate of thirty-seven cents per barrel.
The defendants in the action were the agents of the steamboat, and upon her arrival at Louisville, the rosin and pitch (,of which- there were altogether one hundred barrels,) were unloaded and-placed upon the wharf under their charge. The bill of lading was sent to the plaintiff as consignee, and seven barrels of the pitch and rosin- had been taken to his store by persons in his employment, and by his directions, before any controversy arose between him and the agents of the boat, about the payment of the freight. He then refused to pay the freight, upon the ground that the articles were not delivered in good order; that he had a right to deduct from the amount of the freight.
The plaintiff then'brought this action against them,in which he recovered a judgment in the circuit court ;■ and they have brought the case to this court to reverse that judgment.
Two questions arise upon the record: 1. Had the' plaintiff a right to introduce testimony upon the trial to prove that the articles sued for were not in góod order when delivered ? 2. Had the defendants dime' any act which amounted, in law, to a waiver of the' carrier’s lien upon the goods for the payment of the’ freight ?
1. The modern doctrine is that a defendant may,in many instances, to prevent unnecessary litigation, when sued on a contract for the price of goods,- or work and labor performed, even where a specific sum were agreed upon, show the insufficiency of the goods,- or incomplete or imperfect performance of the work, to reduce the price and diminish the amount of the plaintiff’s recovery. (Culver v. Blake & Co. 6 B. Monroe, 528.) If this doctrine be applicable in the case of a contract for freight, then a consignee may refuse to pay the freight if the goods have been damáged by the carrier, unless a reasonable deduction be made for the injury; and the carrier’s lien may be diminished, or totally destroyed, by proof that the injury to the goods exceeds the sum due on the contract for freight.
In a treatise upon shipping by Abbott, the author argues in favor of the proposition, that where th'é goods arrive at the port of destination, although they may be in so damaged a state as to be of no value,
The doctrine in England is, that if the goods have been damaged by the fault of the master or crew in the voyage, the remedy for the merchant who has received them, is an action for the damage. (Abbott; 293.) But if he has received the goods; he cannot insist upon the damage as a defense to an action brought against him for the freight, even although he has offered to return them. This doctrine, however, seems to be based upon the terms of the charter party or bill of lading, upon which the freight is made' payable. It becomes due and payable according to these terms, upon the delivery of the goods, without regard to their condition at the time, provided there be a complete delivery of the entire quantity contained in the bill of lading.
It was upon this principle that it was decided in the' case of Griswold v. New York Insurance company, (supra,) that the owner could not abandon the cargo; and thereby discharge himself from' the payment of the freight. The ship owner, it was held, had per* formed his engagement when he carried and delivered the goods. The condition that was to precede payment was then fulfilled. The state of the article at the end of the voyage had nothing to do with thé obligation of the contract. The owner urns, there^ fore, personally responsible for the freight, by the terms of the contract, whether the cargo, when delivered at the place of destination, was of any value or not, if the ship owner had conducted himself with fidelity and vigilance in the course of the voyage,
But in this case, the obligation imposed by the terms of the bill of lading was more comprehensive, and required not only the delivery of the goods at the port of Louisville, but their delivery in good order and condition, (the dangers of the navigation and fire only excepted.) The condition upon which the coxrier became entitled to the payment of the freight, was the delivery of the articles in good order and condition. If, when delivered, the property was not in good order and condition, the carrier was resp onsible by the terms of the contract, unless the damage resulted from fire, or the dangers of the navigation.
If the carriers were liable on account of any damage the goods had sustained, there seems to be no good reason why they should be permitted to recover the full amount of the compensation they would have been entitled to if their contract had been strictly complied with, and the consignee he compelled to resort to a cross action to obtain redress for the injury to the goods. To prevent.circuity of actions and unnecessary litigation, the modern doctrine alluded to has been allowed to prevail, by which a defendant, when sued for the stipulated price of services rendered, is permitted to show the imperfect or defective performance of the services to reduce the price he agreed to pay for them. Upon the same principle, the consignee in the present case had a right to prove, for the purpose of reducing the amount of freight due to the carriers, that the articles had not been delivered in good order. As the defendants claimed the right to retain the possession of the goods until the freight due was paid, the plaintiff had a right to introduce proof to show the extent of the damage to the goods, for the purpose of reducing the amount of the freight actually due, or making it appear that nothing was due on that account, thereby manifesting that the defendants had no right to the possession of the goods. And as the consignee contended that he had made a tender before the suit was brought, of as much freight as was actually due, evidence of the condition of the
The question in this case upon the evidence was, had the goods passed out of the hands of the agents of the boat, and the lien upon them for the payment of the freight been thereby lost.
Upon this point the court below instructed the jury —“If they believed from the evidence that the rosin “ and pitch were put out of the steamboat on the wharf “ in Louisville, and the bill of lading was sent to the “ plaintiff, and he took possession of and hauled “ away one load or any part of the rosin and pitch “ with the consent of the defendants, these facts them- “ selves constituted, in law, a delivery or possession, “ and the lien for the freight was thereby lost.”
This exposition of the law we deem erroneous, for the following reasons:
The goods, although put out of the steamboat on the wharf, were still in the possession of the agents of the boat, as it clearly appeared from the testimony; and the act of unloading a boat, and placing the merchandise on the wharf does not indicate any intention to part with the possession of it until the freight is paid. Indeed, the law is, that the officers cannot detain the goods on board the boat until the freight is paid, as the merchant or consignee would then
It was the duty of the carriers to send the bill of lading to the consignee, to apprize him that the goods had anived, and were ready to be delivered, so that he could attend and examine their condition, pay the freight due, and take them into his possession. Sending the bill of lading to him, therefore, amounted to nothing more than a communication of the fact that the goods had arrived, and an offer to deliver them upon the payment of the freight. No other inference arises from the act, nor could it justly create an implication that the delivery of the bill of Jading was intended to operate as a waiver of the lien for the freight, and a delivery of the possession of the goods to the consignee.
As the master may detain any part of the merchandise for the freight of all that is consigned to the same person, and as, if he make a delivery of part to the consignee, he may retain the residue even against a purchaser until payment of thp freight of the whole, (Sodergreen v. Flight, cited in 6 East. R. 622,) the delivery in the present case of the seven barrels of the pitch and rosin, did not necessarily ponstitute a delivery qf the whole tq the consignee. A delivery of part will, in some cases, amount to the delivery of the whole; but whether it is in a particular case to have that effect or not, will depend upon fhe intention with which the act was done. The seven barrels were no doubt allowed to be taken, under the belief that the freight would be paid without objection; but the permission to take the possession of part, did not amount to a waiver of the lien upon the residue by legaj implication, nor to a constructive de^ livery qf that residue to the consignee, unless it was given with that intention, which was a matter of fact for the jury to determine.
These acts, therefore, neither separately nor in conjunction constituted, by legal deduction, a delivery of
Wherefore, for the error of the court in its instruction to the jury, the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial, and further proceedings consistent with this opinion.