103 Ga. 140 | Ga. | 1897
This was an action by the Chicago Packing & Provision Co. against the Savannah, Florida & Western Railway Co., for damages alleged to have been occasioned to the plaintiff because of a wrongful delivery by the defendant of certain meat to N. L. Ragan. The court directed a verdict for the defendant, and the plaintiff excepted. It appeared at the trial, that the plaintiff had shipped the meat in question to Albany, Ga., consigned to its own order, under bills of lading each of which contained a direction to notify Ragan, and each stipulating that its surrender should be required by the carrier before delivery of the goods at destination. Upon each of these bills of lading was an entry in the following words, signed by the plaintiff: “ Deliver to Hobbs & Tucker, or order, for collection.” Clark, the agent of the railway company at Albany, without requiring a surrender of the bills of lading, delivered the meat to Ragan upon written orders which were as follows: “E. N. Clark, agent: Let N. L. Ragan have car meat on dray track, and I will be responsible for B/L. May 18th, 1893. A. W. Tucker.” “Ed. N. Clark, agent: Please let Nevil [meaning Ragan] have one car of meat, and I will stand for B/L. Yours truly, A. W. Tucker.” Tucker testified, in substance, that in giving the above orders to Ragan, it was his private intention that so doing should be regarded as his individual acts, but he did not so inform Clark, the agent. The circumstances, as disclosed by the evidence, were such as to warrant the latter in treating the giving of these orders as acts of Hobbs & Tucker, that firm being at the time in possession of the bills of lading. It further appeared that at the time the meat was delivered to Ragan, he had not paid to Hobbs & Tucker drafts drawn on him by the plaintiff for the price of the meat, which drafts had been forwarded to Hobbs & Tucker along with the bills of lading.
Upon substantially the sam,e state of facts as above recited,
. If a natural person consigned goods to his own order under a bill of lading of the character above indicated, and called in person upon the carrier’s agent at the point of destination, demanded a delivery of the goods and thereupon received the same, it certainly could not be questioned that, as between the consignor and the carrier, such delivery would be good, and would free the carrier from further liability to the consignor, although the bill of lading may not have been produced and surrendered in accordance with the stipulation therein contained. While in such a case the carrier might not, as against one who had in good faith and in the due course of business obtained the bill of lading properly indorsed, be protected by a delivery to the original consignor, surely the latter would have no cause of complaint against the carrier. If such a consignor could thus obtain a delivery of the goods to himself in person, what difference, in principle, would it make if, instead of doing this, he by a written order directed delivery to another, who obtained the goods upon such order without producing and surrendering the bill of lading? In either case, looking at the transaction with reference only to the consignor and the carrier, the latter would have done all that the former had any right to require of it. In other words, the stipulation in such a bill of lading requiring its surrender upon delivery of the goods is for the benefit of the carrier, and not that of the consignor. The plaintiff in the present action was not a natural person, but it made Hobbs & Tucker its agents, and directed delivery to them, or to their order. Treating the papers signed by A. W. Tucker as orders of the firm, the carrier complied with its contract with the Chicago Packing & Provision Co. when it delivered the meat upon these orders. The effect of the indorsements entered upon the bills of lading was, as between the consignor and the railway company, to make Hobbs & Tucker the real consignees.
We are aware that in some jurisdictions there are decisions at least intimating, if not directly holding, contrary to some of the views above expressed; but notwithstanding this, we are confident that we have ascertained and announced the true law of the present case.
As to the fact that Tucker alone signed the orders upon which Clark, the agent of the railway company, delivered the meat to Ragan, it is only necessary to say that, upon the identical state of facts here presented with reference to this matter, this court, in the case first cited supra, held thát the acts of Tucker in giving the orders in question were properly treated by the agent to whom they were addressed as the acts of the firm itself.
Judgment affirmed.