7 N.Y.S. 449 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
The action has previously been before this court upon an appeal from a judgment dismissing the complaint. As the evidence was then presented the case was regarded as one for the jury, and the judgment was directed to be reversed and a new trial had. Dean v. Driggs, 44 Hun, 480. The trial upon which the present judgment has been recovered took place under this direction, and to sustain the appeal the court has been urged to reconsider the point upon which the liability of the defendant has been made to-depend. He was a warehouseman, and received into his warehouse upwards of 2,463 barrels, described as containing cement. For these barrels receipts were issued by him, which were afterwards surrendered. Small quantities of the article were taken from the warehouse, and two other receipts finally executed and delivered by the defendant to Max Yon Angern. These receipts stated the article to be cement,—Portland in one instance, and Portland cement in the other. One of the receipts whs for 963 barrels, and the other for 1,500 barrels, and each in the same form declared the property “to be delivered to bis order on return of this receipt and payment of storage.” Yoni Angern borrowed money of the Chemical National Bank, and hypothecated the receipts for the security of the loan. They were regularly indorsed for that object. The plaintiffs also guarantied the payment of theloan, provided the security should be delivered to them upon the performance of their guaranty. The debtor failed to pay the debt, and the plaintiffs, under their guaranty, were called upon for its payment, and paid the loan, taking up these receipts for their own protection from the bank. The position taken on behalf of the defendant is the same now as it was upon the preceding appeal, that he should not be held liable for the delivery of the kind and description of property mentioned in the receipts, but that he should be exonerated from liability by delivering the packages, with their contents, which have been received by him in store. The case of Hale v. Dock Co., 29 Wis. 488, has been relied upon as an authority sustaining this position. In that case the receipt was given for 54 barrels of mess pork. But it finally turned out, on examination, that this was not the contents of the barrels, but they contained
The case of Robson v. Swart, 14 Minn. 371, (Gil. 287,) is still more inapposite to this controversy, for there the receipt in fact agreed to no more than was to be implied from its very general and descriptive words, and so it was considered by the court in the decision of the case. And what was said in Miller v. Railroad Co., 90 N. Y. 430, as to the general law of the state, appears to support the effect which the statutes of the state, in force at the time when these receipts were issued, by their language, have been regarded as entitled to receive. That was an action upon a bill of lading for the value of eggs, stated in it to have been the contents of 30 packages, or barrels. The barrels contained sawdust, and the company was relieved from liability only for the reason that the printed form of the bill contained the statement “Contents and value unknown.” In the decision it was stated that “the sole question is whether the description of tire articles in the bill of lading was a representation by the carrier that the barrels contained eggs, because, if this is the true construction of the instrument, the right of the plaintiffs to recover is unquestionable. ” Id. 432.
In the present case the receipts were given in such form as to include the representation that the property to be returned was so many barrels of Portland cement. If it had not been intended by the defendant to create the obligation against himself to return that commodity there was not the slightest difficulty in the way of avoiding that result by adding that the contents of the barrels were unknown, or that they were described as barrels containing cement. It was entirely within the power of the defendant to avoid this liability by a simple statement excluding the obligation to return any other than the commodity contained in the packages. But he did not do that. On the ■other hand, he stated that he had received so many barrels of Portland cement on storage, and they were to be delivered to the order of the person named in the receipts, on the return of the receipts themselves, and the payment of the storage. He placed himself voluntarily in the position, if the commodity was not Portland cement, where the person to whom the receipts were issued could defraud others dealing upon their faith and representations, unless the defendant should be held liable for the delivery of the article stated to have been received. And the rule is where one of two innocent persons is to suffer loss from the fraud of a third, the loss shall fall upon the individual who has placed the third person in the position, and supplied him with the evidence through which the successful perpetration of the fraud could take place. The defendant is within the operation of this principle, and liable to make good the obligation expressed by the receipts, by the deli very of the commodity mentioned in them, or the payment of their value. The case was submitted by the court to the jury strictly according to this principle of liability, ■and they rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs for the sum of $4,054.16. This verdict is assailed as having exceeded the support afforded to it by the evidence. To recover the verdict it was incumbent upon the plaintiffs to prove the extent to which they had sustained loss by the action which had been taken upon the faith of the defendant’s receipts. To entitle them to recover at all they were bound to prove that the barrels did not contain Portland cement. This article was shown to be manufactured in England, France, Germany, Belgium, and the United States. It derived its name and description from the ingredients from which it was manufactured, and its ability to set and become hardened in water. It was also stated to be of a
On the part of the defendant it was proved by the importer that this article was imported by him from France, and that he had paid its purchase price, and placed it in the warehouse of the defendant. He seems to have acted in good faith, and upon the belief that the barrels contained Portland cement. Other witnesses were examined who testified to the fact that they had obtained samples from some of the barrels, and had subjected it to the process under which cement of this description was expected to harden, and that this cement had hardened, although not as thoroughly as the best quality of Portland cement. It does not appear that these persons obtained the samples used by them from the same barrels as those which were mentioned by the witnesses on behalf of the plaintiffs; and it is not probable that they did, for the reason that the action of the commodity used by them was entirely different from that obtained by the plaintiffs’ witnesses. There was no substantial conflict between the witnesses sworn on behalf of the plaintiffs and those sworn on behalf of the defendant, for in the samples obtained by them, and the barrels which were examined, the article proved to have been different, indicating that the barrels in store with the defendant did, so far as the observation of his witnesses extended, contain Portland cement; and as the evidence on behalf of the plaintiffs referred to no more than from 118 to 120 barrels of the cement, and the fact was made to appear by the evidence of the defendant that some of the barrels certainly did contain Portland cement, it was not sufficient to justify the general verdict for the amount rendered by the jury. The most that the evidence tended to establish as to the quality of the article was that a part of it proved to be a different substance from that mentioned in the receipts, while the evidence given on behalf of the defendant has clearly and satisfactorily proved that another portion of the packages contained Portland cement. It is true that this was of an inferior quality, but by the receipts the defendant did not bind himself to deliver any particularly described quality of cement. What he undertook to do was to deliver, upon the return of the receipts and the payment of the storage, the article known as “Portland Cement,” and if it was of that description, although inferior in quality, the delivery of that article would be a performance of his obligations. If the substance was not in fact Portland cement, (and that was for the plaintiffs to prove,) it would seem to be susceptible of very satisfactory evidence. But the examinations which were made, and the tests applied, prove no more than a probability that the article was in part only as the plaintiffs affirmed it
Brady, J„ concurs.
Van Brunt, P. J. I am of the opinion that, under the facts of this case» no recovery should be had.