12 Barb. 310 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1851
It appears from the testimony that in the year 1845, the firm of Cobb & Bishop were engaged in the forwarding and transportation and commission business ; Cobb residing at Buffalo, and Bishop at Cleveland; and that during the summer and autumn of that year, C. H. Canfield was their traveling agent, and spent a portion of his time at Chillicothe, in that capacity. On the 22d of October, in that year, he received from J. P. Campbell, at Chillicothe, 650 barrels of flour, and on the 27th of the same month he received 325 barrels more. According to the agreement between the parties, the flour thus received was to be sent to Cleveland, to be sold by Cobb & Bishop, and it rvas in fact so sent, with instructions to sell it if it would bring a price which was limited by Campbell. After the flour had arrived at Cleveland, it was ascertained that it could not be sold for the price fixed, and in the month of November, 1845, a new arrangement was entered into between Campbell and Canfield, by which it was agreed that Cobb & Bishop should transport the flour to New-York, to be delivered to the plaintiffs ; and in pursuance of such agreement, an instrument, which the parties called a bill of lading, was signed by Canfield, on behalf of Cobb <fc Bishop. That instrument stated that the flour was received from Campbell at Chillicothe, on the 22d of October, 1845, and that it was to be delivered to the plaintiffs at New-York, without delay; he, or they, to pay freight for the same, at the rate of $1,30 per barrel, and was despatched on arrival at Cleveland and Buffalo. This instrument, although signed in November, and while the flour was at Cleveland, was, at the request of Campbell, dated on the day when the 650 barrels were received at Chillicothe. After the instrument had been delivered to Campbell, it was sent by him to the plaintiffs ; and at, or about the same time, a draft for $4000, dated at Chillicothe, November 26, 1845, was drawn by Campbell upon the plaintiffs, and was afterwards accepted by them, and paid at maturity. A clerk in the employ of the plaintiffs testified that the advance of the acceptance was made upon the flour in question, and was not connected with any other property consigned by Campbell to the plaintiffs. This
The instrument which was received from Canfield by Campbell, and upon which the plaintiffs advanced their acceptance, was called by the parties a bill of lading. It certainly differs, materially, from the ordinary bill of lading, which has hitherto-been used in commerce. In the first place, it was signed by the agent of a forwarding and commission house, and not by the master of any vessel or boat. It was not a compact for the transportation of the flour, by any particular vessel or boat, but it contemplated transhipments and different modes of conveyance, by the lake and canals. But for the purpose of ascertaining the rights of the parties, I shall first consider it as a bill of lading: and then it will be necessary to consider whether there is any thing in the particular form of the instrument, to vary the rights of the parties.
Although there is some apparent confusion and discrepancy in the different decisions which have been made upon bills of lading, in reference to the respective rights of the consignor and consignee, yet it here seems to be settled, that, as a general rule, a suit founded upon the express contract contained in the bill, should be brought by the shipper with whom the master contracted, or by the owner of the goods, in a case where the shipper acted as his agent. (Brandt v. Bowlby, 2 B. &. Ad. 932. Sargent v. Morris, 3 Barn. & Ald. 277. Berkley v. Walting, 7 Ad. & Ellis, 29. Abbott on Ship. 337.) And that al
It is evident, that no general rule can be laid down as to the rights of the consignee, under a bill of lading, which will be applicable to all cases. His rights will, in some measure, depend upon the particular circumstances of the case.
In the case of Brown v. Hodgson, (2 Camp. 36,) the goods were shipped by order and on account of the consignees, and it was held, that the property vested in the consignees from the time that the goods were put on board the ship. (S. P., Stanton v. Eager, 16 Pick. 467.) In the case of Walley v. Montgomery, (3 East, 585,) goods were shipped to order on account of. and at the risk of the consignee, and a bill of lading to order of assignors, duly indorsed, was, together with an invoice of the goods, sent to him in a letter, informing him that the consignor had drawn bills on him, at three months, for the value of the goods. Another bill of lading was afterwards sent to the agent of the consignor, under which he obtained the goods from the master of the ship, and insisted on immediate payment, by the consignee, as a condition of delivering to him. The consignee offered his acceptances at three months, and on their being refused, brought an action of trover for the goods. It was held, that by the delivery of the goods to the master, and the transmission of the bill of lading and invoice to the plaintiff, the property had passed to him, and that he was entitled to recover. In the case of Anderson v. Clark, (supra,) where goods were shipped and made deliverable by the bill of lading, to the consignee, and it appeared that they were shipped as security for antecedent advances, it was held that the delivery on board the vessel was delivery to the consignee, and that he might maintain an action for the non-delivery by the master to him. In the case
From these cases Lord Tenterden infers the general rule, that when a bill of lading by which goods are.made deliverable to a consignee by name, is transmitted to him as security for antecedent advances, or to indemnify him against liabilities in respect to the particular consignment which they represent, they are evidence of such destination and appropriation to him of the specific goods, as will vest in him a property, absolute or special in them, at the time of the delivery on board, and so render the master responsible to him for their loss or injury. (Abbott on Ship. 333.)
It will be observed that this rule, as well as the eases which have been cited in support of it, refers to bills of lading. But there is another case which is analogous to the one before us, in which the same principles were laid down as applicable to a document essentially similar to the one now in question. In that case it was proved that Tempany, a corn merchant at Longford, who employed the plaintiffs in the suit as his factors at Liverpool, shipped on board a canal boat, a cargo of oats, and took from the master a bill of lading, or boat-receipt, dated January 31st, 1837, whereby he acknowledged that the oats were received on board, deliverable in Dublin to J. & T, Delany, in care for, and to be shipped to, the plaintiffs in Liverpool. On the 2d of February, Tempany wrote to the plaintiffs a letter, enclosing the instrument received by him, and'stating that he had valued on the plaintiffs for a specified amount against those oats. On the 7th of the same month, the plaintiffs received this letter, and accepted the bill of exchange, and returned it to Tempany, who received it on the 9th. In the mean time, Tempany gave an order for the same oats, to a creditor, who afterwards got poé
The first objection made by the defendant to the plaintiffs’ claim, was, that the express contract contained in the bill of lading or forwarder’s receipt, was made with Campbell, not with the plaintiff.
In the case of Anderson v. Clark, above cited, the consignees
It appears from the bill of exceptions, that the defendant introduced evidence for the purpose of showing that there had been no unreasonable delay in the delivery of the flour; and that, whatever delay there had been, was caused by circumstances over which he had no control. The judge, in his charge to the jury, stated that the matters given in evidence on the part of the defendant did not, in law, tend to prove any excuse for the delay which had occurred in the transportation and delivery of that portion of the flour which was not delivered to the plaintiff until the spring of 1846, nor entitle the defendant to have the sufficiency of such evidence to excuse such delay, or any portion of it, submitted to the jury. To this part of the charge the defendant excepted; and we think that the exception was well taken.
The testimony shows that at the time when the bill of lading was signed, the flour was at Cleveland, and it certainly tends to show that there was a difficulty in obtaining vessels at that time and place, amounting almost to an impossibility ; at least there was sufficient, upon this point, to entitle the defendant to go to the jury. One witness said that it was almost impossible to get any" transportation from that place. That Cobb & Bishop had written to Buffalo for vessels to come to Cleveland; that the wind was such that they could not get up. They could not get out of Buffalo. Another witness said that the flour was
In the ease before us, the judge seems to have placed his charge upon the ground that there was an absolute undertaking contained in the bill of lading, which created a greater liability than that which the law implies from the relation of bailor and bailee. If this action had been founded upon an express contract to deliver without delay, it might be a question whether, inasmuch as the undertaking was absolute, and contained no provision as to any ulterior circumstances beyond the defendant’s control, he was bound to perform it at all events. But no such question arises in this case.
We think that a new trial should be granted, costs to abide the event.
Edmonds, Edwards and Mitchdl, Justices.]