9 Daly 403 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1880
The pleadings, in this case, were oral. As the justice returns them, the complaint was for money due under statute, for goods left on a wharf; and the answer, general denial—discharge of lien—no jurisdiction.
Though not expressed in the return, the complaint was evidently dismissed on the ground that the amount allowed for wharfage, by the act of 1860 (L. 1860, p. 416, § 3, as amended by L. 1862, c. 479, p. 952), could be recovered only under the 7th section of the act, in the manner provided in the 217th section of the act of Apz’il 9, 1813 (2 R. L. 1813, p. 431) ; that is, by distress, as was held in the special term case of Warren v. McDiarmid (34 How. Pr. 304).
The 3d section of the act of 1860, above referred to, provides that the owner or lessee of a bulkhead or pier,' may “ charge and receive ” the sum of five cents per ton, on goods, wares and merchandise, remaining on the bulk-head, for every day after the explication of forty-eight hours, from the time they were left or deposited upon it, and that he shall have a lien upon the property, until that amount is paid.
The 7th section of the act, as amended in 1862, has a general provision, that the collection of the rates of wharfage, established by the act, shall be enforced in the manner presci’ibed in the 217th section of the above referred to act of 1813, which gives a remedy for distraining for the wharfage of any ship or vessel, on any goods or chattels found on board such ship or vessel. In my opinion, the acts amendatory of this act of 1860, passed in 1870 and in 1872 (2 L. 1870, p. 1696; 1 L. 1872, p. 799), were intended to be a substitute for this provision, in the 7th section of the act of 1860. The 2d section of the amendatory act of 1870, allows the same sum for thewhai*fage of merchandise remaining on a piei’, wharf or bulkhead, as the act of 1860 ; and gives also a lien until it is paid, but it makes several changes. It gives the right to the wharf-age after the expii'ation of twenty-four houre, instead of forty-eight, as in the prior act; and instead of the language of the previous act, that the owner may “ charge and receive,” it substitutes the words “ charge and collectand this amendatory
A wharfinger’s right to compensation for wharfage, at common law, was not limited simply to a lien upon the goods, until his charges were paid, for that he had a lien, was not settled until the decision of Lord Kenton in Naylor v. Mangles (1 Esp. N. P. 109). It is not clear that the act of 1860 intended to take away his remedy at common law by action, and to give him no other remedy, but to enforce the payment of the wharfage by a distress upon the goods, or leave him without any remedy at all, if the goods were removed, and his lien and the right to distrain was gone. However that may be, I am of the opinion, that the changed provision in the amendatory acts of 1870 and 1872, was intended to be a substitute for the provision in the act of 1860, as to the manner of collecting the wharinge; and to express by the language “charge and collect,” that he might collect that amount for wharfage in the ordinary,mode by an action, coupled with the right to detain the property, until the wharfage was paid. I think, therefore, that the complaint below was improperly dismissed, and that the plaintiff had a right to maintain such an action for the recovery of the amount of wharfage given by statute.
J. F. Daly and Van Hoesen, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed.