28 Mo. 243 | Mo. | 1859
delivered the opinion of the court.
The custom of returning goods to the place of shipment, where the consignee at the place of delivery has refused to receive them, may be a very reasonable one when the freight is very small in proportion to the value of the goods. In such cases the consignor would probably prefer that the boat should bring them back, and a custom to this effect, as it would be entirely consistent with the consignor’s interest, would only show that the carrier, in acting as the agent of the consignor, had discharged his duty and acted as the corn signor himself would have done if he had been in a position
The principle upon which the carrier’s duty is based, in the event of a refusal of the consignee to receive the goods, is simply to regard himself as an agent for the owners, and as such invested with authority to take such steps in relation to the goods as will advance the owner’s interest and purposes consistently with a reasonable security to himself for his freight and charges. What he ought to do in a given case will manifestly depend upon the circumstances, and there
We shall send the case back to be tried on these principles. The verdict was rendered under an instruction confining the jury to the mere question of a custom, about which the evidence was very slight and unsatisfactory. The - steamboat masters, who were examined, spoke of a general practice of returning freight to the owners here where the consignees refused to receive it, but did not explain the character of the goods so returned and received and paid for. They may have been misled by one or two incidents falling under their observation, and supposed that a case here and there, perhaps perfectly consistent with our understanding of the law, constituted a custom universally applicable under all circumstances. We doubt the existence of a custom so totally destructive of |he interests of shippers as was imagined to be established in this case. With the concurrence of all the judges, the case is remanded.