158 N.Y.S. 730 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1916
The defendant has been held liable for converting a carload of lath belonging to the plaintiff. The controversy grows out of the application of certain car service rules for demurrage duly promulgated and rendered effective according to law. The carload in question originated in the State of New Hampshire and was consigned to William Gr. Baker, but was
It was claimed by the defendant at the trial, and is now claimed, that at the time of the payment of the freight there was under'the car service rules in force a charge of one dollar which had accrued for demurrage between the time of the arrival of the car at the Elmira yard of the defendant and the time when the plaintiff paid the freight thereon, and for the purposes of this appeal it will be assumed that such claim is tenable. The trial justice, however, has found on conflicting evidence that nothing was said when the freight was paid about a demurrage charge, and that the .defendant then agreed to place the car on the plaintiff’s track. This it failed to do. It has also been found by the trial justice that oh the following day the defendant demanded three dollars demurrage, and notified the plaintiff that it would not place the car on his track until such demurrage was paid. The plaintiff testified
The failure to place the car on the plaintiff’s track on August thirtieth when the freight was paid was not the fault of the latter. When, therefore, on August thirty-first the defendant demanded three dollars for demurrage there was only in fact one dollar due, and the defendant was making an unlawful and excessive demand. Its refusal to deliver the car on the track of the plaintiff except on compliance with its unlawful and excessive demand for demurrage charges constituted a conversion of the plaintiff’s property. It was a part of the implied contract duty of the defendant to place this car on the plaintiff’s private track and until it did so it had not performed its contract and no freight or demurrage charges although previously earned were collectible. The contract of transportation by a common carrier includes placing the cars conveniently for loading and unloading. The incidental consignee can require the car to be placed at a convenient point for unloading and a' reasonable opportunity therefor. When the consignee, as in this case, has his own track and requires the car to be placed thereon for unloading it is the duty of the transportation company to comply with’his requirement. This was not done in the present case, nor was the car ever in a position where it could be conveniently unloaded. In New York Central & H. R. R. R. Co. v. General Electric Co. (167 App. Div. 726) it was said by this court, speaking through Mr. Justice Woodward (at p. 732): “We believe it may be laid down broadly that transportation by railroad of carload lots, under present-day conditions, requires the convenient placing of the car for loading, and an equally convenient placing of the car for unloading, and that the mere question of whether • the tracks are upon the property of the shipper or upon the
The defendant now urges that the plaintiff did not at the time place his refusal to pay the demurrage on the ground that the car had not been placed on his track, but that his real attitude was that he would not under' any circumstances pay any demurrage charges because the defendant was not entitled to make the same. The version of the transaction as given by the plaintiff and which has been accepted by the trial justice does not justify this contention of the defendant. On August thirtieth, when the plaintiff paid the freight, he gave instructions that the car should be placed on his track, which the defendant agreed to do. Nothing was then said about demur-rage nor until the following day when the defendant informed the plaintiff that unless he paid more than the defendant had a right to demand the car would not be placed on his track. The plaintiff then seems to have placed his refusal to pay on the specific ground that the charge for demurrage as made by the defendant could not be made “on a car that had not been placed.” According to his testimony that was substantially all that was said between the parties. Whatever may have been in his mind or whatever his views may have been on the
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred, except Kellogg, P. J. dissenting, and Lyon, J., not voting.
Judgment affirmed, With costs.