108 N.E. 837 | NY | 1915
The plaintiffs are the shippers of a carload of potatoes. The defendant is the carrier. The plaintiffs say that there was a negligent omission to make delivery at the proper place, and they sue to recover the resulting damages. Whether a recovery may be sustained, depends upon the meaning of the bill of lading.
The shipment was made at Lakeside, New York. The freight agent delivered to the plaintiffs a bill of lading, and took back a shipping order. Both were made out on the carrier's printed forms. Each form has a blank space for the name of the consignee, and another for the destination. These blanks were filled by the freight agent as follows:
. Consignee: L.G. Loomis Son . .-------------------------------------. . . .-------------------------------------. . Grand St. . .-------------------------------------. . . Place Jersey City . . . ----------------------. . Destination . County . . . ----------------------. . . State N.J. . . . ----------------------.
Below these blanks was another for the route, which, however, was left unfilled. *450
The consignors named in the bill of lading are also named there as consignees. In fact, however, the shipment was intended for D.P. Reynolds Co., to whom the bill of lading was at once indorsed and transmitted. D.P. Reynolds Co. have their warehouse in Jersey City in the yard of the Grand Street station of the Lehigh Valley railroad. This Grand Street yard or station has existed for more than twenty years. To bring the car to Jersey City, the defendant had to forward it over the line of some connecting carrier. It chose the Pennsylvania railroad, which had a station in Jersey City about three-fourths of a mile away from the station of the Lehigh Valley. The car left Lakeside on June 12, 1907. It reached the Pennsylvania station in Jersey City on June 18. On learning of its arrival, D.P. Reynolds Co. telegraphed the plaintiffs that the car was at the Pennsylvania station, and that they could not use it there. On the same day, June 18, the plaintiffs made complaint to the defendant's agent at Lakeside, and to the defendant's superintendent in New York. The superintendent answered by letter on June 20 that he had arranged to have the car "moved to destination via proper junction point and route." The car did not reach the Grand Street station till June 29. The purchaser then refused to accept it. The potatoes, which were of the last year's crop, had deteriorated, and the market season for old potatoes had passed. The plaintiffs lost the benefit of their bargain, and insist that the defendant must make good the loss.
To determine whether the defendant is at fault, we must ascertain the significance of the words "Grand Street" in the shipping order and the bill of lading. We held on a previous appeal in this case that those documents taken together constituted the contract. (Loomis v. N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co.,
We think the meaning of the contract was a question for the jury. (Stoops v. Smith,
To this evidence supplied by the form of the bill of lading itself, other tokens of the same purpose may be added. This Grand Street station had existed for more than twenty years. It was one of the large and active stations in Jersey City. We may fairly infer that its existence was well known to men whose business it was to attend to the shipment of freight. Words of uncertain application may take from that knowledge a new color. It is true the defendant's freight agent, in the attempt to relieve himself from blame, is said to have told the plaintiffs, after the event, that he had never heard of such a station. He gave no testimony, however, on the trial, and even if he had testified, his interest in the outcome was such that his disclaimer of knowledge could have been rejected by the jury. We have, therefore, words in the contract which would convey to experienced railroad men the thought of an important terminal. It was for the jury to determine whether they were used with such a meaning. *453
Another guide to a correct solution of the problem was supplied to the jury through the practical interpretation of the contract alike by shipper and by carrier. The plaintiffs, on learning that the car had gone no farther than the Pennsylvania station, at once complained to the defendant that it should have been forwarded to Grand street. The defendant, responding to the complaint, acknowledged, in effect, its justice, and promised that the car would be trans-shipped to the proper destination. Trans-shipment was ultimately made without additional charge. Unless the bill of lading is free from ambiguity, we may find in the defendant's conduct an admission of its own default.
In these circumstances we ought not to hold that the failure to write the name of the terminal in the space reserved for the destination, controls, as a matter of law, the interpretation of this contract. We may view the case as if the plaintiffs had informed the defendant's agent in so many words that the destination was to be the Grand Street station, and had received back from the agent a bill of lading filled out in the form before us. We cannot say if this had been done, that reading the bill of lading, they ought as reasonable men to have understood that their instructions had not been followed. It is true the record does not show in so many words that they gave such instructions. The reason it does not, is because the defendant resisted the admission of testimony directed to that end. It was not held, when the case was here before, that the plaintiffs' instructions to the carrier were incompetent to identify a destination imperfectly described. It was held that they were incompetent to add to the contract an obligation to forward the shipment along one of several routes. This did not mean that they might not, if offered for some other purpose, be properly received. (Brady v. Cassidy,
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, and the judgment of the Trial Term affirmed, with costs in both courts.
WILLARD BARTLETT, Ch. J., CHASE, COLLIN, CUDDEBACK, MILLER and SEABURY, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, etc.