18 F. Cas. 318 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island | 1853
It is in accordance with the practice of this court, when a jury address a written inquiry to the court, while not In session, to summon the counsel, and make known to them the inquiry, and then proceed to answer it in writing, if the court thinks it safe and proper to do so; and no exception is taken to this course now. The objection is, that the instruction was not correct, because not sufficiently qualified. The argument is, that ratification is not binding, unless made with a full knowledge of all the material facts; and that the court ought to have required that the plaintiffs should be informed, not only of what the consignees had done, but of all the circumstances necessary to enable the consignors to make up their mind, understandingly. And that in this case, the consignors ought to have been told, not only that the consignees were about to land the cargo, but that the expenses of landing and storing a cargo there were unusually great, -when compared with those charges at other ports; also, that timber was declining in price at the time it was landed, and how long the consignees intended to keep it on hand, and that the fire risks in that city were unusually great. The instruction given in this as in all other cases, must be considered with reference to the facts of the case. The consignment was made by letter, bearing date Feb. 11, 1850; which was received and replied to by the defendants, April 17, 1S50. In this letter they say: “Lumber is, in some cases, selling at less than home prices, and vessels are extremely low. We see no fair prospect of any essential change in either.” On May 29, 1S50, the defendants acknowledged a receipt of a duplicate of the letter of consignment, and further, say: “There is no improvement to notice in the lumber market.” On the 27th July, 1850, the vessel and cargo arrived, and on the 31st the defendants wrote a letter, detailing, with great minuteness, the difficulties they had encountered in obtaining possession under the plaintiffs’ mortgage, which was the title by virtue of which they made the consignment, and the litigation which had grown out of it, and referring the plaintiffs to their circular respecting the markets. On the 14th of August, they again ■wrote to the plaintiffs, informing them of their further difficulties about the title, and that they had sold the vessel well for $2,400. And they add: “The lumber is now being landed and stored, as we cannot get an offer of more than $50 per M. for the lot We have been, and shall continue to be, as economical as possible in regard to expenses, but we anticipate we shall be able to remit you but a part of your claim.” On the 31st August, 1850, the defendants again wrote to the plaintiffs, giving some further information about the litigation, and referring the plaintiffs to their circular for information of the state of the market. On the 13th September, they again wrote, chiefly concerning another suit which had been brought against them on account of the cargo, and adding: “We have no improvement to notice in the lumber market; on the contrary, prices generally are not so good as they w-ere some weeks since.” They also refer to their circular for further information concerning the market. It was admit
The rule, as laid down by Mr. Justice Story, in his Commentaries on Agency, (section 25S,) is: “If the principal, having received information from his agent, of his acts, touching the business of his principal, does not, within a reasonable time, express his dissent to the agent, he is deemed to approve his acts, and his silence amounts to ratification.” This requires information of the acts of the agent, but not of those surrounding circumstances of a general nature, which usually accompany all such transactions, and which the principal must be supposed to be cognizant of when he made the consignment, and to have kept himself informed of after-wards. Take the rule laid down in Richmond Manuf’g Co. v. Starks [Case No. 11,802], which is supported by the authorities, that if a merchant neglects, after a reasonable time, to object to an account current, he is deemed to acquiesce in it, and it is treated as an account stated; it is manifest an account current conveys no information concerning the previous or expected states of the market. In Cairnes v. Bleecker, 12 Johns. 300-306, Mr. Justice Spencer says: “It is a salutary rule in relation to agencies, that when the principal has been informed of what has been done, he must dissent, and give notice in a reasonable time, otherwise his assent to what has been done shall be presumed.” And the same law may be found in Bredin v. Dubarry, 14 Serg. & R. 30, and in other cases.
Certainly- the consignor must not be misled by tliS; consignee, upon any- point, general or particular; and he is entitled to such information concerning the acts of his agent as will put him upon a decision of the question whether he will ratify a departure from his orders. Thus, if the agent does not plainly disclose that he has departed from instructions, as was the case of Courcier v. Ritter [Casé No. 3,282], he is not bound to reply. So I think'the principal is entitled to a fair statement of any special circumstances which have induced the agent to depart from his instructions. And in this case there was such a statement; for in letters previous to that of the 13th of September, the defendants had informed the plaintiffs that lumber was very low, that there was no immediate prospect of its rise, and in the letter of the 13th of September they say: “The lumber is now being landed and stored, as we cannot get an offer of more than $50 per M. for the lot;” and there was no evidence in the case tending to show that this was not true, or that it was not the cause for their landing the cargo. Indeed, I do not- understand the plaintiffs’ counsel to contend, that the instruction given would not have been correct, if the consignment had been made to a port like Liverpool, or New Orleans; but it was argued that San Francisco, being in 1850 comparatively a new place of trade, the same presumption of knowledge, or the same duty, on the part of the consignor to inform himself concerning these general facts, did not exist. But I do not think the rule of law varies with the age and amount of trade of the port of destination. If it were to do so, I can conceive of no standard which could be applicable to any case. How old must a port be, and how much trade must it have had, and how long continued, to exempt the consignee from the duty of going into- a minute history of all the facts which could have a bearing upon the interest of the consignor? If the trade is recent, if it is subject to great and sudden fluctuations, if the dangers from marine or fire perils at the port are unusual, the consignor may reasonably be supposed to have known these facts when he sent his property there; because, ordinarily, men do not embark in such enterprises without informing themselves on these points. And perhaps no case could be put which would afford a better illustration than this, of .the impropriety of allowing the rule of law to be varied on account of any of these circumstances. For, in the first place, though the