3 Abb. Ct. App. 386 | NY | 1867
[After briefly stating facts.] — The question is, whether on the facts stated the defendants were discharged from their liability as common carriers. It seems they had conveyed the property safely to its place of destination, and, no one being there to whom they could make delivery, it was deposited, according to the usual course of business, in the freight-house. While the defendants were bound to deliver the property according to the usual course of trade or business, they were not required to go or send to the plaintiffs’ residence, fifteen miles away, either to make delivery there or to notify them of its arrival. Having transported it°safely and with reasonable dispatch to the place of destination, and having held it there uninjured for a reasonable time, ready for delivery, the carrier was absolved from liability, as such, in a case like this, where the party-resided at a distance, and had no agent at the place to whom notice of arrival could be given. According to the decisions in Massachusetts, railroad companies, as common carriers, are discharged when they have transported the goods safely and with diligence to the place of destination, and deposited them in their warehouse, after a reasonable time has elapsed for the owner or consignee to examine them and take them away. 1 Gray, 263; 10 Metc. 472. And it was
The application of these principles to the case before the court will exonerate'the defendants from liability. The property had arrived at its place of destination in safety, and had remained in the freight-house uninjured one full day and part of another. It had not been'called for, nor did the owner and consignee reside in the vicinity. Its destruction after that period by an accidental fire, created no liability against the defendants.
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
[After stating the facts.] — The precise point presented for adjudication in this case was decided by the supreme court of this State more than twenty years since. Fisk
These views are specially pertinent to the case now under consideration. There the carrier, as carrier, had performed his whole duty as such. The goods had securely arrived at their place of destination. The consignee was absent, residing some fifteen miles distant. He had no agent to whom delivery could be made, or to whom notice could be given. Can the consignee, by his neglect of duty in this regard, continue the strict liability of the carrier until it shall suit his convenience or pleasure to call for the goods F I think not, and that the carrier can properly do what he did in this case — deposit the same in a freight-house — and that then his strict liability as
These cases are all based upon the controlling fact, that the carrier in whose custody the property was destroyed was an intermediate carrier, and that in no instance had the goods reached their ultimate destination. That such intermediate carrier could not change the character of his liability by a deposit of the goods in a warehouse. But not one of these cases infringe upon the doctrine of Fisk. v. 1STewton, but on the contrary, recognize it as sound law. We think the rule laid down in this latter case is controlling upon that now under consideration, and that upon the circumstances disclosed in this case, the liability of the defendants as common carriers ceased when they safely transported the property in question to the point agreed upon, and that the consignee, being absent at the time of its delivery, and they having no agent there to receive the same or to whom it could be delivered, or to whom notice of its arrival could be given, it was the duty of the carrier, and his whole duty, to deposit the same in a warehouse, and thereafter these defendants ceased to be liable as common carriers.
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
All the judges concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.