2 Trans. App. 183 | NY | 1867
—The defendants were common carriers, and agreed to transport for the plaintiffs a cei tain quantity of wheat from Tully, in the county of Onondaga, to Chenango Forks, and which was duly transported by the defendants upon their railway from Tully to Chenango Forks. Said wheat was in twenty-two bags, and directed to the plaintiffs at Chenango Forks, at a place called Chester Yillage. It appears that no one being present to receive said bags of wheat on tlieir arrival, at their place of destination, the said bags of wheat were deposited by the defendants in their freight-house at Chenango Forks, at four o’ clock in the afternoon of the 8th of August, 1859 ; that the plaintiffs, on the afternoon of the ninth day of August, 1859, received notice that said bags of wheat had been sent from Tully to Chenango Forks ;
The precise point presented for adjudication in this case was decided by the supreme court of this State more than twenty years since (Fisk v. Newton, 1 Den., 45). In that case the court said: “So when goods are safely conveyed to the jfiace of destination, and the consignee is dead, absent, or refuses to receive, or is not known and cannot after due efforts are made be found, the carrier may discharge himself from further responsibility, by placing the goods in store with some responsible third person in that business, at the place of the delivery, for and on account of the owner. . . . The risk of the carrier ceased on the delivery of the goods in store.” This seems to be the well-recognized rule, where the goods are carried to the point of ultimate destination—the place of delivery to the consignee (Thomas v. Boston & Providence R. R. Co., 10 Metc., 472 ; Norway Plains Co. v. Boston & Maine R. R. Co., 1 Gray, 263). The case of Fisk v. Newton is cited approvingly by Johnson, Ch. J., in Groold v. Chapin (20 N. Y., 259); and the doctrine there enunciated is repeated and reaffirmed in the same case by Strong, J. He says : “ It is not intended to' decide that common carriers can in no case change their peculiar responsibilities, while they retain possession of the goods confided to them. They may not be able with due diligence to find any one to receive the goods in behalf of the owner, and there may not be any safe place of deposit within their reach, and in such case their duties as carriers would end, and they would then become mere or-ordinary bailees. They may also deposit the goods in their own warehouse, and thus absolve themselves from any further responsibility as common carriers. That, however, can only be where there has been a failure by the owner or his agent to receive them.”
These views are specially pertinent to the case now
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. Newton, but on the contrary, recognize it as sound law. We think the rule laid down in this lat
The j adgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
—The parties made and presented a case to the supreme court for adjudication, without action, pursuant to section 372- of the Code of Procedure. Judgment was ordered for the defendants, and the plaintiffs appealed to this court.
The case agreed upon by the parties discloses the following facts : The defendants, on the 8th of August, 1859, received from the plaintiffs, at Tully, for transportation, twenty-two bags of wheat, directed to them at Chenango Forks. The property arrived at the latter place on the same day, and was, at 4 p. m., placed in the defendants’ freight-honse, where it remained, without actual delivery to the plaintiffs, until the next succeeding evening, when, at about 11 o’clock, it was, with the freight-house, destroyed by an accidental fire. The plaintiffs were merchants and millers,, and resided at Centre Yillage, fifteen miles from the depot at Chenango Forks. They received notice that the wheat had been sent foward from Tully to the Forks on the afternoon of the 9th, and sent for it on the following day, when they learned that it had been destroyed by fire the evening previous.
The question is whether, on the facts stated, the defendants were discharged from their liability as common
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 arid part of another. It had not been called for, nor did the owner and consignee reside in the vicinity. It was placed safely in deposit for the owner, and remained so sufficiently long for examination and delivery. Its destruction after that period by an accidental lire, created no liability against the defendants.
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed with costs.
All the judges concurred.
Judgment affirmed.