| U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | Sep 30, 1859

NELSON, Circuit Justice.

According to the bill of lading in this case, the coal was to be delivered at Peck slip, East river, to William Jarvis, or his assigns, on the payment of freight, at one dollar and eighty-five cents per ton. The libel charges, that the vessel arrived, with the coal, at the port of New York; that notice was given to the consignee, who requested that it might be delivered at his place of business in the city, 59 Ann street,, and agreed to pay the expense of such delivery at the rate of twenty-five cents per load; that the coal was delivered accordingly, in gjgod order and condition, and accepted and received by him; and that, nevertheless, he refused to pay the freight and the expense of delivering the coal. An answer was put in, but it is not material to notice it, as the case was heard in the court below, and in this court,.upon the admission by the claimant, that the facts were as stated in the libel. I lay out of view the deposition taken and produced in this court, as not put in in time to be read as a part of the proof.

The question presented is, whether or not, upon the case as made out in the libel, the libellant, by delivering the coal, parted with his lien upon it for the freight? If he did, he cannot pursue and attach it in the admiralty, as being still a security for the freight money. The claimant must defeat the demand, if at all, upon a dry point of law, as the case admitted assumes that the money is justly due to the libella'nt, and the rights of no third or innocent party exist or intervene. Now, the mere manual delivery of the coal by the carrier to the consignee, does not, of itself, operate, necessarily, to discharge the lien. The delivery must be made with the intent of parting- with his interest in it, or under circumstances from which the law will infer such an intent. The act of the party is characterized by the intent with which it is performed, either expressly or by necessary implication. Therefore, a delivery of the article according to the terms of the bill of lading, and the taking possession of it by the consignee, under the expectation that the freight will be paid at the time, is not such a delivery as parts with the lien.

I remember a class of cases, where, by the bill of lading, the freight was to be paid on delivery, but, according to usage, the bills were not presented till two or three days aft-erwards, so that the consignee might have time to ascertain the correctness of the shipment of the goods, and in which it was held, that, as between the parties, the delivery was conditional, not to become absolute till the payment of the money. It was otherwise where the rights of third parties intervened. These cases illustrate the principle above stated.

Now, as I understand this case, as presented in the libel, the demand of the freight was made as soon as the coal was delivered, and the delivery was made under an expectation of the payment. According to the bill of lading, the coal was to be delivered at Peck slip; but, by an agreement between the parties, *703the place was changed to 59 Ann street. This changed the mode of delivery. Instead of being delivered at the dock, or the ship’s tackle, it was delivered in carts, and. when thus delivered, to the satisfaction of the consignee, the payment was demanded. This is, I think, the fair interpretation of the facts admitted, and, in this view, it is clear that the lien was not discharged.

As to the objection that the court below included in its decree the amount of the cartage across the city, it is not sustained, as will be seen by a reference to the decree itself. It allows the cartage to be deducted from any payments that may have been previously made. Whether any had been so made nowhere appears, and, if they had, unless they were specially made upon the freight, the application of them to the cartage would be unobjectionable. Decree affirmed.

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