90 P. 341 | Idaho | 1907
This action was prosecuted by the plaintiff against the Northern Pacific Express Company for the recovery of the sum of $660, consigned by one J. W. Pratt from the defendant’s office at Culdesac, Idaho, to the plaintiff at Lewiston, Idaho. On the twenty-third day of November, 1904, the consignor, J. W. Pratt, delivered to the defendant’s agent at its office in Culdesac, a sack or package for shipment containing $660, lawful money of the United States, and prepaid the charges thereon, and the package was addressed and directed to the plaintiff at Lewiston. The defendant’s agent issued to the consignor a receipt, the principal part of which is as follows:
“Culdesac, Idaho, November 23, 1904.
“Received of J. W. Pratt 1 sk. said to contain money valued at six hundred and sixty and no-100 dollars, and marked J. M. Pratt, Lewiston, Idaho. Prepaid 50 cents, wMch we undertake to forward to our agency nearest and most convenient to destination only,” etc.
The express company neglected and refused to deliver this money to the consignee, and after written demand was made upon the agent at Lewiston, and refusal to pay, tMs action was instituted. It seems from the evidence that the night after the deposit of this money with the express company, its
The only proposition presented by the appellant on this appeal is that the consignor was the proper party to sue, and that the consignee cannot maintain his action herein. The respondent controverts this proposition, but, in the first place, contends that the defendant waived the point by failure to demur under section 4174, Eevised Statutes. He contends that this question should have been raised by demurrer to the complaint on the ground “that the plaintiff has not the legal capacity to sue,” and that by failure to do so under section 4178, it is precluded from thereafter urging that objection. We do not think, this point, is well taken. A demurrer on the grounds of want of legal capacity to sue, it seems to us, must relate to some legal disability on the part of the plaintiff to prosecute and maintain his action. As said by Pomeroy in his Code Eemedies (fourth edition), page 180, this disability must be “such as infancy, coverture, idiocy and the like, and not the absence of facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.” A plaintiff may have legal capacity to sue and to prosecute his action against the defendant, but if he does not have a cause of action, he certainly cannot recover. (Wetmore v. San Francisco, 44 Cal. 294; Robinson v. Peru
The only evidence produced upon the trial touching the ownership and right of possession in this property is that given by the consignor and consignee, and is as follows: The consignor, J. W. Pratt, testified: “I was sending this money to my brother for payment on some money I owed him.” The consignee, the plaintiff in this case, testifies on cross-examination as follows: “Q. Do you know why any money was being sent you at that time by your brother? A. Why it was sent to me? Q. Yes. A. He owed me this money. Q. What money is that? A. The money he was to send me. Q. If I understand you, any money that was being sent, if he sent any, was being sent in payment of an indebtedness he owed you? A. Yes, sir.” At the trial plaintiff produced the receipt issued by defendant’s agent at Culdesac, proved a demand made on the company for the money after .they had been given a reasonable time for the delivery of the same, and produced the consignor as a witness on his behalf. It was also shown that the agent at Culdesac had stated to plaintiff’s attorney
In this country the point has been variously determined, though perhaps there is not such a great conflict when the facts of the cases are taken into consideration as would at first appear. Where the consignor has sued, the courts have generally held that he was a proper party and could maintain his action, and where the consignee has sued, they have generally sustained him.
In Ogden v. Coddington, 2 E. D. Smith, 317, the court of common pleas of New York, in 1854, said: “I think the plaintiffs are right in saying that a mere consignee cannot maintain an action for the negligence of the carrier, or the breach of the carrier’s contract. Such right of action belongs to the
The case nearest in point with the one at bar as to the-’facts involved is that of Bernstine v. Express Co., 40 Ohio St. 451, determined by the supreme court of Ohio in 1884. The point there determined is stated in the syllabus as follows: “Where a creditor, living at a distance from his debtor, requests the payment of the debt without giving specific instructions as to how the money shall be sent, and the debtor sends it by an express company, and it is lost in transitu, the debtor may maintain an action against the company for its recovery.”
In the latest edition of Hutchinson on Carriers, volume 3, section 1317, the author in discussing the subject, “When a Consignee may Sue,” says: “And it may be stated as a well-settled rule that if the goods are delivered to the carrier on behalf of the consignee, and at his request or by his direction, either express or implied, and no other fact appears, the legal presumption will be that the property in the goods immediately on such delivery becomes vested in him, and that he is the proper party to bring an action against the carrier, either in assumpsit in his own name upon the contract with the consignor as his agent, or in case for the breach of duty on
In 6 ' Cyc., page 468, Justice McClain, the author of the test, in considering the question as to whom delivery may be made by the carrier, says: “Where the carrier receives the goods under a contract, either express, or implied from the marks on the goods, to deliver them to a person named, without any reservation of power of disposal by the consignor, then the delivery to such person completes the contract and relieves the carrier from further liability. This rests on the assumption which the carrier is authorized to entertain that the title to the goods passes to the consignee on delivery to the carrier.” (See, also, 7 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 220, and 12 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 558.) It will be seen that the authorities quite generally -agree that where the shipper delivers his property to the carrier, marked and addressed to another person as consignee, and gives the carrier no other or further notice than that to be presumed and inferred from the act of consignment, the law will presume the contract for transportation to have been made for and on behalf of the consignee, and that the consignee is the owner of the property and entitled to its possession and to sue therefor. It should also be remembered that where the shipper delivers the property over to the carrier without any special instructions as to its ownership or its delivery on any condition, the consignee becomes immediately entitled to the possession of the property, and may demand and lawfully receive it forthwith from the carrier, and that the carrier will be justified in delivering it to the consignee at any point on its line of transportation. (2
In the case at bar the plaintiff might have lawfully demanded this sack of money from the express agent immediately after its delivery by the consignor, and the express company would have been legally justified in delivering it to the plaintiff then and there or at any point along its line of transportation thereafter; provided, however, that the consignor had not in the meanwhile given different or contrary directions to the express company. In Bernstine v. Express Company, supra, the creditors had written their debtor to “send them some money,” but did not direct him as to the means he should employ ,in sending it. The court held that it was the duty of the debtor to pay his creditor in person, and that the money while in the hands of the express company was there at the risk of the debtor, and that the loss primarily fell upon the debtor; that the deposit of the money with the express company did not pay the debt and did not relieve the consignor of his liability to his creditors, and that therefore the debtor was a proper party to sue for its recovery. It should be borne in mind, however, that the Ohio court did not hold that under the facts of that case the creditor could not have maintained an action against the carrier. It is true it did hold that the consignor could maintain the action. Had the debtor made no demand of the carrier and the creditors had sued, we are inclined to the opinion that the court would have sustained them in their action. In the case at bar the consignor was indebted to his brother and was sending him this money in payment thereof. The consignor said this was “the money he (the debtor) was to send me.” It is therefore apparent from the evidence that J. W. Pratt was to send $660 from Culdesae ,to J. M. Pratt, the plaintiff, at Lewiston. Now, then, the record is silent as to the manner of the sending or the means he was to employ in sending that money. If the law presumes in the first instance that the consignee was the owner of this money, and the carrier was authorized and directed to deliver it to the consignee, and this was money it had been agreed between debtor and creditor
It appears to us that considerable fallacy and illogical reasoning has crept into some of the cases to which our attention has been called, and this seems to be due largely to the fact that in these cases the question has been treated with a view to the relation existing between the shipper and consignee in reference to the ownership and right of possession of the property, rather than considering the true question of the relation the carrier sustains to each of these parties respectively. Any difference or diversity of interest that may arise between the consignor and consignee can in no respect concern the carrier so long as it is protected against responding for the property more than once.. The ownership may be general and unqualified, or special and limited; the right of possession may be absolute or contingent'; in either instance the interest would be sufficient on which to. found an action in the absence of the assertion of a superior right in another. The, success of the demand and claim of one apparently entitled to possession as against the carrier will relieve the carrier from further responsibility even to one having a better right. Under our statute (Rev. Stats., sec. 4113; First Nat. Bank of Hailey v. Bews, 3 Idaho, 486, 31 Pac. 816), if there is any question or doubt as to the party to whom the carrier is liable, all necessary parties may be brought in and required to set up their interests, and thereby determine the respective rights and effectually protect the defendant from the possibility of the assertion of any further claim by other parties. So in the case at bar, the express company might have had the consignor brought in as a party to set up any interest or claim he might, have. "We think the plaintiff has shown sufficient interest in the subject of the action herein to sustain the verdict and judgment in his favor.
No other assignment of error has been argued by appellant, and we take it that there is none that merits consideration. We are not unmindful of the fact that some things we have said herein are in conflict with what is perhaps the