32 F. 491 | D. Maryland | 1887
This is a libel in rem against the canal barge John K. Shaw, to recover the value of a cargo of grain, which, it is alleged, the master contracted by a bill of lading to deliver to the libelant in Philadelphia.
A certain George W. Morrison, of New Castle, Delaware, who was engaged in the business of shipping grain under the firm name of W. H. Jefferson & Co., chartered the canal barge to carry a cargo of grain for him to Philadelphia. The grain was to he received on hoard at St. George’s and at Delaware City. On the last days of September, or perhaps on the first day of October, 1886, and before any grain had been put on hoard, John Eveland, the master of the barge, at the request of Morrison, signed his name to a printed form of bill of lading. This printed form Morrison dated October 1, 1886, and filled up so as toread that he had shipped 8,510 15-60 bushels of wheat on the barge John K. Shaw, then lying at Delaware City and bound for Philadelphia, to he delivered to Raphael (the libelant) on his paying one and one-eighth cents per bushel freight. On the same day, October 1st, Morrison drew a sight-draft for $2,500 on Raphael, which he negotiated, with the bill of lading attached, and which Raphael paid in due course, receiving-with it the bill of lading. On the twelfth of October, the grain not coming, Raphael telegraphed to the master of the barge at Delaware City to know why the barge had not brought the grain, but he received no reply. Raphael then went to Delaware City, and saw the master, who, in substance, refused to come to Philadelphia because the farmers from whom Morrison had procured the grain which had been put on hoard,
The proofs show that there was put on board the barge in all 3,090 bushels of wheat under the following circumstances: A farmer named Reybold had been for some years in the habit of acting for Morrison as his agent in buying wheat from the farmers in the neighborhood of Delaware City and along the canal. The grain -was bought for cash, and was to be hauled by the' farmers, with their own ’teams, and emptied in bulk into the canal-boats furnished by Morrison. As the grain was run into the hold, it was weighed, and the quantity ascertained. Then Rey-bold procured from Morrison his checks for the respective amounts due the farmers, and paid them.
Reybold began loading this barge at St. George’s on October 1st, and on that day received from E. L. Mifflin 548 bushels of wheat, and from P. D. Reynolds 192 bushels. He had already advanced to Mifflin $350 on account. The barge was then moved to Delaware City, where, on the fourth, she received about 700 bushels, on the fifth nearly 2,000 bushels, and on the eleventh the balance, making up the total of 3,090 bushels. On the morning of the fifth Reybold learned that two checks, dated September 29th, which Morrison had given for grain purchased through him for a previous shipment, had gone to protest. He telegraphed to the cashier of the bank, who replied that the checks had not yet been provided for, but that Morrison had said ho would make them good that day. Reynolds also .telegraphed for Morrison to come at once to Delaware City, and he replied that everything would be right, and that he would come that afternoon. Morrison did not come, and at 5 p. m. Reybold wrote him that he had stopped all the teams and-should not haul any more grain until he saw him. After this, on the 11th, there was about 400 more bushels of grain put on the barge. The barge then lay at Delaware City until the fifteenth October, when, the grain not having been paid for by Morrison, the farmers, through their attorney, ordered the master to take the cargo to Baltimore, and the master, -with the assent of Morrison, and upon the demand of the farmers and of Rey-bold, issued another bill of lading on the fourteenth October, making the grain on board deliverable to consignees in Baltimore. It was so delivered, and was sold for the account’ of the farmers.
Reybold testified that all the grain was bought for cash, and was to be paid for as soon as delivered on board, and that, with respect to that put aboard on the fifth October and afterwards, there was a distinct agreement and condition that, if it was not paid for, it should be taken out. Mr. Higgins, who was the owner of 1,100 bushels, testifies to this, and that, knowing that Morrison was* in financial difficulties, he would not have put his property on the barge upon any other terms. Neither Rey-bold nor Higgins nor any of the farmers knew, until the telegram from Raphael on the 12th, that a bill of lading had been issued by the master to Morrison..
It is contended,-on behalf of the respondents, that the bill of lading held by libelant is altogether void, not only because signed by the master
In this case there is evidence to prove that the understanding of the farmers, who furnished the grain, with Reybold, the agent of the shipper, was, that the barge was not to be taken away until the grain was paid for, and as to the greater part of the whole amount, which was put aboard after Morrison stopped payment, there can be no doubt that there was a distinct understanding that the grain should be taken out again if the money was not paid. And the master must have known that his barge was not being loaded, and that he was being detained because the farmers claimed to hold the grain until the purchase money was paid. If at that time he had been asked to give Morrison a bill of lading, be would have known that Morrison was not the owner of the grain, but that the farmers retained a jus disponendi. lie could not at that time and with that knowledge have given a hill of lading which would have defeated their rights. Thompson v. Trail, 2 Car. & P. 334; same case on appeal, 6 Barn. & C. 36. And this is the difference which, in my judgment, distinguishes the facts of this case from those of Raw
It would, of course, have been more regular for the vendors of the grain to have each taken a receipt from the master as evidence of their intention to retain a jus disponendi; and, in a commercial port where that method of retaining a lien on goods put aboard conveyances for transportation is established and well known, it might be that the court would hold that the absence of such a receipt was a decisive proof of an unconditional delivery; but whether a delivery is without any retention of a jus disponendi or not is always a question of intention to be derived from the acts, declarations and circumstances accompanying the delivery. Prince v. Railroad, 101 Mass. 546. A barge lying in a canal in a farming country, for the reception of grain to be hauled and placed on board by the growers, is known to be loading under very different circumstances from a vessel receiving cargo in a commercial port. She is in fact for the time being a warehouse for the collection of the grain which is to constitute the cargo. Delivery on board is a prerequisite of payment; and when it is known to the master that the grain has not been paid for, that the vendors do not intend to relinquish their title to it, and that the retention of the title is necessary for their protection because of the failing condition of the shipper, under such circumstances the master cannot safely give a bill of lading to the shipper.
The proof is not very clear as to the knowledge of the master in this case, but I think enough appears from which it is only a fair inference that he well knew on October 5th why it was that he was being detained, and that he then knew that the barge was not to be allorved to leave until payment for the grain was made. Notwithstanding, therefore, that an. antedated bill of lading may be allowed to operate by way of estoppel and relation upon the grain subsequently put aboard, still it must be affected by whatever knowledge the master had, at the time the goods were actually ladened, with regard to the intention of the vendors not to unconditionally part with their property.
In Bryans v. Nix, 4 Mees. & W. 774, a case frequently referred to as authority on this class of questions, receipts for two cargoes of oats were obtained from the masters of two canal-boats, and dralts were drawn against them. At the time the receipts were given, one boat was loaded, but the other was not, although the shipper had a cargo prepared for her.
Applying the doctrine of Bryans v. Nix to the present case, it would follow that any contract, agreement, or understanding which Morrison had with the vendors of the grain, after the issuing of the blank bill of lading, and while the grain was going aboard, even though unknown to the master, and which was subsequently executed by the signing of new bills of lading by the master under which they took possession, can be sustained as against the holder of tlio first bill of lading. It is very true that it is settled law that, where a vendor delivers goods to a carrier by order of a purchaser, the appropriation is determined. Delivery to the carrier is delivery to the vendee, and the property vests immediately. Benj. Sales, § 362; Halliday v. Hamilton, 31 Wall. 560; Prince v. Railroad Co., 101 Mass. 542. But this rule is not contravened by asserting Hie jus disponendi of. the vendor, when the circumstances evidence an intention to retain, and where there is a special agreement to retain it. If the goods are not delivered to the carrier unconditionally as goods to which the shipper his acquired title, the carrier cannot validly agree, and certainly by an antecedently issued bill of lading he cannot contract,
The grain being the property of the vendors, it was rightly given up to them without requiring them to resort to legal process, except as to the portion of Mifflin’s grain which was paid for by the $350 advanced to him by Morrison, and which respondent has tendered. The decree will be in favor of the libelant for the proper value of so much of the Mifflin grain as had been paid for. Each party must pay his own costs.