121 Iowa 502 | Iowa | 1903
In July of the year 1899 various parties living on the line of the Burlington, Cedar Rapids & Northern Railway Company delivered to said company numerous cases of eggs consigned to O. 0. Knispel & Co. and Knispel & Lenhart, Chicago, Ill. This freight was delivered by the Burlington & Cedar Rapids Company to the defendant company at West Liberty, Iowa, for shipment to Chicago. Shipping receipts were issued by the Burlington Company, which recited that the goods were marked in the names of the aforesaid consignees. In due course the goods arrived in Chicago, and while yet in the possession of the defendant plaintiff sent it a telegram which read as follows: “Cedar Rapids, Iowa, July 9th, 1899. J. JET. Norris, 0. R. L & P. Ry. Co., Chicago, III: I hold bills of lading for eggs arriving today from B., C. R. & N. points consigned to O. C. Knispel and Co., and Knispel and Lenhart, Chicago. Do not make delivery until bills of lading are surrendered. I will be there Monday. Henry Schlichting.” Defendant received this telegram, and on the strength thereof refused to deliver the goods to the consignees. Thereupon plaintiff wrote the following letter, which was delivered to one of-the consignees, and by them presented to the railway company at its office in Chicago, Ill. The letter read in this wise: “Chicago, Ills. July 10th, 1899. Mr. Norris, 0. R. I. & P. Agent at Chicago — Dear Sir: I wired you Saturday, July 8th not to deliver any eggs billed to O. 0. Knispel and Co. and Knispel and Lenhart without bills of lading, that I would call on you today. That I held bills of lading. Now I saw the gentleman and I think he is A No. 1, so I will recall that order and you deliver the eggs to them without the bills of lading as you have done in the past
Evidence was offered to prove a custom to deliver without the production of bills of lading. The evidence was not sufficient to establish any such custom, even if it were competent to prove it. But we doubt the admissibility of such evidence. Bank v. Bissell, 72 N. Y. 615; Bank v. R. R. Co., 132 Mo. 492 (33 S. W. Rep. 521, 53 Am. St. Rep. 505).
The order directing a verdict for defendant was right, and it is aeeirmed.