19 Johns. 44 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1821
delivered the opinion of the Court. (After stating the facts.) The questiod, upon this state of facts, is, on whom is the loss to fall; it being proved that the defendants were not guilty of any negligence in regard to the burning of the mill and store; and that there was no default in delivering flour according to the contract, until after the destruction of the mill.
It cannot, with any kind of propriety, be asserted, that these facts show a sale of the wheat to the defendants. On the contrary, it is manifest, that no sale was ever contemplated by either of the parties. If the defendants had kept this wheat specifically, by itself, there would have been no ground for saying, that they were liable for the loss. The general law of bailment was very ably discussed by Lord Holt, in Coggs v. Barnard; (2 Ld. Ray. 909.) and although his general division of bailments is imperfect, as respects the delivery of goods to a tradesman or manufacturer to operate upon ; yet in all his divisions, he does not consider a bailee responsible for inevitable accident, unless he be a person exercising a public employment; such as a common carrier, common hoyman, master of a ship, an innkeeper, &c. These are bound to answer for the goods, at all events, except where the joss is attributable to the act of God, or the enemies of the king. This, he considers truly, to be a politic establishment, contrived by the policy of the law, for the safety of all persons, the necessity of whose affairs oblige them to trust these sorts of persons, that they may be safe in their ways of dealing. Sir William Jones, in his treatise on bailment, has altered the arrangement of Lord Holt’s division of bailments, and has reduced his six kinds to five, which he has rendered more definite and comprehensive. His fifth class is Locatum, or a hiring, which, he says, is always for a reward. He subdivides the Locatum into, 1st. Locatio rei by which the hirer gains the temporary use of the thing; and 2d. Locatio operis faciendi, when work and la-
, He says, “ it may be right also to mention, that the distinction before taken, in regard to loans, between an obligation to restore the specific things, and a power or necessity of returning others of equal value, holds good likewise in the contrasts of hiring and depositing; in the first case, it is a regular bailment, in the second, it becomes a debt.” He divides loans into those that are for use, and those that are for consumption. The first are to be returned specifically, and ' the owner must abide the loss, if they perish, through any accident which a careful and vigilant man could not have avoided. The second, such as lending wine, corn, and other things, which are to be restored in equal value or quantity ; as these specific things are not to be returned, the absolute property of them is transferred to the borrower, who must bear the loss,however inevitable the misfortuneby which they are destroyed; and he cites the Digest, 19. 2. 31. and Bynkershoeck, Obs. Jur. Rom. lib 8. commenting on what he calls the famous law of Alfenus. “ If an ingot of silver be deli
The object was, that as the plaintiffs had wheat which they wished to turn into flour, and as the defendants had a mill adapted to its manufacture, the plaintiffs should, for a certain quantity of wheat of a given kind, receive a certain quantity of flour of a particular kind. I have already observed, and Sir William Jones and all the cases justify the position, that if the same wheat delivered by the plaintiffs was to be manufactured for, and delivered to them, the defendants, clearly, would not have been responsible for the present loss.' But the plaintiffs’ wheat was mixed with other wheat belonging either to the defendants or other persons. I confess I do not see how' that alters the case, unless we are to presume, without evidence, that it was mixed with an inferior quality of wheat. If it was put with wheat of exactly the same, or of a superior quality, the act was not injurious to the plaintiffs. Its indentity was destroyed, but that was entirely immaterial, if there yet remained wheat of the first quality. The plaintiffs expected that the identity was to be changed in the manufacture. 1 presume, that neither party contemplated that the plaintiffs’ wheat was to be kept separate from other wheat of the
Judgment for the defendant.