10 F. Cas. 905 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1846
This case involves two questions of fact: First, wheth
I cannot doubt that the consignees of the ship had authority to arrange with the owner or consignees of the cargo in respect to the time and manner of its delivery, and that the arrangement thus entered into for general convenience and the better security of the cargo, was not a personal matter between the parties to the agreement. The consignees of the ship had the control of her for the purpose of delivering the cargo, and could modify and regulate such delivery in any way consistent with the rights of those interested in the cargo. The case does not stand upon an independent agreement, speaking in a technical sense, but upon an understanding between the parties in respect to the delivery, on which the respondents had a right to rely, and the breach of which occasioned the damage. The decree must be affirmed, with costs.