delivered the opinion of the Court.
Upon complaint of Hamersley Manufacturing Company, the Interstate Commerce Commission issued an order that the Erie Railroad Company and a connecting carrier establish an all-rail rate of 10 cents per 100 pound
The Commission found the following facts concerning the course of the business involved. The Hamersley Company makes to a New York broker, who is a commission agent for specified foreign mills, its offer to buy a certain quantity and grade of pulp manufactured abroad. The broker cables the offer to one of the foreign mills which he represents, naming the prospective purchaser. If the offer is accepted, the broker so informs the Company and then makes a contract with it in his own name, sending a copy to the mill. The contract provides for shipment from abroad during a specified period and delivery, at the agreed price, on dock New York Harbor. The mill is not named in the contract. It ships to the broker the ordered quantities marked with a brand, but not so as to show the individual customer, and cables the broker when the shipment is made, naming the steamer, the quantity, the customers, and the date of expected arrival. This information is communicated by the broker to the Company. It appears from the record that the broker pays the mill as soon as he is thus advised of the shipment; and that the ship’s bill of lading is sent to him.
The carriers contend that title to the pulp does not pass to the Company until the broker arranges, at the Hoboken dock, for shipment of the specific lot to Garfield;-.that the shipment by the mill to its agent, as consignee, of pulp in quantity exceeding that ultimately destined to Garfield, terminates when the pulp is delivered on dock at Hoboken;.that this foreign shipment is distinct from the subsequent shipment by the broker to Garfield of the smaller quantity, under a new and local bill of lading; and that therefore, the rail movement from Hoboken to Garfield is. an independent intrastate transaction. But the nature of the shipment is not dependent upon the question when or to whom the title passes,
Pennsylvania R. Co.
v.
Clark Coal Co.,
Reversed.
