134 Va. 186 | Va. | 1922
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action of assumpsit brought by the railway company against Stoke to recover a balance claimed by the plaintiff to be due for freight and demurrage on two wagons. By consent of the parties, the case was heard by the court, upon an agreed statement of the facts, without the intervention of a jury. The trial court entered judgment for the defendant, which judgment we are now asked to review and reverse.
The facts of the case are not controverted. They are stated in the petition for the writ of error, and, after
On October 7, 1920, the defendant, H. F. Stoke, (hereinafter referred to as the defendant) entered into a written contract with the War Department of the United States Government for the purchase of two army escort wagons, which were then located at Camp Sherman, near Chillicothe, Ohio. By this contract the defendant agreed with the War Department to purchase two wagons, which were then stored at Camp Sherman, Chillicothe, Ohio, at the price of $45.00 each and pay to the government the purchase price therefor. In paragraph two of the said contract it is stated that the wagons were sold F. O. B. cars, at the point of storage, and were to be billed freight charges collect. And in paragraph four of this contract the depot quartermaster was directed and authorized to make delivery of the wagons in accordance with paragraph two' above referred to.
The defendant paid the purchase price for said wagons and the said depot quartermaster then placed an order for an empty automobile car to be placed on the side tracks of Camp Sherman, at Chillicothe, Ohio, and loaded the two wagons, completely set up, in this automobile car and directed that the two wagons be shipped to the defendant at Moneta, Virginia. The car was accordingly switched from Camp Sherman to the Norfolk and Western tracks at Chillicothe. The camp quartermaster prepared a bill of lading for the car containing the two wagons, which was signed by the agent of the Norfolk and Western and by the camp quartermaster. It provided that “the owner or consignee shall pay the freight and all other lawful charges accruing on said property, and if required shall pay the same before
Had these wagons been shipped completely “knocked down” they would have take’n a much cheaper freight rate and the total freight- charges would have been $70.79.
In view of the mistake of the depot quartermaster, the quartermaster supply officer at Chicago recommended that the government reimburse Mr. Stoke to the extent of $54, which the depot quartermaster calculated to be the difference between the freight charges properly assessed on the wagons as they were actually shipped and what the freight charges would have been had the wagons been shipped “knocked down.”
The general rule with reference to the primary liability of the consignor for freight, whether he is the owner of the goods or not, taken from 10 Corpus Juris, 445, sec. 699, and supported by a great array of authorities, is not controverted by the plaintiff in error, and is as follows:
“The consignor with whom the contract of shipment is made is primarily liable for the payment of the freight charges whether he is the owner of the goods or not. A contract to pay freight is to be implied from the mere fact that the consignor has placed the goods with the carrier for the purpose of being carried to their destination. This liability is discharged only by full payment by the consignor or the consignee. Acceptance by the consignee, although accompanied by an undertaking to pay the charges, does not, it has been said, discharge the consignor from liability to the carrier; the two contracts are held to be independent, and not inconsistent one with the other.”
See also Wooster v. Tarr, 8 Allen (Mass.) 270, 85 Am.
But the plaintiff in error insists that the purchaser is hable for the freight because he ordered the wagons to be sent by freight and at his expense, and hence is both consignor and consignee, relying upon Union Freight R. Co. v. Winkley, 159 Mass. 133, 34 N. E. 91, 38 Am. St. Rep. 398; Penn. R. Co. v. Descalzi, 59 Pa. Sup. Ct. 614; Phil. & Read. R. Co. v. Parry, 66 Pa. Sup. Ct. 49. and other cases.
In the view we take of the ease, we do not deem it necessary to examine the many authorities cited by counsel on the question of who is liable for freight under varying circumstances. The question involved is simply one of agency, and the extent of the powers of the agent. Did the depot quartermaster have authority from Stoke to engage an automobile car for the shipment of the two wagons? If he did, Stoke is liable for the freight and demurrage. If he did not have such authority, actual or ostensible, then Stoke is not liable. The wagons were “sold F. O. B. cars, point of present storage, and are billed freight charges collect.” In order to carry out the contract of sale, it was necessary for the depot quartermaster, as the agent of the government and not as the agent of Stoke, to deliver the wagons F. O. B. at the point of storage. In Becker & Co. v. Norfolk & W. R. Co., 125 Va. 558, 100 S. E. 478, a carload of dried fruit was shipped by Griffin-Skelly Company, from Fresno, Cal., to Roanoke, Va. “The bill of lading shows that the car was ‘consigned to the order of
(a) “It is further stipulated that the service to be performed hereunder shall be subject to the conditions, whether printed or written, herein contained, and said conditions are hereby agreed to by the shipper and by him accepted for himself and his assigns as just and reasonable.”
(b) “The owner or consignee to pay freight charges as per specified rates, upon the goods as they arrive.”
It was contended in that case that “in signing the bill of lading, the vendors acted as agents for the vendee.” But the court said: “We find no ground whatever to support the contention that the vendor in California was the agent of the vendee in signing the bill of lading. He was acting in his own interest in the performance of his own contract to deliver the goods to the carrier, which he had sold to the vendee, to be transported to Roanoke.” The same may be said in the ease at bar.
But even if it be conceded that the depot quartermaster. was the agent of Stoke, he was an agent of very limited authority, and it is said that one who deals with such an agent-does so at his own risk, that he is presumed to know the extent of the agent’s powers. Silliman v. Fredericksburg, etc., R. Co., 27 Gratt. (68 Va.) 119; Bowles v. Rice, 107 Va. 51, 57 S. E. 575, and cases cited; Rosendorf v. Poling, 48 W. Va. 621, 37 S. E. 555; Fruit Dispatch Co. v. Ellis, 75 W. Va. 52, 83 S. E. 187. The powers, however, of even a special agent, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, are usually co-extensive with the “holding out” by his principal. Huffcut on Agency, sec. 7. But where the special
The only authority the depot quartermaster had from Stoke was the “letter of acceptance of bid for surplus property,” in which it is stated that “all goods on this agreement are sold F. O. B. cars, point of present storage, and are billed freight charges collect.” In the agreed statement of facts it is stated that the order for wagons was given by Stoke, “believing that the quartermaster would ship the wagons ‘knocked down,’ so as to take the lowest rate, as had been done with similar previous shipments.” It further appears from said statement of facts agreed that “the quartermaster at Camp Sherman was called upon for an explanation as to why the wagons were shipped standing instead of being knocked down, to which he replied that he received no specific instructions as to whether the wagons should be forwarded assembled or knocked down and because of extreme shortage of personnel and in the interest of expediting shipment same were forwarded assembled.
‘ ‘ Recommendation: In view of the fact that the purchaser has had a penalty imposed upon him by the excess freight in this transaction, it is recommended that he be reimbursed to the extent of $54.00, the difference in freight paid and the amount that should have been
There was no “holding out” of the depot quartermaster as the agent of Stoke, but if there were it extended no further than to make the shipment in the usual manner “as has been done with similar previous shipments.” There was no authority to engage an automobile car and make a carload shipment of what could have been shipped in a much smaller space and at less than half the cost. The government recognized this and authorized the refund of the excess freight, but did so long after the demurrage charges had accrued, and at a time when it could not relieve Stoke. Stoke never, directly or indirectly, authorized the hiring of the automobile car. He did not hire the car himself, nor authorize the depot quartermaster to do it, nor hold him out to the public as having authority to do it. The depot quartermaster was not his agent, but the agent of the government, and if loss has accrued to the railroad company, it has not been occasioned by any act or neglect on the part of Stoke. Upon the whole case, we are of opinion that the judgment of the circuit court should be affirmed.
Affirmed.