27 Mo. App. 360 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1887
Lead Opinion
Plaintiff sues defendant for the conversion of a lot of cigars. The conversion is based on a misdelivery of the goods. The facts are, the plaintiff shipped the goods upon the receipt of the following letter :
“La Cygne, Linn Co., Kan., Oct. 1, 1884.
“Wm. A. Wilson & Co.,
“ Gentlemen: This being fair week, and my stock getting very low, I would like you to ship me via first express, 3 M. Quakeress cigars : 2 M. Colorado Maduro; 1 M. Maduro. If you have not the brands asked for,
“Yours truly,
“F. H. Davis.”
The consignment was made, as indicated by the letter, to “F. H. Davis, La Cygne, Kan.” Plaintiff had never had any dealing with a man by that name, and made inquiry for his name and standing in the usual commercial channels, and thus learned that there was a man by that name in business in La Cygne, Kansas, of good financial and commercial standing. It appears,, from the evidence, that there were, at that time, at that place, two men of that name, one a resident merchant, the other a stranger and swindler, who was running a. booth at the fair, then going on at La Cygne. It was the-swindler who ordered the goods. There is some question made in the case as to whether Davis was his real name, but the evidence indicates he went under that name at that time.
When the goods arrived at La Cygne, the swindler, who had ordered them as before stated, presented himself as the consignee, and demanded them. The defendant’s agent, not knowing him, but knowing the merchant, sought the latter and learned from his clerk that the-goods were not for him. The swindler then produced a letter from plaintiff addressed to F. H. Davis, containing a bill of the goods. The postmaster had delivered this letter to the merchant, who had opened it and endorsed thereon, “opened by mistake,” and returned it to the postoffice. It was afterwards delivered to the swindler. The following extract from the agent’s testimony explains the delivery of the goods:
“ Q. State what occurred when you received these packages of cigars, October 2, 1884, in regard to their delivery. A. After the goods had been put off of the-car, a man calling himself F. H. Davis said, ‘ Those are-my goods,’ speaking of the cigars. I said, ‘No, sir, they
I. This is a sufficient statement of the facts for a full disposition of the questions presented. Instructions were given for plaintiff, holding defendant liable, abso
“1. If the court finds, from the evidence, that the defendant received and undertook to convey plaintiff ’ s goods from Kansas City, Missouri, to La Cygne, Kansas, and there to deliver the same to F. H. Davis, and that the defendant, a reasonable'time having elapsed there, for, has failed to do so, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover from the defendant the reasonable value of such goods, with interest at six per cent.”
“2. It is no defence to this action that the defendant delivered the goods • of plaintiff to a person falsely or fraudulently assuming the name of the person named as the consignee thereof.”
The foregoing statement of facts shows clearly that the defendant delivered the goods to the party who ordered them. To state it in a different way: a man going by the name of F. EL Davis ordered the goods, and to this man the defendant made delivery. . •
If two men of the same name live in the same town, and one of them orders goods from a merchant at a distance, and the carrier delivers the goods to the man of that name who had really made the order, is such carrier to be held responsible, simply because the consignor thought his order was from the other of the two men? No case has gone to this extreme. The carrier is responsible for a correct delivery, but he is not the guardian of his patrons, nor, when faultlesshimself, must he answer for’their mistakes or mend their misfortunes.
II. It may be that, on a retrial of this cause, plaintiff will be able to prove that the name, F. EL Davis, was assumed by the swindler. The question would then be, is defendant liable in the absence of proof of negligence ? I am of the opinion it would not be. The question is one of general interest as well as of great importance to commercial business. It has not been discussed in our own courts, though it has met with judicial determination elsewhere.
We have been thus particular in stating the facts of that case, to show how nearly it fits the one under consideration. The court assumed “that his real name was not A. Swannick, but that he fraudulently assumed
The court make use of the following language, which is specially applicable to the facts in this case, viz: “Suppose, upon the arrival of the goods at Saratoga Springs, the impostor had appeared and claimed them ; to the demand of the defendant upon him to show that he was the man to whom they were sent, he replies: ‘ True, there is another A. Swannick here, but he has nothing to do with this matter; I am the one who ordered and purchased the goods ; here is the bill of the goods, and here is the letter notifying me of their consignment to me, addressed to me at my post-office box 1595.’ The defendant would be justified in delivering the goods to him, whether he was the owner or not, because he had ascertained that he was the person to whom the plaintiff had sent them.”
In that case, as in this, the carrier sought out the other party and did not deliver to the impostor until there had been a refusal by the other. But it will be noticed that the court excuses the carrier, if the supposed case had been a reality, without reference to the question of his first seeking the party thought to be the purchaser by the plaintiff, for the reason that the goods were delivered to the party to whom they were addressed and who made the purchase. The supposed facts, as put by the court in that case, were actual facts in this case.
It is contended in the case at bar, as it was in the case cited, that plaintiff intended to send the goods to the other party, but the fact is, as was remarked in the case cited, he intended to send them to the man who ordered them, supposing, erroneously, that he was the other man. The truth of the whole matter is, that plaintiff shipped the goods on the order of, and to, the man to whom the defendant delivered them. That he was
The views here advanced find ample support in Dunbar v. Railroad (110 Mass. 26); Schneider v. American Ex. Co. (N. Y. Supreme Court, Dec. 3, 1885, reported in Daily Register); The Drew case (15 Fed. Rep. 836). The authorities cited by plaintiff have been under review in some of the cases above referred to, and it is said they all turn on the question of negligence. One of the strongest cases to which our attention has been called is that of Price v. Railroad (50 N. Y. 213), but it is there stated by the court that “ defendant delivered them (the goods) to a stranger, without making any inquiry as to who, or what, he was, simply upon his inquiring for the goods.” No effort whatever was made to find out the consignee or the identity or right of the stranger asking for them.
Holding the view that defendant, as a carrier, de livered to the party to whom the goods were shipped, we need not consider the question as to its liability as a warehouseman. The only liability that can exist in this case would be such as would arise from the negligence of defendant in the delivery — that is, if defendant was aware of the fraud practiced on plaintiff and failed to thwart it by holding the goods ; or, if proper care in the delivery on defendant’s part would have led to a discovery of the fraud, a liability would attach. As to whether such care was used, under all the circumstances, is a question of fact.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Concurrence Opinion
Concurring. — I concur in reversing this case, on the ground that the instructions given by the court indicate that it ignored the question of negligence on the part of defendant’s servant. If it had been