Williams, Black & Co v. Wilmington & Weldon Railroad

93 N.C. 42 | N.C. | 1885

The action is prosecuted for the recovery of the value of the undelivered cotton mentioned in two bills of lading, upon the faith of which and under an arrangement with the consignor they made full advancements in honoring his drafts. It does not proceed upon allegation of fraud practiced through the instrumentality of the defendant's agent, and made successful by means of the false bills of lading. We must therefore consider the case as resting upon contract or the common law liabilities of carriers of goods for their safe transportation and delivery to the consignees and the failure of the defendant to do so.

The authorities cited and discussed in the well-prepared brief of defendant's counsel seem to sustain his proposition that the authority to issue such bills depends upon the actual delivery of goods, and if issued without delivery they do not bind the principal, and that this defense is open to the latter. Some of the authorities to this effect we propose to refer to.

"Except as against a bona fide transferee of the bills of lading for value," remarks a recent writer, "the carrier may contradict it as to thedelivery to him of the goods, or as to their description, quality or condition." Abbott's Trial Evi., 537, sec. 45.

Carrying the rule still further, Mr. Daniel, in his excellent work on Negotiable Instruments, Vol. 2, sec. 1733, states it thus: "Although the bill of lading is signed by the master of the ship, his (45) subscription is as agent for the owners, and the contract is binding upon them. But the master has no authority to grant a bill of lading unless the goods be actually received on board the ship; and if he transcends his authority in this respect, and the goods be not on board, the ship owners will not be bound by the bill, although it be transferredto a bona fide endorsee for value."

So it is said by the Supreme Court of the United States that the general owner is not "estopped from showing the real character of the transaction by the fact that libellants advanced money upon the faith of bills of lading." Freeman v. Buckingham, 18 How., 182; Pollard v. Vinton,105 U.S. 7.

In like manner Mr. Justice Davis, delivering the opinion of the Court in the Lady Franklin, 8 Wall., 327, and reiterating the doctrine, says: "The attempt made in the prosecution of this libel to charge this vessel for the nondelivery of a cargo which she never received, and therefore could not deliver because of a false bill of lading, cannot be successful, and we are somewhat surprised that the point is pressed here."

He adds: "In this case the bill of lading acknowledges the receipt of so much flour and is prima facie evidence of the fact. It is, however, not conclusive on this point, but may be contradicted by oral testimony." *64

Upon similar grounds are the rulings in this Court which declare written acknowledgments of money received liable to contradiction by parol proof when no contract is formed by them, as in Brown v. Brooks, 52 N.C. 93;Smith v. Brown, 10 N.C. 580, and other cases.

When no goods are placed in custody of the carrier's agent to transport, there is no subject matter to support a contract, and hence no obligation is imposed by the receipt put in the form of a contract. There can be no conveyance unless there be something to convey, and therefore no breach of obligation or duty.

The result is that the defendant company has incurred no liability in this form of action by the bill of lading for eight bales given in (46) May. Of them only two were delivered to the agent, and they were consigned to the plaintiffs and received by them.

But the company is responsible for the failure to carry and deliver the ten bales mentioned in the bill of May preceding. These did pass into the possession of the agent, and although their first destination was fixed in the contemporary bills at Norfolk to a consignee there doing business, it was competent for the consignors to change this and direct transportation to the plaintiffs in New York. This new superseded the first contract and annulled all liability under it. The cotton being then in possession of the company, it was competent to issue the second bill and undertake to transport the goods to the plaintiffs at New York. This was valid contract and was broken by the failure to carry to the plaintiffs and, instead, conveying to the consignees at Norfolk under the superseded contract.

There is error in entering up judgment for six bales of cotton described in the last bill of lading, and the plaintiffs should have received only the value of the ten first delivered.

The form of the case agreed will not permit of a reform of the judgment, for it requires us to sustain it in its entirety or render judgment for the defendant. The aspect of the case as considered by us seems not to have been contemplated by the parties, and therefore, reversing the judgment, we remand it for further proceedings in the court below.

Error. Judgment accordingly.

Cited: Burwell v. R. R., 94 N.C. 456; Mason v. Cotton Co., 148 N.C. 518;Peele v. R. R., 149 N.C. 393; Bank v. R. R., 175 N.C. 416; Riff v.R. R., 189 N.C. 588. *65

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