141 N.Y.S. 606 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
The defendant is a common carrier of freight for hire and . this action was brought on assigned claims for damages caused by its failure to deliver 66,000 bushels of corn, 15,000 bushels of rye and 76,000 bushels of oats for which its freight agent, Henry C: Palmer, at Albany, signed and issued thirty-seven order hills of lading, between Jaquary 5 and February 26, 1910, inclusive, consigning the grain to the order of Durant & Elmore at the city of Hew York, containing directions to “notify Otto Keusch at. Hew York City.” The Durant &• Elmore Company, which for brevity will he referred to as the consignor, was a corporation engaged in dealing in grain, and its headquarters were at Albany. It had succeeded to a copartnership business conducted at the same place by Durant & Elmore; and, according to the evidence, was the oldest and most respected house of the kind in the United States. One Gibson Oliver was its treasurer and managed its business. It had been shipping over defendant’s line since 1892, and shipped from 8,000 to 10,000 carloads per annum, and was defendant’s largest shipper.
Keusch was a grain broker and a member of the Produce Exchange of the city of Hew York, and had been engaged in selling grain on commission on the exchange since 1901, and was thirty years of age. He.had sold grain to the consignor off and on from.1905, and in the spring of 1909 he sold a large quantity of buckwheat for it. He testified that he handled .bills of lading for the consignor representing 650,000 bushels, presumably including those in suit, until the failure of the consignor, which occurred on the 19th or 21st day of May,
The arrangement between the consignor and Keusch was that he was to sell the grain on its arrival, according to instructions transmitted, or to submit bids for the grain and sell if approved by the consignor, and, if not, the grain was to be “held in store.” Palmer, in violation of his duty to the defendant and acting in excess of his authority, which was limited to issuing bills of lading for freight delivered to the defendant, and evidently in furtherance of a scheme, conspiracy and plan with the consignor, acting through Oliver, to cheat and defraud the defendant, signed in the office of the consignor bills of lading, in standard form in blank, without having received any freight therefor, and left them there to be filled out and used at will, and they were under the direction of Oliver filled out by the bookkeeper and confidential clerk showing car numbers, weights of goods and route as via defendant’s railroad, which did not extend to New York, and the Erie and New York Central. This practice continued a year and a half or two years before the termination of Palmer’s agency, which was stipulated
Of course, the entire recovery could not be sustained on the assignment from the bank, for its advances on any theory were much less; and it is impossible to tell whether the jury found for or against the plaintiff on that assignment, and, therefore, the judgment cannot in any event be sustained on the assignment from the bank, unless, as matter of law, plaintiff was entitled to recover in the right of the bank and made that point on the trial of the action. The plaintiff did not claim upon the trial to be entitled, as matter of law, to judgment for the amount advanced by the bank, and the learned trial court was. not requested to rule on that point. The case was tried and
The recovery -in the right of Keusch is sought to be sustained on the theory that the defendant is estopped from denying the authority of Palmer to issue the bills of lading; and the decision of the Court of Appeals in Bank of Batavia v. N. Y., L. E. & W. R. R. Co. (106 N. Y. 195) is relied upon in support of that contention. That was an action based on a false bill of lading for sixty-five barrels of beans, issued by the carrier’s agent in Batavia in collusion with one Williams, who purported to be the shipper, to recover the amount advanced to him by the local bank on the day of shipment, on a draft on the fictitious consignee, to which, the bill of lading was attached. On the contention then made that there was no privity between the bank and the carrier, the court held, on the authority of New York & N. H. R. R. Co. v. Schuyler (34 N. Y. 30), that no privity, other than that which flowed from the wrongful act, was necessary; and emphatically and unqualifiedly declared the settled law of agency “that where the principal has clothed his agent with power to do an act upon the existence of some extrinsic fact necessarily and peculiarly within the knowledge of the agent, and of the existence of which the act of executing the power is itself a representation, a third person dealing with such agent in entire good faith, pursuant to the apparent power, may rely upon the representation, and the principal is estopped from denying its truth to his prejudice,” applicable to bills of lading.
I am of opinion that the doctrine of equitable estoppel does
It is contended, however, that if this evidence would ordinarily have constituted notice to Keusch that the grain had not been delivered to the defendant, it did not in the case at bar, for Keusch says that he understood that the consignor had a “ milling in transit privilege,” under which it could unload and clean, or mill, or grind, the grain and reload it or the ground product into the same or other cars, and. forward it; and that he had been informed by Oliver that the consignor had a “special arrangement” or “some arrangement” with defendant for handling “everything in bond,” and “by which grain could remain indefinitely on the cars'; ” but that he did not know whether or not it was charged demurrage. Oliver absconded and did not testify. The testimony of Keusch with respect to having received this information from Oliver is wholly uncorroborated and, though uncontradicted, is quite improbable in so far as he claims to have been informed, and to have believed, that the defendant held the grain, or permitted the consignor to hold it in cars indefinitely without a substantial charge for the use thereof. It would seem that he had had sufficient business experience to know that such information, if thus communicated to him, could not be true; and if he was so informed, it is evident that he appreciated that it was a very unusual arrangement, and that he would have inquired into it further but for the fact that he feared that he would lose the consignor’s business and that inquiry would have revealed facts affecting the security of the bills of lading which he had accepted. Keusch knew that this grain was not grown in Hew York, and that it had come through from the west. Although the bills of lading were dated Albany, he also knew that the gram was to be shipped, from Oneonta. In order to obtain low freight rates, grain was usually billed through to seaboard with “diverting,”or “re-consignment” and “milling in transit” privileges. This consignor billed its grain through to Boston or Portland, via Lehigh Valley, Erie or Lackawanna, from Buffalo to Binghamton, and thence via defendant’s road; and its diverting point was Oneonta, where, to the knowledge of Keusch, it had and operated a flouring mill and elevator and had
On the 31st day of January, 1910, Keusch wrote Oliver a letter, which he marked “Personal & Confidential,” stating, among other things, that he had bills of lading for about 240,000 bushels of com on hand, and that the banks were “ running around to see what is doing.” He testified that this was not true, and that he wrote it to induce Oliver to send the grain on; which would indicate that he then thought that the consignor’s course of business was irregular at least, or he could not have expected that such a letter would spur Oliver to greater activity. That letter indicated that the market for the grain represented by the bills of lading was not favorable, and that the banks were calling for more margin, and that it might be necessary for the consignor to remit funds; and contained a postscript written in ink by Keusch, as follows :
“ The Produce Ex. Bank President called upon me today to explain to him why com from Oneonta should be four or five weeks getting to N. Y. He claimed the E. E. agents up there*708 sign Ladings without the stuff being on cars —he said if thats the case the bank is not protected as the R. R. agent is not held nor .the railroad for issuing such paper.. I did not tell him that your grain all arrived under ex-numbers or he would have smelled a rat •— I don’t want the bank to get 'suspicious of your paper otherwise Otto (meaning himself) may sit down hard so please hustle the stuff along a little more.”
■ Oliver replied to this letter, saying, among other things, that the consignor would furnish margins as might be required, and “ do not let those fellows scare you down there or get you nervous. * * * We have been holding this grain back as much as possible' owing in a large extent to the prevailing conditions in the market, which are narrow, and also because of the billing that, we have on this grain, on which we do not want to attract too much attention with the road by bunching them. Everything, however, is all right, and we will have the boys cleaning you up steadily now daily. There may be a break for a day or two and then the flood gates will be let loose, and you will be getting good arrivals daily, and will clean up with you before heading anything more your way, as we do not want to embarrass you in any way, shape or manner.” Keusch also says that the postscript was entirely false. But that, if true, would not aid the plaintiff, for although it is not very material whether Keusch thus acquired information that bills of lading were being issued without the delivery of the grain to the defendant, or gleaned that information from the ■course of business or from Oliver or another source,—it emphasizes the point if he knew it before that time and, as would seem, was merely letting Oliver know by a personal letter that the bank suspected it. Oliver did not deny the charge, and the statement in his answering letter about not wanting to attract the attention of the “road” by “bunching them” was direct notice that something had been concealed from defendant, and adds significance to his failure to deny the charge-made in the postscript, for it indicates that he understood that Keusch knew that the grain had not been delivered to the defendant. A letter from Keusch to Oliver the next day, in which he acknowledged the receipt of reassuring telegrams and speaks of “ everything ” as being
This analysis of the evidence plainly shows that Keusch relied upon the consignor, and not upon the hills of lading, or the liability of the defendant, on the theory that it had received and was holding the grain; and if he did not, then equity and good conscience required that he should have communicated with the defendant when he had reason to believe, if indeed he did not actually know, that the grain had not been delivered to the railroad. On these' facts there certainly was no equitable estoppel precluding the defendant from denying, as against Keusch, that it received the grain represented by the bills of lading upon which the major part, at least, of the advances were made.
The doctrine of the Bank of Batavia Case {supra), which does not"'prevail mother jurisdictions, should not be extended. It should be confined to bills of lading believed by the transferee to have been issued in the ordinary and usual course of business, and should not be applied to bills of lading such as those in question, which were known by Keusch not to have been so issued, but to have been issued pursuant to special arrangement by which the grain then in the possession of the consignor might be delivered to the railroad for shipment, ór might not, according to the election of the consignor. The learned counsel for the respondent draws attention to certain provisions of the Penal Code, declaring crimes as follows, viz., for the agent of a common carrier to issue a bill of lading without having received the freight (§ 629), or to deliver freight for which an order bill of lading has been issued, without its surrender. (§ 633), or to pledge the property without the consent in writing of the holder of the bill of lading (§ 632), which provisions are now contained in the Penal Law (§§ 360, 365, 361), and he argues that Keusch was warranted in relying thereon. One of those statutory provisions was designed to prevent the perpetration of such frauds as that now under consideration, but they have no particular bearing on the issues in this case.
On the new trial, which must be ordered, the right of the
It follows that the judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin and Clarke, JJ., concurred; Scott, J., dissented.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs-to appellant to abide event. Order to be settled on notice.