A. J. Neimeyer Lumber Co. v. Burlington & Missouri River Railroad

74 N.W. 670, 54 Neb. 321, 1898 Neb. LEXIS 69
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1898
DocketNo. 7691
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 74 N.W. 670 (A. J. Neimeyer Lumber Co. v. Burlington & Missouri River Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. J. Neimeyer Lumber Co. v. Burlington & Missouri River Railroad, 74 N.W. 670, 54 Neb. 321, 1898 Neb. LEXIS 69 (Neb. 1898).

Opinions

Ragan, C.

C. N. Deitz is a lumber merchant in the city of Omaha, Nebraska, and will be hereinafter designated as Reitz. The A. J. Nedmeyer Lumber Company are a corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of lumber at Waldo, Arkansas, and will be hereinafter designated as Neimeyer & Co. Simpson, Perkins & Co. are lumber merchants in the city of Dallas, Texas, and will be hereinafter designated Simpson & Co. The Burlington & Missouri River Railroad Company in Nebraska is a railway corporation organized under the laws of this state and will be hereinafter designated as the railroad company. About January 1,1892, Reitz ordered of Simpson & Co. a large quantity of a certain class of lumber.. It appears that Simpson & Co. did not have the material ordered on hand and purchased the lumber to fill the order from Neimeyer & Co., and they, in pursuance of the directions of Simpson & Co., shipped it by rail to Reitz, the bills of lading issued by the initial carrier being made out to Reitz, consignee. Soon after the shipment of this lumber, which consisted of 17 car loads, Simpson & Co. failed and Nedmeyer & Co. then notified the railroad company, into whose possession as a common carrier the lumber shipped had come as the last carrier in the line of transit, of the insolvency of Simpson & Co., that the 17 cars of lumber belonged to them, Neimeyer & Co., to hold such lumber, and not to deliver it to Reitz. It seems that when the railroad company received this notice it had already delivered 6 car loads of the lumber, and disregarding the notice of Nei[324]*324meyer & Co. delivered the other 11 ears also to Deitz, and thereupon.Neimeyer & Go. brought this suit against the railroad company in the district court oí Douglas county to recover the value of the 11 cars of lumber delivered by it to Deitz after receiving índice not to deliver. The railroad company had a verdict and judgment, and Neimeyer & Go. have filed here a petition in error to review the same.

1. Neimeyer & Go. contend that by virtue of the contract existing between them and Simpson & Go. the delivery of the 17 cars of lumber shipped to Deitz was to take place at Omaha, Nebraska, and that until the lumber reached that place the title thereto remained in Neimeyer & Go., and that the railroad company, all the time it had such lumber in its possession, held it as the agent and bailee of Neimeyer & Co. A vendor’s title to property sold by him is divested on its delivery to his vendee, and immediately upon such delivery the title to the property vests in the vendee; but Avhere delÍArerv of property sold is to take place is, of course, to be determined by the contract between the Arendor and vendee; and if the contract between the parties expressly provides that delivery shall be made at a certain place, then the Aren dor’s title to the property is not divested until deliArery is made at such place. But the universal holding of the courts is that where the contract between the Amndor and Arendee is silent upon the subject of the place of delivery, the delivery of the property by the vendor to a carrier, for transportation to the vendee, of itself then and there divests the vendor’s title to the property, and the vendee’s title to such property, from the moment of .such delivery to the carrier, attaches. (21 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law 528-530; Benjamin, Sales [2d ed.] secs. 181, 682; 2 Chitty, Contracts [11th Am. ed.] 1201; Smith v. Gillett, 50 Ill. 200; Krulder v. Ellison, 47 N. Y. 36, and cases there cited; McKee v. Bainter, 52 Neb. 604; Congdon v. Kendall, 53 Neb. 282.) In such case the carrier is, in contemplation of law, the bailee of the person to whom and not by whom [325]*3251 lie goods are sent. Keeping in view these principies we now proceed to an examination of the contract existing between Neimeyer & Co. and Simpson & Co., which resulted in the former selling to the latter the 17 car loads of lumber involved in this controversy. The contract existing between these parties is found in certain letters which passed between them. It would seem thht prior to January 8, 1892, Neimeyer & Co. had sent out to the lumber dealers of the country statements showing the various kinds of lumber which they manufactured and had for sale, and it was prior to this date that Deitz had ordered of Simpson & Co. the bill of lumber which the latter did not have on hand. On this date, January 8, 1892, Simpson & Co. wrote Neimeyer & Co., saying: “We received your stock sheet sometime since, and herewith send you two orders, which you will find very nice ones. Please name your, figures as Ioav as possible on these orders.' * * * Also inclose us your lowest f. o. b. price list.” Accompanying this letter were. the two orders mentioned therein. These orders, so far as material here, were as follows:- “A. J. Neimeyer Lumber Company, Waldo, Ark.: Ship to O. N. Deitz, Omaha, Nebraska, * * *• 17 cars of certain described Limber. If for any reason you cannot ship, promptly advise. Please also send bill of lading and invoice to us at Dallas.” Neimeyer & Go. at once filled the order of Simpson & Co. by shipping the 17 car loads of lumber as already stated to Deitz and on January 9, 1892, wrote to Simpson & Co. as follows: “Your valued order of January 8 received and filed for prompt shipment, with the exception of two items. * * * We have filled your order as follows: [Here follow the description and price of the lumber in the 17 cars.] Prices f. o. b. Omaha, Nebraska.” It is to be observed that in the correspondence between Simpson & Co. and Neimeyer & Co. the question of the place of delivery of this lumber was not inquired about nor discussed. The place of the delivery of the lumber was not the subject of the negotiations. The expression in the [326]*326Neimeyer & Co. letter of January 9, “Prices f. o. b. Omaha, Nebraska,” they insist affords conclusive evidence that the intention of the parties was that the delivery of this lumber to Simpson & Co. should take place at Omaha, Nebraska. Three witnesses testified on the trial as to the meaning among railroad men and shippers of the expression, “Prices f. o. b. Omaha, Nebraska.” One of them said it meant “that the price named in the shipper’s invoice is the price at Omaha.” Another said it meant “to be delivered at Omaha free on board cars.” Neimeyer himself, president of Neimeyer & Co., testified: “If we say f. o. b. Omaha, that means that is the price delivered at Omaha.” We think the true construction of the contract is the one placed thereon by the district court, and is in line with the explanation of the phrase in the contract under consideration made by the first-and last of the witnesses just named. The word “prices” which precedes “f. o. b. Omaha, Nebraska,” is of importance in the construction of this contract. By that expression Neimeyer & Co. meant that the prices which they had .affixed to the lumber sold Simpson & Co. were to be the prices which the lumber should cost Simpson & Co. at Omaha; not that the delivery of the lumber to Simpson & Co. should take place at Omaha, but that the price charged Simpson & Co. by Neimeyer & Co. for the lumber was io be its price at Omaha; in other words, that Neimeyer & Co. should pay the freight on this lumber from Waldo, Arkansas, to Omaha, Nebraska; or, what is the same thing, that Simpson & Co., or their vendee, Deitz, might pay the freight and then remit the purchase price of the lumber less the freight. But the fact that Neimeyer & Co.

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Bluebook (online)
74 N.W. 670, 54 Neb. 321, 1898 Neb. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-j-neimeyer-lumber-co-v-burlington-missouri-river-railroad-neb-1898.