Allen v. Sewall

2 Wend. 327
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1829
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 2 Wend. 327 (Allen v. Sewall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Sewall, 2 Wend. 327 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1829).

Opinion

By the Court, Savage, Ch. J.

This is an action on the case against the defendants as common carriers, under the act of incorporation of the Dutchess and Orange Steam-boat Company ; the sixth section of which act is as follows : “ And be it further enacted, that the members of the said corporation shall be liable individually, in the same manner as carriers at common law, for the transportation of all goods, wares and merchandise, delivered to the agents of the said corpora[338]*338tian, and for all contracts which shall be made by such agents reiatmg- to the business of the said corporation.”

The plaintiffs were, in the course of their business, in the practice of sending large sums of money in bank bills from New-York to Albany by the steam-boats, and usually by the steam-boat Constellation, Captain Cruttenden. On the 15th November, 1826, the plaintiffs’ clerk delivered to Captain Livingston, of the steam-boat Sun, a packet containing in bank bills $14,347 50, and a check of $1800, with a request that he would deliver it to the person to whom it was addressed, at Albany, which he promised to do; and being informed that it was very valuable, locked it up in a drawer in his office. The Sun did not sail that day, and the letters and packets put on board of her were sent by the Richmond steam-boat. The packet in question never reached its destination, but was lost; and several questions are raised: 1. It is said that a suit will not lie against the defendants, being a portion of the stockholders; that it should have been brought against all the stockholders, or against one individual. I apprehend it was the intention of the legislature to put the defendants upon the same footing as to liability, as if they had not been incorporated. Individual liability in the act must be understood in contradistinction to corporate liability, and the defendants must therefore be held responsible to the same extent, and in the same manner as if there was no act of incorporation. The plaintiffs undoubtedly might have sued the corporation, but they had their election under the sixth section of the act to consider the association an unincorporated copartnership. It is true that the plaintiffs should have brought their suit against all the copartners, as this is an action quasi ex contractu; but this error of the plaintiffs can be taken advantage of only by plea in abatement; The defendants’ counsel have indeed referred us to some of the cases in which it was decided that want of joining all the partners as defendants might be taken advantage of on the trial upon the general issue, but the practice has been otherwise since the case of Rice v. Shute, (5 Burr. 2611.) It was there held, that the non-joinder of all the partners, defendants, must be pleaded in abatement. “ A creditor [339]*339knows,” says Lord Mansfield, “ with whom he dealt, but he does not know the secret partners. He may be nonsuited twenty times before he learns them all, or driven to a suit in equity for a discovery who they are.” (1 Saund. 291, b. n. 4, 5 Bos. & Pul. 364, 2 Bl. 947, and Seymour v. Minturn, 17 Johns. R. 174, in which the point was conceded upon the argument.) In the latter case, Spencer, Ch. J. says, “The objection could have been taken only under a plea in abatement. The case of Rice v. Shute, which has never been questioned, is decisive.”

2. The plaintiffs having abandoned so much of their claim as relates to the check of $1800, the next question is, whether bank bills are “goods, wares and merchandise.” The term goods is synonymous with personal chattels ; and “ bona et catalla,” it is said, although they do not, of their proper nature, extend to charters and evidences concerning freehold, or inheritance, or obligations, or other deeds or specialties, being things in action, yet in the case of an innkeeper’s liability, they do extend to such obligations ; “ and if one brings a bag or chest of evidences into the inn, or obligations, deeds, or other specialties, and by default of the innkeeper, they are taken away, the inkeeper shall answer for them, and the writ shall be bona et catalla generally, and the declaration shall be special.” (8 Co. 65.) Money hath been accounted to be goods and chattels; though things in action are not generally accounted goods and chattels. (Jacob's L. D. tit. Chattels.) This court has considered bank bills money, and held that as such they may be levied on by an execution. (12 Johns. R. 220.) Money is there decided to be goods and chattels ; “ and' it appears to us,” says Spencer, J., “ to comport with good policy as well as justice, to subject every thing of a tangible nature, excepting such things as the humanity of the law preserves to a debtor, and mere choses in action, to the satisfaction of the debtor’s debts.” Here the court expressly distinguish between bank bills and choses in action, calling the former money ; and that a person may be a common carrier of money as well as of other property, is decided, 11 Johns. R. 109.

[340]*340The liability of the defendants is, by the statute, the same as that of common carriers, and common carriers are responsible for the safe delivery of all goods entrusted to them or ^h’ agents or servants, unless the loss is occasioned by the act of God or a public enemy. (11 Johns. R. 109.) There needs no particular agreement for hire to render a common carrier liable, because, when there is none, the carrier may have a quantum meruit for it. (2 Show. 129.) Nor is there any ground for an imputation of fraud or concealment as to the contents of the packet. In some of the cases cited, there seems to have been a fraud practised in concealing the fact that money was sent, and such fraud exonerated the carrier. Thus, in Gibbon v. Paynton, (4 Burr. 2300,) £100 was concealed in a bag with hay; the price for carrying money was three pence per pound, and the coachman, the defendant, had given notice that he would not be accountable for money unless he was informed that money was delivered to him to be carried. Lord Mansfield held the defendant not liable, no notice having been given that money was sent by him, and the plaintiff being cognizant of the defendant’s advertisement as to the terms on which he would agree to be liable. So it was said by King, Ch. Justice, (1 Str. 145,) “If a box is delivered generally to a carrier, and he accepts it, he is answerable, though the party did not tell him there is money in it. But if the carrier asks, and the other says no, or if he accepts it conditionally, provided there is no money in it, in either of these cases I hold the carrier is not liable.” In this case, the plaintiffs’ clerk told captain Livingston that the packet was a very valuable one ; no objection was made to carrying it on that account; it was received. Nothing was said at the time about compensation. The practice was either to receive compensation upon delivery of the -packet, or at the end of the season.

3. The principal point, therefore, is whether the money in question was delivered to the captain of the Sun as the agent of the defendants %

It is not denied that captain Livingston was the general agent of the defendants in relation to the common and ordinary business of the steam-boat Sun. That boat carried pas[341]*341sengers and light freight, and it was the general practice of all the steam-boats which Carried passengers to carry money.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Wend. 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-sewall-nysupct-1829.