Bliss v. Geer

7 Ill. App. 612, 1880 Ill. App. LEXIS 278
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 13, 1880
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Ill. App. 612 (Bliss v. Geer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bliss v. Geer, 7 Ill. App. 612, 1880 Ill. App. LEXIS 278 (Ill. Ct. App. 1880).

Opinion

Wilson, J.

The two principal questions arising in the present record are, first, whether there was a delivery of the goods sufficient to vest the title thereto in the defendant, and if there was, then secondly, whether the subsequent institution of the replevin suit by the plaintiffs, assuming this to have been done by their authority, was sufficient to prevent a recovery by them against the defendant for the price of the goods.

As to the first question, it appears from the evidence that the goods were shipped at Chicago, in the name of Madden, via the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, to Hastings, where they arrived in due time. Hpon their arrival there the agent' of the company forwarded them, pursuant to the written order of Madden, consigned to the defendant at Kearney. All this was done in strict accordance with the agreement between the parties at the time defendant gave his order for the- goods.

The rule is well settled that where the vendor of goods is required to send them to a purchaser by a designated common carrier, delivery of the goods to the carrier is a delivery to the purchaser himself, the carrier being in legal contemplation, in such cases, the bailee of the person to whom the goods are sent Benjamin on Sales, 2nd Am. Ed. §§ 181, 693, and cases there cited.

The seller is thenceforth divested of all right to the possession of, or control over the goods, and he cannot retake them unless there exists a right of stoppage in transitu. Delivery of goods to a servant or agent of the purchaser, or to a master of a vessel, when they are to be sent by water, is equivalent to a delivery to the purchaser, and the property, with the corresponding risk, immediately vests in the purchaser. The effect of a consignment of goods by a bill of lading is to vest the property in the consignee. So, too, the rule is that a delivery to any general carrier where there are no specific directions out of the ordinary usuage, is a constructive delivery to the vendee. 2nd Kent Com. 499; Cotte v. Harden, 4 East Rep. 211; Brown v. Hodgson, 2 Campb. 36; Groning v. Meedham, 5 Mel. & Sel. 189.

But if there be no particular mode of carriage specified, and no particular course of dealing between the parties, the property and risk remain with the vendor while in the hands of the the common carrier. Jones v. Bradner, 10 Barb. 193; Coates v. Chaplin, 2 Gale & Davidson, 552; 2 Kent Com. 500. These general principles are well settled.

Without stopping to inquire whether the delivery of the goods to the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Kailroad at Chicago, and Madden’s order to the station agent at Hastings, did not constitute a delivery to the defendant, we are all of the opinion that when the goods reached Hastings, and the station agent there, acting on the order of Madden, had forwarded them consigned to the defendant at Kearney, the delivery was complete, and the title became vested in Geer, and, as between him and the plaintiff's, were thereafter at his risk. The case stands precisely as if the plaintiff had in the first instance shipped the goods at Hastings, consigned to the defendant at Kearney. For any breach of duty on the part of the railroad company, or wrongful act of a stranger thereafter committed in respect to the property, the buyer, and not the seller, could maintain an action. The contract of bargain and sale was completed by the delivery of the goods to the agent of the railroad company at Hastings. The order of Madden which gave appellee the right to control the goods was never revoked, nor has there ever been any act done by Madden inconsistent with it. The goods were duly forwarded in pursuance of the order, and duly arrived at Kearney, where they were called for by appellee, but were seized on an attachment against Madden, who never had, nor claimed to have any interest in them. Appellants had thus done all they were required to do by the terms of the contract, to vest the title of the goods in appellee, and we are therefore of the opinion that the plaintiffs were entitled to sue for and recover from appellee the price of the goods, unless such right of recovery was defeated by the institution and dismissal of the replevin suit.

In respect to the replevin proceedings, it would be enough to say there is no sufficient evidence that they were authorized by appellants. Aside from the transcript of the record of those proceedings, the only evidence on the subject of authority in respect thereto is found in the testimony of Madden. He testifies that he received a letter from Geer, stating that the goods had been attached by the Kearney Bank, and asking what he had better do. Madden says : “ I telegraphed him to replevy the goods and we would sustain him in his title? It will thus be seen that Madden not only did not direct the bringing of a suit in the name of Bliss & Topliff. but, on the contrary, the direction was that Geer (in whom the title was vested, and who would therefore be able to maintain a suit,) should replevy the goods, and that “ we” would sustain him in his title. Moreover, Madden testifies that he .had no authority to direct the institution of legal proceedings in behalf of Bliss & Topliff — that he acted as their agent while taking orders for goods, but beyond that he had no authority to act for, or bind them in any way. He further testifies that he received no instructions from the plaintiffs in relation to commencing the replevin suit, nor does it appear that he informed them of the seizure of the goods by the bank prior to the time of his sending the message to Geer to replevy them.

The record is thus barren of evidence that appellants authorized the institution of the replevin suit, certainly not a suit in their name. We think it fairly inferable that Madden acted upon his own responsibility when advising appellee to commence legal proceedings; and that if, as is claimed by appellee’s counsel, there is any legal presumption that an attorney of record in a suit is authorized by the party whom he assumes to represent, to act, such presumption in the present case is fully rebutted by the evidence. The inference seems to us to be a legitimate one from the proofs, that appellee himself) acting upon the advice of Madden, employed the attorney and commenced the replevin suit.

But assuming the replevin proceedings to have been authorized by appellants, we are unable to perceive upon what grounds it can be held that their right to maintain a suit against appellee for the recovery of the purchase price of the goods is thereby impaired. If, as we have endeavored to show, the title to the goods had become vested in . ppellee, his right of action for their wrongful seizure to satisfy Madden’s debt, was perfect, and could no more be defeated by the bringing of a suit by appellants against the sheriff, than it would be by the bringing of a like suit by a person who never had any interest in, or connection with, the goods. After the sale and delivery of the goods to appellee, appellants occupied no other or different relation to them than that of a stranger. Their seizure by the sheriff was no more an invasion of appellant’s rights than it would have been if appellee had taken manual possession of the goods on their arrival at Kearney, and placed them on the shelves in his store before they were seized, nor than would have been the seizure of any other of ajmellee’s goods. Appellants could maintain no suit for the recovery of the goods, for the obvious reason that they were neither the owners of, nor entitled to, the possession of them.

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10 Barb. 193 (New York Supreme Court, 1850)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Ill. App. 612, 1880 Ill. App. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bliss-v-geer-illappct-1880.