Boston & Maine Railroad v. Oceanic Steam Navigation Co.

226 Mass. 509
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 23, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 226 Mass. 509 (Boston & Maine Railroad v. Oceanic Steam Navigation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boston & Maine Railroad v. Oceanic Steam Navigation Co., 226 Mass. 509 (Mass. 1917).

Opinion

Loring, J.

The question presented in this case is the right of a railroad to recover storage charges of the same kind and caused by the same longshoremen’s strike as those before the court in New York Central & Hudson River Railroad v. Frederick Leyland & Co. Ltd. 222 Mass. 444. In that case the right to recover depended upon the authority of an agent to enter into an agreement on the part of the steamship company to pay storage charges in case it was decided by the interstate commerce commission that those charges were covered by the tariff filed by the railroad under the interstate commerce act. It appeared in that case that the interstate commerce commission decided that that tariff was within the act and it was held that the agent had authority to make the contract. The right of the railroad to recover in the case at bar depends upon the question whether as matter of law the steamship company came under an implied contract to pay the storage charges here in question by accepting delivery of the goods under circumstances set forth in the agreed facts. We say that the question is whether as matter of law an implied contract came into existence because the finding of the judge who heard the case without a jury was for the defendant.

The circumstances were these: Before the matters herein complained of took place the railroad had filed a tariff under the interstate commerce act which provided for storage charges in case goods were not unloaded within the free time therein specified. On January 16, 1912, the steamship company wrote to the railroad company that it had been their intention to forward by the “Anglian intended to sail for London on the 19th ... all traffic which requires to be loaded at seaboard within 30 days after arrival at Boston” but that owing to the longshoremen’s strike they had found it impossible to do so and that “we are obliged to notify you therefore that we cannot accept any responsibility for such storages incurred.” To this the railroad answered: “We are obliged [514]*514to collect storage charges in accordance with the I. C. C. Tariffs in force, and if traffic is taken forward by you on which storage charges have accrued, in accordance with the tariffs, we shall hold you responsible for payment of such charges.” The steamship company replied upon the same day acknowledging the receipt of the railroad’s answer and wrote: “We will appreciate it if you will kindly at your earliest convenience send us a copy of the I. C. C. Tariff to which you refer.” On the next day (that is to say on January 18) the railroad company sent the steamship company copies of the tariff in question. Thereafter (that is to say after January 18) the steamship company took delivery of the one hundred and thirty-one lots of freight on which the storage charges had accrued that are the subject of this action. The goods in question were carried by the railroad and by the steamship company under one bill of lading. But that bill of lading contained two agreements made with the shipper, one by the railroad and the other by the steamship company, and these agreements were made by them separately and not jointly. There is no dispute as to the amount of the storage charges nor that they are in accordance with the tariff.

1. The storage charges in question were within the interstate commerce act and the shipper was liable to pay them. The railroad company had no option in the matter; they were bound to collect them. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad v. Frederick Leyland & Co. Ltd. ubi supra. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad v. York & Whitney Co. 215 Mass. 36. The demurrage charges in question in Central Railroad of New Jersey v. Anchor Line, Ltd. 219 Fed. Rep. 716 (relied upon by the defendant), were not storage charges within the interstate commerce act, were not charges for which the shipper was liable, and for them the railroad did not have a lien. The decision in that case was based on these facts. The other decision upon which the defendant has placed its main reliance, namely, The Corfe Castle, 221 Fed. Rep. 98, was not a case of charges within the interstate commerce act but was a case in which a lighterage company undertook to collect demurrage charges from the steamship company for which under the contract between the shipper and the steamship company the steamship company was not liable.

2. The plaintiff railroad company had a lien on the goods for these storage charges. Kawcabany v. Boston & Maine Railroad, [515]*515199 Mass. 586. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad v. Frederick Leyland & Co. Ltd. 222 Mass. 444. See also Miller v. Mansfield, 112 Mass. 260.

3. The case therefore comes down to this: In case a railroad company has transported to the seaboard goods to be delivered by it to a steamship company to be carried to a foreign port and those goods as against the shipper are subject to storage charges for which the railroad company has a lien, does an implied contract arise as matter of law under the circumstances of this case?

We are of opinion that as matter of law an implied contract does come into existence in such a case.

The defendant’s position is that the fact that the railroad company wrote the last letter is not decisive; that it is a case where both parties were acting on parallel lines which never met. Whatever may be the result in a case which depends solely upon the fact that the party seeking to charge the other had the last word, there is more than that in the case at bar. When the railroad company wrote that it had no option under the act and under the tariff filed by it under the act, the steamship company replied that they would like to see the tariff. It took no objection to the statement that the railroad company had no option under the act. If the charges were covered by the tariff filed by it, they impliedly accepted that statement by confining their answer to a request for a copy of the tariff. When the steamship company was furnished with a copy of the tariff, which in fact covered the charges demanded by the railroad, no further objection was made by it and delivery of the goods was accepted. We are of opinion that under these circumstances as matter of law the steamship company must be taken to have acquiesced in the plaintiff’s demand that if it took the goods it must assume responsibility for the charges.

Objection has been made by the steamship company that under the agreed facts an order for delivery (in the form there set forth) was not used in case of all the one hundred and thirty-one lots and also that some of the goods were not transported from the cars of the plaintiff on to the defendant’s ship but were unloaded upon the pier and that “as soon as the goods were deposited on the pier by the plaintiff, they were considered by the parties as in the custody and control of the defendant; ” in that connection the steamship company urges that the plaintiff lost its lien when it [516]*516deposited the goods on the pier. These are all matters of detail. Of course the plaintiff lost its lien when it made delivery to the defendant. It is immaterial whether it lost its lien when the goods were unloaded on to the ship or on to the pier. The material fact is that the 'defendant took delivery after notification that it must assume responsibility for the charges if it took delivery and it finally took delivery without objection on its part.

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Bluebook (online)
226 Mass. 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boston-maine-railroad-v-oceanic-steam-navigation-co-mass-1917.