Brittan v. Barnaby

62 U.S. 527, 16 L. Ed. 177, 21 How. 527, 1858 U.S. LEXIS 678
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 62 U.S. 527 (Brittan v. Barnaby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brittan v. Barnaby, 62 U.S. 527, 16 L. Ed. 177, 21 How. 527, 1858 U.S. LEXIS 678 (1859).

Opinions

Mr. Justice WAYNE

delivered the opinion of the court.

This caiise involves an important commercial principle, of daily recurrence in practice, which does not appear to be well understood and settled in Sap Francisco. Our decision will correct the misapprehension there in regard to the-delivery.: of merchandise by ship-owners, and the payment of freight for its .transportation.

. The libellant was the owner and consignee of goods of á value exceéding four thousand dollars, which were shipped in good order and condition at New York, on board of the ship Alboni, to be carried and delivered in San Francisco, in the same order, at a rate of freight expressed in the bill of lading. It amounted to two hundred and forty-seven dollars and twelve cents, including eleven dollars and-seventy-seven cents for primage. The bill of lading, upon its face, is in the ordinary form; but, there was a stamp upon the back of it, in these words: “ That the goods were to be delivered at the ship’s tackles when ready for delivery — not accountable for loss or damage by fire or collision ; freight payable prior to delivery, if required; contents unknown.” The proctors in the cause agreed that those words were stamped on the original bill of lading.

■ The ship arrived at San Francisco. Notice of it was given to the libellant by the consignee of -the ship; and he also required payment of the freight of the goods as they should be landed from the ship on the wharf, and that if it was not paid, and the goods received by four o’clock of the day, such of them, as had been landed would be placed in a warehouse for safe keeping, at the expense of the libellant. The notice and the requirement are taken from the second article of the respondent’s answer to the libel. He adds, that the libellant had refused to pay the freight according to the terms of the bill of lading.

The testimony discloses what the respondent considered to be its terms, and the refusal of the libellant to acquiesce in his interpretation.

[532]*532The goods were landed from the ship in parcels, on different days, from the 24th to the 27th of October, inclusive. The clerk of the libellant attended on each day to receive them. In conformity to the notice which had been given, he offered to pay the freight of such of the merchandise as had been landed. The consignee of the ship refused to receive it, or to deliver such goods, claiming that he had a right to demand the freight upon the whole shipment, when he was only ready to deliver a part of it. In the assertion of this right (certainly not in conformity with the notice he had given to the libellant) the respondent from day to day warehoused the goods.

'• The libellant did all he was bound to do under the notice which had been given to him. He could not have done more. The respondent’s refusal to deliver the parcels as they were landed cannot be justified, under the notice he had given, by any delay there may have been in the delivery, either from the necessity of weighing or measuring them, or from the claim made by him to have the freight paid upon the whole shipment before he would deliver a part of it. He had taken his-course, and the libellant acquiesced in it, by offering to pay the freight on each parcel as it was put on the wharf, though not bound to do so by the commercial law. The respondent’s refusal has no justification, either in law, nor can it be vindicated by any evidence in the cause.

"We do not mean to say that the libellant had a right to take the parcels on the days they were landed, without the payment of a pro rata freight; but where a ship-master has a larger shipment under one bill of lading than he can land in the business hours of a day, as he has the control of unloading the cargo, he must take care not to do it in such quantities that he may not be able to have the pro rata freight ascertained in the only way in which it can be done. Until it shall be done, he is not in readiness to deliver such part, or to demand the freight which may be due upon it. Goods so landed will be under his care and responsibility, without additional expense to the consignee of them, until they shall be ready for delivery.

Ordinarily, no difficulty arises between the ship’s owner and [533]*533the consignee of the goods; their interest, convenience, and responsibilities, usually suggest to them some arrangement for the freight beforehand, by which goods landed from day to day may be taken without delay bythe consignee of them. In this instance, however, no opportunity was given to the libellant to make such an arrangement, the consignee of the ship having absolutely demanded the whole freight of the shipment as the condition for the delivery of any part of it.

On the fourth day, when all of the libellant’s shipment had been landed, and before they were sent to a warehouse, he demanded from the consignee of the ship a delivery order for all •the merchandise specified in the bill of lading, tendering at the same time, in gold, the whole freight due. The delivery order was refused, the answer being that the goods were subject, in addition to the freight, to a charge for storage and cartage. The last was also warehoused by the respondent, as those of the three previous landings had been.

The foregoing is a sufficient statement of the facts and evidence in this case for the decision of it. It will not be necessary to notice again the attendance of the clerk of the libellant on the days of landing, to receive the goods and pay the freight.

The word freight, when not used in a sense to imply the burden or loading of the ship, or the cargo which she has on board, is the hire agreed upon between the owner or master for the carriage of goods from one port or place to another. That hire, without a different stipulation by the parties, is only payable when the mjrchandise is in readiness to be delivered to the person havingxhe right to receive it. Then the freight must be paid before an actual delivery can be called for. In other words, the rule is, in the absence of any agreement to the contrary of it, that freight, under an ordinary bill of lading, is only demandable by the owner, master, or consignee of. the ship, when they are ready to deliver the goods in the like good order as they were when they were received on board of the ship. Such is the general rule. Neither party can require from the other that the merchandise shipped under one bill'of lading shall be put up into parcels for delivery, or for the payment of freight. They may do so by stipulation in the bill of lading, [534]*534or by subsequent agreement, for either of the purposes just mentioned. The master is bound to deliver the goods in a reasonable time. What may be so, depends upon the facilities there may be for the discharge of the cargo at the port of delivery, and the impediments in the way of it.. When the shipment is large, or, from the master’s storage of it, it cannot be landed in a day,- if he lands a part of it, his lien upon the whole gives him the power to ask from the consignee of the merchandise a satisfactory security for the payment of the entire freight as called for by the bill of lading. But a security or arrangement is all that he can ask. He may not demand that the whole freight of the shipment should be paid before the consignee has had the opportunity to examine his goods, to see if the obligations of the bill'Of lading have been fulfilled by the ship-owner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 U.S. 527, 16 L. Ed. 177, 21 How. 527, 1858 U.S. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brittan-v-barnaby-scotus-1859.