Brown & Haywood Co. v. Pennsylvania Co.

65 N.W. 961, 63 Minn. 546, 1896 Minn. LEXIS 47
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 28, 1896
DocketNos. 9685-(286)
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 65 N.W. 961 (Brown & Haywood Co. v. Pennsylvania Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown & Haywood Co. v. Pennsylvania Co., 65 N.W. 961, 63 Minn. 546, 1896 Minn. LEXIS 47 (Mich. 1896).

Opinion

CANTY, J.

The plaintiff, a corporation, delivered a car load of glass to the defendant railway company at Tarentum, Pennsylvania, hilled to Snohomish, in the state of Washington, via the Chicago, St. Paul & Kansas City Railway and the Northern Pacific Railroad, and a bill of lading was issued by defendant accordingly. Tbe defendant carried the car of glass over its own road, but wrongfully, by mistake or otherwise, sent the same over the Union Pacific Railway, instead of over the Northern Pacific Railroad.

A certain portion of the glass was for a customer of plaintiff at [548]*548Tacoma, Washington, another certain portion for customers at Seattle, and the balance for a customer at Snohomish. If the car had been sent over the Northern Pacific Railroad, it would have arrived first at Tacoma, next at Seattle, and last at Snohomish; and before the car was shipped, plaintiff had made arrangements with the Northern Pacific Railroad Company to stop the car at each of these places, respectively, and permit the glass destined for that place to be there unloaded and delivered, the car then to proceed to the next place; but none of these facts were stated in the bill of lading or known to defendant. The Union Pacific Railway Company did not connect by rail with any of these points. The terminus of its railway line was at Portland, Oregon.

When the car arrived at that point, the glass was shipped by the last named railway company to Seattle, by water, on its own vessel, to be there transshipped over the Northern Pacific Railroad Company to Snohomish. But when the glass arrived at Seattle, and was placed on, its wharf by the Union Pacific Railway Company, one Louderback, a broker who had negotiated the sale of the glass destined for Seattle, informed its agent of the wrongful deviation in the shipment, that all of the glass was not destined for Snohomish, of the points to which the different portions of it were destined, and the arrangements made with the Northern Pacific Railroad Company to distribute it to these different points. Louderback also informed the Union Pacific Railway Company of the fact that the glass was at this time some 20 days overdue, and of the pressing necessity for the prompt delivery of the different portions of it to the different points of destination, respectively, to fulfill contracts, some of which were then in default, and others would be if prompt action was not taken. He also tried to get possession of the glass destined for Seattle, to fulfill the contracts made by him, but the Union Pacific Railway Company refused to deliver the same to him unless he paid all the freight due on all the glass over the whole route from Tarentum, amounting to $533.80. After some further parleying, Louderback agreed to pay this freight, and the Union Pacific Railway Company agreed to deliver to him there the glass destined for Seattle, and at its own expense transport to Snohomish the glass destined for that point, [549]*549and to Tacoma tlie glass destined for that point. The boats being too busy to carry the latter glass to Tacoma, the Union Pacific Railway Company undertook to have it transported by rail over the Northern Pacific Railroad to that point. In order to do so, it was necessary to have the glass transferred on a dray from the wharf to the depot of the Northern Pacific Railroad Company. The Union Pacific Railway Company employed one Heath, a dray-man at Seattle, to do this, and in doing so he permitted one of the cases of plate glass to fall against the wheel of the dray, whereby all of that package of glass was broken and rendered worthless.

This action is brought against the defendant for damages for loss of the glass by reason of its wrongful acts in disobeying directions as to the connecting line over which the glass should be sent. The plaintiff recovered in the court below, and from an order denying a new trial, defendant appeals.

Until after the glass was broken, neither plaintiff nor defendant had any knowledge of the new arrangements that were made by Louderback and the Union Pacific Railway Company for the distribution of the glass. Louderback was not the agent of the plaintiff, and had no authority from plaintiff to make these arrangements, but did it on his own responsibility, for the purpose of protecting the good will of his own business. But plaintiff subsequently repaid him the freight which he so paid, and it is contended by appellant that plaintiff fully ratified his acts by so repaying him, and adopting the benefit of those acts. For the purposes of this case we will concede, without deciding, that this contention is correct, and that plaintiff has ratified those acts, and is as much bound by them as if Louderback had full original authority from it to make these new arrangements for the distribution of the glass. We will now consider the next step in appellant’s position.

Appellant concedes that, by misdirecting the goods beyond the end of its own line, the defendant was liable for conversion, and was therefore an insurer of the safe arrival of the goods at their destination, all of which is undoubtedly good law. But appellant further contends that plaintiff by its own act has released defend- 0 ant from liability, that the new arrangements made with the Union [550]*550Pacific Railway Company for the distribution of the goods “operated, in law, as a delivery of the goods by the Pennsylvania Company to the Brown & Haywood Company.” Counsel argue: “The contract between the plaintiff and the defendant provided that the goods should be carried to Snohomish, and no obligation rested upon defendant or the Union Pacific Company to deliver any of the goods at any point other than Snohomish. * * That contract required the defendant to deliver plaintiff’s goods at Snohomish, but not elsewhere, and required the plaintiff to receive the goods at Snohomish, not elsewhere, and thereupon, but not otherwise, to pay defendant the amount of freight charges agreed upon. The Union Pacific Railway Company had not, nor had any of its representatives in Seattle, any authority to alter this contract in any particular.”

The fallacy of counsel’s position consists in assuming that there was, in fact, any contract between the plaintiff and defendant to carry the goods to Snohomish. Defendant made no such contract. It merely agreed to carry the goods over its own line, and deliver them to the next designated carrier, with proper directions for their further carriage. There its contract and its duties ended. But this contract, made with defendant, was not the whole of plaintiff’s contract. It had made another contract with the Northern Pacific Railroad Company to distribute the goods at the three points aforesaid. It is true that defendant had no knowledge of the latter contract, but the latter contract did not concern defendant, or in any manner increase its liability, if it had rightfully performed its own contract; and we cannot see that plaintiff was under any obligation to inform defendant of a matter which did not concern it.

When plaintiff discovered the wrongful deviation of its goods by defendant, it disclosed to the carrier in whose possession it found its goods the whole contract, and demanded that the goods be distributed and delivered accordingly. We cannot see but that it was both the right and duty of plaintiff, as between it and defendant, to disclose its additional contract to the Union Pacific Railway Company, and demand that the different portions of the goods be carried to their respective destinations as required by [551]*551that contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 N.W. 961, 63 Minn. 546, 1896 Minn. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-haywood-co-v-pennsylvania-co-minn-1896.