Brunswick & Co. v. U. S. Express Co.
This text of 46 Iowa 677 (Brunswick & Co. v. U. S. Express Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
A common carrier may excuse a non-delivery, pursuant to the bill of lading, by delivering the goods upon demand to the real owner.
“ When the bailee has actually delivered the property to the true owner, having the right to the possession, on his demand, it is a sufficient defense against the claim of the bailor in an action for the commission against the bailee.” Steamboat Idaho, 3 Otto, 575.
“When a person falsely represents himself as agent for another for whom he proposes to buy, and thus obtains the vendor’s assent to a sale, and even a delivery of the goods, the whole contract is void; it has never come into existence, for the vendor never assented to sell to the person thus deceiving him.” Benjamin on Sales, Sec. 60.
In the absence of a ratification by Savery of Haskell’s pretended agency, there was no'sale to any one. The ownership of the goods remained in plaintiffs.
•It is true, the plaintiffs treated Haskell as agent. But they did not represent to the express company that he was agent. The company acted upon no such representation. Upon the contrary, the goods were shipped to Savery, and were delivered to Haskell upon his demand that they were his property and should have been shipped to him.
III. Lastly, it is urged that the court below may have [680]*680found from the evidence that Haskell was the authorized agent of Savery, and that a delivery to Haskell was a delivery to Savery. We do not think there is anything in the evidence to warrant such a finding. A judgment in favor of plaintiffs and against Savery for the value of the goods, based upon Haskell’s alleged agency, we think would find no support from the evidence in this case.
In our opinion, there was in fact no sale of the goods to any one. It was the duty of the express company to deliver to Savery, the consignee. This would have been a strict compliance with its undertaking. If Savery refused to receive them, they should have been held or properly deposited, subject to plaintiffs’ order.
The principles here announced find support in Price v. Oswego R. Co., 50 N. Y., 213.
Reversed.
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46 Iowa 677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brunswick-co-v-u-s-express-co-iowa-1877.