Byrne v. Weeks

7 Bosw. 372
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedNovember 10, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Bosw. 372 (Byrne v. Weeks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byrne v. Weeks, 7 Bosw. 372 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1860).

Opinion

Robertson, J.

—This action was tried at special term by the court, without a jury, and the appeal from the judg[375]*375ment has been argued upon exceptions filed to decisions of facts and conclusions of law contained in the finding of the judge before whom the same was tried. •

Two causes of action for freight, are united in the complaint—one for transporting and delivering coal to the defendant—and the other for transporting coal which the defendant converted to his own use, while the lien of the plaintiffs’ assignors for the freight remained. A third cause of action was also set out, and was for demurrage for a detention by the defendant, of the vessel in which such coal was transported. The plaintiff claims, as assignee of the owner and master of the boat in which such coal was carried.

The answer, besides denying the principal allegations in the complaint, sets np a counter-claim for goods mentioned in the bill of lading, (under which the defendants received the goods alleged in the complaint to have been delivered to him,) not delivered to the defendant.

Upon the production of the bill of lading under which the goods were transported for which freight is claimed, the body of it contained no statement of the nature, of the merchandize, except by requiring a certain sum to be paid for freight of each ton of “ said coal.” It had, however, a memorandum upon its margin, as follows: “ Lump coal, broken—78 egg—100 stove, Chestnut; 178 tons, of 2,240 lbs., Tunnel Vein Red Ash coal.” On the voyage for which such bill of lading was given, the boat had on board only 78 tons of stove coal, and 100 tons of egg coal. The rate of demurrage specified therein, was ten dollars a day after three days. The coal specified in the bill of lading, was sold to the defendant, and the bill assigned to him while the coal was in transitu.

On the arrival of the boat, ten tons of egg coal were delivered to the defendant before any discovery was made of a deficiency of stove coal. Upon demanding coal of the quantity and kind described in the bill of lading, he received more egg coal, enough to make 76| tons in all, and a little, over 49§ tons of stove coal, when the master refused to [376]*376deliver any more stove coal, unless the defendant would take all the egg coal on board, amounting to 23| tons ; the defendant refused to do so, but demanded the rest of the stove coal on board, amounting to nearly 28| tons, and offered to receive a ton and three-quarters of egg coal so as to make the complement of seventy-eight tons, and generally demanded enough of each kind to make up the amount specified in the bill of lading. The master, however, refused to make any further delivery of the coal unless the defendant would take all the coal in the boat, which the latter refused.

The whole of the coal to which the defendant was entitled, could have been received during three days after the arrival of the vessel in New York, and the latter was not detained from any want of readiness of the defendant to receive such coal.

The master of the boat demanded freight for 178 tons of coal, which the defendant refused, offering to pay freight for what he had received, deducting the value of that which he had not received.

After the delivery of the coal, the master of the boat recovered a judgment against the defendant, in the Marine Court of the city of New York, for the freight of 178 .tons of coal, and levied on the coal remaining in the boat, which the officer, having the execution, removed to a coal-yard for storage. The keeper of such yard, subsequently sold the coal for storage, after advertising the same and giving notice to the attorney, by whom the judgment was recovered. Other property which the defendant owned, being in his actual possession, was levied upon at the same time by the same officer, but the judgment was reversed on appeal, and the property levied upon ordered to be restored to the •defendant, which was done.

The foregoing facts appear in the finding of the judge, and are fully sustained by the evidence. There are some matters which seem to be material in some aspects of the case, not passed upon; thus, no demand of the amount due for demurrage, was proved or found, nor was the difference [377]*377between egg and stove coal pointed out in the evidence, although they are universally spoken of by witnesses as different articles of merchandize, while the latter is both proved and found to have been more valuable than the former. Still less was any inquiry made as to whether the difference is perceptible on bare handling or inspection; or whether the quantity of each in the boat could have been discovered before the defendant took out any qf the coal, received by him. The defendant is not proved to have known that the coal bought by him from the owner of the coal-yard where it was stored, was any part of the cargo. There was no occasion for him to have made inquiries leading to such result; and he remains, as to such coal, a bona fide purchaser for value, without notice.

Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff in this action, for the difference between the freight on the quantity of coal received by the defendant from the vessel, and the value of the coal not delivered to him according to the bill of lading.

The finding of the judge, as to the following matters, was excepted to by the plaintiff, as containing erroneous decisions of fact and conclusions of law, to wit: the want of a delivery of the quantity of coal according to the bill of lading; a failure of any delivery, under the bill of lading, beyond 125 tons; the non-delivery to the defendant and non-acceptance by him, of the coal remaining on board ; the non-detainer of the boat beyond the time allowed. Exceptions were also taken to the following supposed conclusions of law of 'the court, to wit: the absence of any obligation on the defendant’s part, to accept the coal left by him on board, as the coal to which he was entitled under the bill of lading; the right of the defendant to select such part of the cargo as he took away, without being bound to pay all the freight provided for in the bill of lading; the liability of the master to deliver merchandize conform-ably to the marginal description thereof in the bill of lading; the right to charge against the freight of the coal accepted by the defendant, the value of the residue of [378]*378the coal not delivered less the freight; the release of the coal sold for freight from any lien for freight; the exemption of the defendant from liability for freight of the coal so sold; his right to have the plaintiff’s claim reduced by the value of the coal not received by him under the bill of lading; the plaintiff’s inability to recover for more freight than on the coal received by him, or more than the amount awarded. No such conclusions of law are stated in the finding. The only one stated is, that the plaintiff is entitled to recover freight of the coal received less the' value of that not delivered. It is true, that the reverse of such conclusions was insisted upon by the plaintiff’s counsel at the trial. Thus, he contended, that the defendant, on discovering.the variance between the amount of stove coal on board and the bill of lading, was bound to elect whether he claimed it or not, and that his subsequent acts in receiving the coal, amounted to such election and a delivery and acceptance of the whole cargo, and made him liable for all the freight as well as demurrage.

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Miller v. Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad
31 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 607 (New York Supreme Court, 1881)

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Bluebook (online)
7 Bosw. 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byrne-v-weeks-nysuperctnyc-1860.