Citizens' Ins. v. Kountz Line

10 F. 768, 1882 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 43
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 20, 1882
StatusPublished

This text of 10 F. 768 (Citizens' Ins. v. Kountz Line) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens' Ins. v. Kountz Line, 10 F. 768, 1882 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 43 (E.D. La. 1882).

Opinion

Billings, D. J.

This suit is brought to recover upon bills of lading for goods shipped upon the steamer H. C. Yaeger. The goods were shipped from St. Louis to New Orleans and other points upon the Mississippi river, and were laden upon the Yaeger, which, with her entire cargo, was lost when out from St. Louis about 30 hours. The libel-lants were insurers of the cargo, have paid the loss, and bring this action as subrogees of the insured, the parties named in the bills of [769]*769lading. The suit was commenced by attachment, none of the defendants having been found within the district. The bills of lading are for goods shipped by the steamer H. G. Taeger, and wore signed by “J. W. King, agent Kountz line, St. Louis.” The defendants, whose property has been attached, are several of five corporations, and the question submitted with reference to this part of the case is, were these five corporations jointly bound by these bills of lading thus issued by King as agent of the Kountz line ?

The evidence shows that the Kountz line had been in existence about nine years. It is a corporation established under the laws of Missouri “to receive and forward merchandise and products, and for the purpose of transportation upon the Mississippi river and its tributaries.” At the time of its incorporation four boats were cor-porators or stockholders, but shortly afterwards five separate corporations were formed under the same law of Missouri, also for the purpose of transportation on the Mississippi river and its tributaries. The boats ceased to be stockholders in the Kountz line, the new corporations were called by the name of the several boats, and the title to each boat was transferred to the corporation which bore its name. These five boats constituted a line of steamers running at regular intervals and under one management, and were known as the Kountz line steamers. There was not a complete identity of interest on the part of the Kountz line and the several boat corporations. There were different stockholders, though to a large extent the stock was held by the same persons and in the same proportions. In two of the boat corporations a great majority of the stock was held by the daughters of Com. Kountz. He was the president, and J. W. King was secretary, of the Kountz line, and of all the boat corporations. The corporations were all domiciled at St. Louis, and had the same place of business, which was transacted at the office of the Kountz line under the direction of Com. Kofintz, and_either by him or King as the agents of the Kountz line.

The Kountz line received all the money earned by each boat at St. Louis, and all that was collected by the agents at New Orleans was forwarded by draft to the Kountz line at St. Louis. The purchases of merchandise for any of the boats, in order to make out a cargo, were made by the Kountz line, were billed to and paid for by it. The Kountz line, by J. W. King, agent, advertised, through circulars and hand-bills widely distributed, that the Kountz line boats were superior to their competitors in their construction, in their prompt [770]*770.compliance with their bills of lading, and in their rate of charges for freight. One advertisment in an Allegheny newspaper was offered in evidence, in which the Mollie Moore, one of the steamers attached, is announced as forming, with the Yaeger and three other steamers, the Kountz line steamers, running from St. Louis to New Orleans, from the Kountz line wharf-boat, St. Louis, and the public were invited to apply for further information to “John W. King, Kountz line wharf-boat, St. Louis, Mo.; ” “0. L. Brennan, Kountz line office, 106 Gravier street, New Orleans;” “or to W. J. Kountz, Allegheny, Pa.”

But the evidence' establishes that the accounts of each of these boats were kept upon the books of the Kountz line separately, and that in these accounts each boat was credited with all its own earnings, after deducting $150 as the charge of the Kountz line for each trip j that each boat was charged with the price of goods purchased for and forwarded by it, and was separately credited with the proceeds of all the goods carried by it when sold. The evidence also shows that in two of these boat corporations a dividend had been declared, and that in case of one of these boats the corporation which owned it, out of its earnings, had built a second boat, which it continued to own, and which also ran under the management of the Kountz line.

The question presented is whether the bills of lading issued by King, agent of the Kountz line, for goods shipped by the Yaeger, bound the. owners of the Yaeger alone, or whether they bound the owners of all ■the boats which ran in or constituted the Kountz line steamers.

These bills of lading were issued by the “agent of the Kountz line,” i. e., by the Kountz line, and the question is whether the relations of the boats were such, either when viewed as actually existing or when considered as they were held out to the public as existing, as to make the bill of lading issued for one boat the act of the owners of all the boats which were operated by a common agent, and were so con-.neeted that they constituted one line.

The questions as to the joint liability of carriers for the acts of a common agent has most frequently arisen with reference to transportation over connected lines, but in principle the question is the same where th'e owners, having a single agent, represent, not different sections of a continuous route, but different vehicles traversing the same route. The cases with reference to this question divide themselves into three classes:

[771]*7711. Where there is a sharing of the profits or earnings of each section among the owners of all the sections. Here, upon the same equity which establishes the, liability of individuals in partnerships, all the owners are bound by the acts of the agent as to the part of any owner. An illustration of this class is found in the case of Champion v. Bostwick, where both in the supreme court of New York (11 Wend. 571) and in the court of errors (18 Wend. 175) the liability of the owners of all the parts of a route for a negligence upon one part was maintained, because all shared in the profits of the entire route.

2. Where, without any sharing of earnings, the common agent, having authority to bind the owners of each part to carry over the entire route, exercises that authority, and there is a default upon any part of the route. Hero all axe bound, because all have agreed to be bound. An example of this class is found in Fairchild v. Slocum, 19 Wend. 329, afterwards affirmed by the court of errors, 7 Hill, 292.

3. Where, without any sharing of earnings, the owners of the various sections of a route have a common agent, but in his representative capacity he acts separately for each. In this class of cases, since there is no joint interest and no joint agency, there can be no joint liability, and the owner of each section of the route is bound with reference to transportation over his own section only; for an agent, though he have power to transact the separate business of many, cannot, therefore, bind one of his principals in the separate business of another principal. This class of cases is illustrated by Briggs v. Vanderbilt, 19 Barb. 222, and Bonsted v. Vanderbilt, 21 Barb. 26. Into this class also falls the ease of St. Louis Ins. Co. v. St. Louis, etc., R. Co. 13 Cent. Law J.

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Related

Briggs v. Vanderbilt
19 Barb. 222 (New York Supreme Court, 1855)
Fairchild v. Slocum
19 Wend. 329 (New York Supreme Court, 1838)

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. 768, 1882 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-ins-v-kountz-line-laed-1882.