Clark v. Railroad

50 S.E. 446, 138 N.C. 25, 1905 N.C. LEXIS 223
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 4, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 50 S.E. 446 (Clark v. Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Railroad, 50 S.E. 446, 138 N.C. 25, 1905 N.C. LEXIS 223 (N.C. 1905).

Opinion

Connor, J.

The plaintiff alleged and introduced testimony tending to show that prior to Nov. 1, 1903, he was the owner and had in his possession about 20,000 cross ties. That the manager of the Standard Pole & Tie Co., proposed to buy them to be shipped to defendant — bill of lading to be in plaintiff’s name. Plaintiff agreed to sell provided they were shipped in his name and the defendant would become responsible to him for them. . That he was not willing to trust the Standard Pole & Tie Co. That he ordered cars and began to ship them to Wilmington to his, plaintiff’s order. Ties were to be put in vessel and carried as plaintiff’s property to defendant at Hoboken, N. J. Plaintiff had this understanding with the manager of Standard Pole & Tie Co. Plaintiff was to have check for amount due on the ties when they reached defendant, when he was to release them. Plaintiff introduced letter from himself to Geo. E. Wilson, purchasing agent of defendant, bearing date February 25, 1904, stating in substance that when the Standard Pole & Tie Co. shipped cargo that they gave him a mortgage on 19,000 of them for balance due, stating amount saying: “The ties were not released, but put in with theirs and would be released on payment of $3,441 to me when cargo was discharged. Please hold back payment of cargo till they give 'you order to pay my claim. These people wrote me that they had notified you but for fear they have not will ask you myself to put in voucher for $3441, *27 wbicb will release everything and leave balance due Standard Pole & Tie Co.” He enclosed stamp for reply asking Wilson to notify him. The plaintiff received from Wilson answer to letter of February 25th, and saying “I beg to advise you that I am authorized by Standard Pole & Tie Co. to remit to you on account of shipment made by them the sum of $3468.41. I have had no advice of the shipment you referred to. However, on arrival of shipment after inspection is made, remittance will be made to you as directed.”

The plaintiff testified that defendant had not paid for the ties. Plaintiff introduced agreement between himself and Standard Pole & Tie Co. The 19,500 ties were shipped to defendant Company. They were mixed with other ties, aggregating 26,000. Plaintiff introduced the deposition of one Walsh, who testified that he had conversation with Wilson, purchasing agent of defendant; that he stated to AVilson he went to see him about páyment for his ties — showed him letter of February 29, 1904. Wilson said shipment of poles had not been received; when they were received and inspected he would immediately, or as soon as convenient, forward to O. L. Clark a check for the amount of the lien which was some three thousand dollars plus. That he had a second conversation with Wilson in whi^h he said that the ties had been received but had not been inspected. That as soon as they were inspected he would send Mr. Clark a check for the amount of the lien and there was no need to worry about it. That he did not understand why Mr. Clark was worrying about it. That the Deleware, Lackawanna and Western R. Road Co. had guaranteed the payment to Clark through the agent who negotiated the original delivery of the ties * * * That the Deleware, Lackawanna & Western R. Road Co. had agreed to pay Clark this lien on these ties and that was sufficient to set him at rest.

Defendant introduced G. F. AVilson, who testified that he was purchasing agent for defendant company. He denied *28 having had any conversation with Walsh; said that he bought ties from Standard Pole & Tie Co. That plaintiff was not known in the transaction, that he was simply to disburse the money for the Standard Pole & Tie Co. That the ties were sold to defendant absolutely. That there were no conditions connected with the sale. Defendant offered to show that the Trustee in Bankruptcy of the Standard Pole & Tie Co. claimed the money and forbade the payment of it to the plaintiff This was ruled out by the Court and defendant excepted. The exception can not be sustained. The testimony was clearly incompetent. The defendant asked the Court to give certain special instructions which were refused. We think that the court properly refused to give the instructions. They involved an instruction to find for the defendant upon all of the testimony and were equivalent to an instruction that the plaintiff Avas not entitled to recover. His Honor instructed the jury that if they found “That the plaintiff had in his possession or under his control 24,000 cross-ties of the Standard Pole &°Tie Co. on the 10th of November, 1903, then this paper, the agreement or contract between plaintiff and Standard Pole and Tie Co. of that date, gaVe him a valid lien upon those cross-ties as long as he retained them in his possession, at least on 19,500 if them.”

“If the cross-ties were not in the possession of the plaintiff, the description in the agreement between him and Standard Pole and Tie Company would not be sufficient to give a valid lien, but if plaintiff had possession he had a valid lien on the cross-ties as long as he kept them in his possession.”

“By shipping the cross-ties to Wilmington, N. C., the plaintiff did not lose his lien upon them, if he. had a lien.”

“If the jury find that the Standard Pole and Tie Co. and plaintiff agreed that the cross-ties should be shipped to the defendant .from Wilmington, and that the plaintiff was not to release his lien upon the cross-ties by the shipment by the *29 plaintiff, by schooner, to the defendant in New Jersey, until the plaintiff was paid the amount the Standard Pole and Tie Co. owed him, or until the defendant guaranteed the payment of the debt of the Standard Pole and Tie Co. to the plaintiff, then the court charges you the- shipment from Wilmington, N. C., to the defendant does not lose the plaintiff his lien upon the cross-ties or waive it.”

Here the court read the letter of plaintiff to George F. Wilson, purchasing agent, dated February 25, 1904, and the letter of George F. Wilson, purchasing agent, to plaintiff, dated February 29, 1904.

“The court charges the jury that if the plaintiff had a lien upon 19,500 cross-ties, that he reserved the lien by agreement between himself and the Standard Pole and Tie Oo., and if the defendant received these cross-ties, and if beforé the defendant received these cross-ties, the defendant received the letter of the plaintiff dated February 25, 1904, which I have just read, and wrote the letter to plaintiff dated February 29, 1904, which I have just read, then the defendant would be indebted to the plaintiff, and the jury will answer the first issue ‘Tes.’ ”

“The indebtedness of the defendant to plaintiff is $3,-468.47, if you believe the evidence, with interest from the commencement of this action.”

“Before the‘jury can answer the first issue ‘Yes,’ they must find that the letter of plaintiff to Geo. F. Wilson, of February 25, 1904, was recived before the defendant received the cross-ties, and that the letter of Geo. F. Wilson to plaintiff, of February 29, 1904, was written before defendant received the cros-ties.”

The defendant excepted to the charge specifying the parts thereof to which exceptions were pointed.

The defendant files seventeen assignments of error based upon exceptions to Ilis Honor’s ruling upon the admission of testimony. We have examined each of them.

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Related

McNeill v. Mays Manufacturing Co.
114 S.E. 698 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1922)
Mills v. McMillan
82 So. 812 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 S.E. 446, 138 N.C. 25, 1905 N.C. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-railroad-nc-1905.