Draper v. . Prest., Etc., D. H.C. Co.

23 N.E. 131, 118 N.Y. 118, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 931, 73 Sickels 118, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1560
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 20, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 23 N.E. 131 (Draper v. . Prest., Etc., D. H.C. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Draper v. . Prest., Etc., D. H.C. Co., 23 N.E. 131, 118 N.Y. 118, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 931, 73 Sickels 118, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1560 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Haight, J.

This action was brought to recover the value of a quantity of household goods and furniture which was destroyed by fire.

On the 6th day of February, 1885, the plaintiff shipped the goods and furniture in question by the defendant at Binghampton, to the city of Albany. The goods so shipped arrived in *120 Albany in due course of time and were left in the car in which they were shipped until the first day of March thereafter at which time they were destroyed by fire.

The first question which it becomes necessary for us to consider is as to whether the defendant can be held liable as a common carrier. It appears that at the túne the goods were received at Binghamton for shipment the defendant issued to the plaintiff or her husband, who was there acting for her as her agent, a bill of lading in which.the plaintiff’s name was entered as “ Mrs. Wm. Draper, Albany,” in the usual place for the consignee, and by which the defendant undertook to transport the goods from Binghamton to its warehouse at Albany. "Upon the back thereof there was printed conditions and rules forming a part of the contract, one of which provides as follows: When goods arrive at the place to which they are to be carried over this line and are placed 021 the platform, or in the store-room of the company, according as the usage of b2isiness may require, awaiting delivery there to the consignee at such place, or to other carriers for ti’ansportation to points beyond the line of this compay, or to be taken from the car by the consignee, it is to be deemed a part of the contract that said goods shall be held in either case by this company under the liability of a warehouseman and not as a carrier.” It will be observed that under this provision, the defendant becó2nes liable as a warehouseman, and not as a carrier after the goods have arrived at their place of destination and are placed on the platform or in the store-room of the company, or to be taken from the car by the consignee. The contract or the bill of lading does not specify what shall be done with the goods upon their arrival at the defendant’s warehouse in Albany. The company, therefore, had its option to retahi them in the car, to be taken from it by the consignee, or to remove the goods from the car a2id place them in the store-house, and in either case, the liability of the defendant as a conunon can-ier would cease after the consignee had a reasonable time to call for and remove them. (Fenner v. B. &. S. L. R. R. Co., 44 N. Y. 505.)

*121 Prior to this time the plaintiff had resided in Binghamton. She contemplated moving to the city of Albany, and had consequently caused the goods to he shipped to that place to herself as consignee. She Avas not present at the time the goods arrived, and did not at that time have a place of residence in Albany, so that she could he notified of their arrival.

It further appears that three or four days after the goods were shipped, her husband left Binghamton, going to the city of Utica, Avhere he remained for tAvo or three days, and then Avent to the city of Albany, and that in the fore part of the following week, or about the sixteenth of the month he called at the defendant’s freight-house and inquired of the man in charge if the goods had arrived, and Avas informed that they had. He then asked if they had been unloaded from the car, and was informed that they had. He then remarked that he Avas sorry; that he did not knoAv but he should have a situation in Utica, and slionld ship them to that place, and asked that they he stored for a few days until he could determine whether he should go to Utica, and offered to pay for such storage, and the man in charge informed him that he could leave them. The agent in charge Avas mistaken in reference to the goods having been unloaded. The car in Avhicli the goods Avere shipped Avas placed upon the track next to the platform of the freight depot, at the end thereof, so that the goods could he unloaded onto the platform or taken from the car by trucks from the opposite side, and there the car remained from the time of its arrival until the first of March, the time of its destruction. We are unable, lioAvever, to see how this affects the question for, when Draper, the plaintiff’s husband, was informed that the goods had been unloaded, he expressed himself as being sorry that they had been, in view of his then contemplated remoAutl to Utica. This would justify the defendant’s agent in retaining the goods in the car after finding that he Avas mistaken in reference to their being-unloaded. So, that whether the goods Avere held under the bill of lading or under the arrangement made by the plaintiff’s husband at his intervieAv with the freight agent alluded to, in eitlier *122 case the defendant would only be liable as a warehouseman, and not as a carrier.

The question as to whether the defendant is liable as a warehouseman depends upon the question as to whether or not the fire originated through the negligence of the defendant, its agents or servants; or whether they were negligent in reference to the care of the plaintiff’s property after the fire had commenced. Upon this question the burden was upon the plaintiff. The cause or origin of the fire is not disclosed. It does not distinctly appear where the fire broke out. Hr. Wadsworth, who was at the time the defendant’s freight agent, testified that he was in the office of the freight-house at the time and believed that he first discovered the fire. He was sitting at his desk and saw smoke coming over the building past his window which he thought was more than would naturally come from the chimney. He thereupon directed Hr. Smith, one of the clerks, to step out of the door and see where the smoke came from and he did so, coming back and reporting that he believed the freight-house was on fire. The witness then rushed out himself and saw that the freight-house was on fire and caused the alarm to be sounded. He then looked again to locate the fire more carefully and saw the smoke rolling over pretty heavy from the building that was 200 or 250 feet away; that there was a very dense smoke, and he believed the fire originated in the lower end of the adjoining building, a building that ran at right angles with the buildings alongside of which the goods were placed, a different building from the main building. He then went to the yard where the engines were and set them to work getting the cars away from the building that was on fire and then came back and told the men to get their piles of papers together and get them out of the building. It does not distinctly appear whether the building in which he believed the fire originated and which was at right angles with the freight-house belonged to or was under the control of the company or not, so that we are left in ignorance as to the cause or origin of the fire or as to whether it broke out from the inside or outside of the building. The case *123 consequently fails to show negligence in reference to the commencement of the fire. (Whitworth v. Erie R. Co., 87 N. Y. 413).

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.E. 131, 118 N.Y. 118, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 931, 73 Sickels 118, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/draper-v-prest-etc-d-hc-co-ny-1889.