Estherville Produce Co. v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R.

57 F.2d 50, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3913
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 25, 1932
Docket9276, 9264
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 57 F.2d 50 (Estherville Produce Co. v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estherville Produce Co. v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R., 57 F.2d 50, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3913 (8th Cir. 1932).

Opinion

VAN VALKENBÜRGH, Circuit Judge.

The Estherville Produce Company, a co-partnership composed of H. D. Hinseh and ■Frank Koch, and suing as a firm under local practice, was engaged in the poultry and egg-business at Estherville, Iowa. One of its regular customers, the commission firm of Levit & Woorman, had a place of business-at 345 South Front street in Philadelphia, Pa., but usually received 'shipments on track 7-A, Pier 62 South, in said city. The produce company had had dealings with this Philadelphia firm for a period of about six months prior to November, 1928, during which time goods had been shipped directly to Levit & Woorman as consignee. Early in November it determined to make a change in the method of consignment, with the object, as Mr. Koch states, “to assure ourselves, to make sure, that that property belonged to us until it was paid for.” This purpose was communicated to Levit & Woor-man by telephone prior to November 6, 1928. On the last-mentioned date the produce company shipped a ear of live poultry to Philadelphia. The Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad was the initial carrier, and one Anthony Stoery was the agent in charge of its offices at Estherville. The circumstances attending this consignment are best stated in the language of Mr. Hinseh, whose testimony in this regard is uneontradieted:

“I think all of our shipping transactions went through the same man, through Stoery. *51 The transaction of November 1G, 3928, and the prior transactions were had on the railroad premises, in the office of the freight depot. The freight depot at Estherville is just across the tracks, 1 think, from the passenger depot. Estherville is a city of a little better than 5,00(1 population. 1 had a conversation with Anthony Stoery at or about the time of these transactions of November 6, 1928, and I talked to him with regard to the shipment we wished to make or were about to make. 1 told Mr. Stoery that I wanted to hill this ear to ourselves at Philadelphia, and I would like to have an order bill of lading; a yellow bill of lading, whereon he told mo that we could not ship poultry, live poultry, with an order hill of lading; we would have to use the common bill of lading. That wasn’t something I said. He told me we would have to use the common hill of lading. So I told him that they would have to bill it that way but we wanted them billed to ourselves so it was our poultry when it got to Philadelphia. * * *

“Q. What further was said about the shipment? A. I told him I would like to have him put on ‘Notify Levit & Woorman when this shipment reaches Philadelphia’, and he said he couldn’t put that on, hut he would put on ‘Spot at’ or ‘In care of’ and I told him I didn’t care, just so the poultry would he ours on arrival in Philadelphia.”

The hill of lading issued for this shipment of November 6, 1928, was a uniform straight bill of lading. In it the Estherville Produce Company was named as consignor and consignee, the destination was Philadelphia, Pa., and on it was this notation: “Spot at Levit & Woorman, 345 So. Front St., Philadelphia, Penn.”

The produce company procured a draft for the amount of the shipment, and forwarded it, with this hill of lading attached, to a Philadelphia bank for collection. In this draft the payor was named as “Levit & Woorman, 345 So. Eront St., Philadelphia, Pa.” Upon arrival, in due course in Philadelphia, the ear was placed on track 7-A, Pier 62 South, where, as has been said, Levit & Woorman usually received shipments of poultry. On November 12, 1928, the demurrage clerk for the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, the receiving carrier, notified Levit & Woorman by mail of the oar’s arrival, In this notice Levit & Woorman were named as _ consignee. Upon receipt of this notice Levit & Woorman, by telephone and letter, instructed the Baltimore & Ohio to direct this cax “to the same consignee at Weehawken, N. J., Erie R. R. delivery.” The directions for this reeonsignment were given on a new memorandum waybill, showing the new destination. The destination on the original bill of lading was not changed. No now bill of lading was issued, and the railroad did not demand nor receive the old one. Concerning this transaction, Woor-man, of the Philadelphia commission firm, testified that this car “was diverted by me to Weehawken, N. J. and sold to Julius Eastern. That is, he handled it on consignment and paid our firm for it.” Levit & Woorman, however, did not pay the Esther-ville Company. It was not until early in December that that company was advised that its draft had not been paid. January 9, 1929, Levit & Woorman were adjudged bankrupts. The produce company proved up its claim. A composition settlement was effected whereby it received a 10 per cent, dividend in cash, and 15 per cent, of its claim in notes. It brought suit against the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad Company, appellee in canse No. 9276, to recover for the alleged wrongful diversion and resulting conversion of this ear of poultry. At the trial the District Court directed a verdict in favor of, the railroad upon the transaction above described, which formed the subject-matter of the first count of the petition of the produce company. It is to review the resulting judgment that this appeal in No. 9276 is taken.

The second count of the produce company’s petition has to do with a second shipment by it to Philadelphia on November 13, 1928. This was pursuant to a telephone conversation on the tenth or eleventh of November between Koch and Woorman, as a result of which the latter sent to Estherville a caretaker named Williams to accompany the shipment. The produce company was named as consignor and consignee in a uniform straight bill of lading upon which appeared the following notation: “In care of Levit & Woorman, 345 So. Front St., Philadelphia, Penn.”

En route, at Blue Diamond, 111., Williams received instructions from Levit & Woorman by telegram to direct the car to Bridgeport, Conn., via New York Central Railroad. Williams executed a written order accordingly. The ear, thus diverted, proceeded to Bridgeport, and was there unloaded by Levin Bros., to whom Levit & Woorman had sold the poultry. As before, a draft with hill of lading attached had been sent to a, Philadelphia bank for collection, but this draft was never paid. Through the composition in *52 bankruptcy above described, tbe produce company received a easb dividend of 10 per cent, and 15 per cent, in notes upon its claim against Levit & Woorman. It brought suit against the initial carrier to recover for the diversion and conversion of its property as above stated, this transaction forming the subject-matter of the second eount of its petition. At the trial below, this count was submitted to the jury, which returned a verdict against the railroad, appellant in cause No. 9264. We shall dispose of this last-named controversy first.

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Bluebook (online)
57 F.2d 50, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3913, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estherville-produce-co-v-chicago-r-i-p-r-ca8-1932.