Fitch v. Newberry

1 Doug. 1
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 1 Doug. 1 (Fitch v. Newberry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fitch v. Newberry, 1 Doug. 1 (Mich. 1843).

Opinion

Ransom, J.

Upon the facts found in the special verdict, several questions were raised, but the most important, and the only one which we deem it necessary to consider, is, whether the defendants had acquired a lien upon the goods, which they could enforce, even against the owners, the plaintiffs in this case.

On the part of the defendants, it is contended that a common carrier who receives goods for carriage and transports them, may detain them by virtue - of his lien, for freight, even against the owner, in case the freight has been earned without fraud or collusion on his part; that, if goods be stolen, or otherwise tortiously obtained from the legal owner, at New York or elsewhere, and carried by a transportation line from thence to Detroit, rvithout a knowledge of the theft on the part of the carrier, he would be entitled to a lien for freight, even against the owner. This doctrine is sought to be maintained by the defendants’ counsel, on several grounds : 1. He insists that a common carrier is bound to' receive goods which are offered for transportation, and to carry them; that it is not a matter of choice whether he will receive and carry them or not; that he is liable to prosecution if he refuses. 2. That a common carrier is not only bound to receive and transport goods that are offered, but he is liable for their loss,- in all cases, except by the act of God and public enemies; and the same rule, he insists, applies to warehousemen and [6]*6forwarders. 8. That the duties and obligations of common carriers and innkeepers, are, in all respects, analogous; and an innkeeper is bound to receive and entertain guests, and to account for a loss of their baggage while under his care. 4. That a common carrier, being bound by law to accept goods offered him for carrying, and being responsible for their safe delivery in all cases, except when prevented by the act of God or public enemies, is entitled to a lien for their freight, against all persons, including even the owner, when the goods were tortiously obtained from himp'that he is not bound to enquire into the title of the person who delivers them: >and such lien exists, although there be a special agreement for the price of carriage. 5. That the master is not bound (nor his agent for him) to deliver any part of a cargo until the freight and other charges are paid.

But for the plaintiffs it is contended: 1. That liens, are only known or admitted in cases where the relation of debtor and creditor exists, so that a suit at law may be maintained for the debt which gives rise to the lien ; that a lien is a mere right to detain goods until some charge against the owner be satisfied. 2. That the defendants obtained possession of the goods without authority from the owners, either express or implied; that no legal privity exists between the parties, and therefore the relation of debtor and creditor does not exist between the defendants or their principals and the plaintiffs, and no action could be maintained by either against them for the freight, or any part of it. 3. They contend further, that, even if the defendants lawfully received the goods from the original carriers of the plaintiffs, the New York and Michigan Line, they did so as their agents and servants, and were bound by their agreement with the plaintiffs; that their contract of affreightment is incomplete, and therefore no freight is due.

That common carriers are bound to receive goods which [7]*7are offered, by the owners or their agents for transportation and to carry them for a just compensation, upon the routes which they navigate, or over which they convey goods in the prosecution of their business, is too well settled to require discussion, although this general proposition is subject to some qualifications.

Chancellor Kent says, 2 Kent’s Com. 598: Common carriers undertake generally, and for all people indifferently, to convey goods and deliver them at a place appointed, for hire, and with or without a special agreement as to price. They consist of inland carriers by land or water, and carriers by sea; and as they hold themselves out to the world as common carriers, for a reasonable compensation, they assume to do, and are bound to do what is required of them in the course of their employment, if they have the requisite convetiiences to carry, and are offered a reasonable or customary price; and if they refuse without some just ground, they are liable to an action.”

The books, English and American, are filled with strong cases affirming this doctrine. See 2 Show. R. 332 j 5 T. R. 143; 4 B. & Aid. 32; 1 Pick. R. 50, and numerous other cases, and the elementary writers passim-

That common carriers are responsible for the safe conveyance and delivery of the goods committed to them for carriage, is just as conclusively settled as that they are bound to receive and carry them. A common carrier is said to be in the nature of an insurer, and is answerable for accidents and thefts, and even for a loss by robbery. He is answerable for all losses which do not fall within the excepted cases of the act of God, or inevitable accident without the intervention of man, and public enemies. 2 Kent’s Com. 597; Colt v. McMechen, 6 Johns. R. 160. This doctrine is sustained by a series of decisions running back through a period of more than a century and a half. Proprietors Trent Navigation v. Wood, 3 Esp. R. 127; [8]*8Dale v. Hall, 1 Wils. 288; Forward v. Pittard, 1 T. R. 33; Hyde v. Trent Navigation Company, 5 T. R. 389.

Another position taken by the defendants’ counsel, that ('the duties of common carriers and innkeepers are analo- ' gous, may be admitted. , As a general proposition it cannot be denied. Upon the obligations and liabilities imposed on common carriers, for the transportation, safe custody and delivery of goods, the counsel for the defendants base a corresponding right to compensation for such transportation and delivery, and a lien on the goods for its payment.

; If, as contended for by the defendants, a carrier is /bound to receive and carry all goods offered for transporjtation, without the right of enquiring into the title or authority of the person offering them, then clearly he should be entitled to a lien, even against the owner, upon the goods, until he is paid for the labor he may bestow in their carriage. /

Let us now enquire whether such is the law.

The doctrine is certainly opposed to all the analogies of the law, and it seems to me to every principle of common justice.

The only,adjudged case I have been able to find, which favors it, is Yorke v. Grenaugh, 2 Ld. Raym. 866. That was replevin for a gelding. The defendant, who was an innkeeper, received the horse from a stranger who had stolen him. On demand being made for the horse, by the owner, the defendant, who was ignorant of the theft when he received him, refused to deliver him up until paid for his keeping, insisting on his right of lien. The Court held it reasonable that he should have a remedy for payment, which was by retainer; and that he was not obliged to consider who was the owner of the horse, but whether he who brought him was his guest. And Holt, C. J. cited the case of the Exeter carrier,

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Bluebook (online)
1 Doug. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitch-v-newberry-mich-1843.