Goodrich v. . Thompson

44 N.Y. 324, 1871 N.Y. LEXIS 46
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 1, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 44 N.Y. 324 (Goodrich v. . Thompson) 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
Goodrich v. . Thompson, 44 N.Y. 324, 1871 N.Y. LEXIS 46 (N.Y. 1871).

Opinion

Lott, Ch. C.

The motion for the dismissal of the complaint, after all the testimony given on the trial had been introduced, is stated in the case to have been made on the following grounds, among others :

1st. That the receipt, exhibit A, did not restrict the defendants as to the mode of conveyance, and oblige them to forward by Ocean Bird.

2d. That as the Ocean Bird did not make the trip contemplated, the defendants were entitled to send by any other usual, customary and proper mode of conveyance.

3d. That the exhibit A was not made by the defendants or their authority, and was not obligatory upon them.

4th. That Tillinghast had no authority to 'sign the said sxhibit A, or to make the contract claimed to have been made thereby.

*329 None of the “ other” grounds are set forth.

The exception taken on the denial of the motion, so far as it was based on the third and fourth of the grounds above stated, makes it necessary to examine the testimony in reference thereto.

It is important, before referring to the evidence given on the trial, to notice the fact that the defendants, in their answer, admit that they agreed to forward the boxes of merchandise in question, on the terms and conditions specified in a receipt in writing, of which a copy is set forth, executed and delivered by them, which they say “ clearly and accurately expressed the agreement of the parties thereto, in respect to the forwarding of the said boxes.”

That receipt was signed “ For the proprietors, Tillinghast.” The admission concedes that he was authorized to sign that receipt, and the only difference between it and that introduced by the plaintiffs, and marked exhibit A, is that in the latter the additional words, “per Ocean Bird,” are added after the names of “ Hyde & Goodrich,” therein mentioned. The controversy is thus narrowed down to the question, so far as it relates to the grounds we are now considering, whether Tillinghast had authority to insert or add those words; or rather, whether there was such a defect of proof in support of such authority as to make the decision of the referee, in refusing to dismiss the complaint on that ground, erroneous.

It is proved, and indeed it is not denied, that the said exhibit A was signed by Tillinghast, and the evidence of the cartman who delivered the goods was to the effect that he carted them to the office of the defendants, and on reaching there he took them inside and delivered them to Tillinghast (who, so far as it appears from the case, was the only person therein at the time), and he then signed the said receipt (exhibit A) at his desk in the said office; that after it was so signed it was given to the witness, that he took and delivered it to a clerk in the office of the plaintiffs’ agent, and that it was in the same condition on the trial as when Tillinghast *330 signed it. He also stated that he was in the habit of taking goods to the express office of the defendants to go to Hew Orleans, on the sailing of every steamer; that he generally examined the receipt given therefor, to see if the name of the steamer was put in, and that he made such examination of the receipt in question. There was also evidence introduced on the part of the plaintiffs tending to show that it had been agreed by and between an agent of the plaintiffs and James Stuart, an agent of the defendants, that the said boxes should be shipped by the Ocean Bird.

It was shown on the part of the defendants, that at the time of the transaction in question the said James Stuart was freight superintendent, that Lariston W. Winchester was superintendent of office, and that Tillinghast was manifest clerk, and that his duties were making out way-bills which went east by the way of Stonington, and those south by way of Savannahthat the Hew Orleans way-bills were made out by Stuart and under his supervision, and that Tillinghast had no authority to make contracts to transport freight by any particular vessel, or to give receipts for goods to be carried by any particular vessel, or which stated that they were to be so carried, and that he had no authority to sign exhibit A, and that no one except Stuart was authorized to insert the name of any particular vessel in the receipt of the goods to be forwarded.

Stuart stated that in this particular instance he did not insert or authorize the insertion of any particular vessel in the receipt, and was not positive that it was ever done for the plaintiffs previous to this shipment, but afterwards, on being asked if it was ever done in any instance for any one prior to the receipt of the goods in question he answered “I should say yes, because people would want it for their insurances,” and it appeared by receipts given to the plaintiffs, signed by himself, subsequently introduced, one bearing date March 17th, 1855, and another dated Hovember 26th, 1855 (only five days before that in question), for the forwarding of goods to Hew Orleans, that a particular steamer was named *331 by which they were to be sent. He also gave evidence to show that no agreement or promise had been made by him or instructions given to him to send the boxes in question by the Ocean Bird. He, on his cross-examination, stated that he had known Tillinghast to sign a receipt for property left to be carried, and on being asked by the referee if he had known of Tillinghast signing receipts for goods prior to the time of this transaction, he answered “ ordinary receipts frequently,” which in answer to a further question he said were receipts for forwarding ordinary freight where there was no special agreement as to the manner of forwarding,” and in answer to a question by the defendants’ counsel he said that signing of ordinary receipts did not come under his own regular duty. He also stated that the defendants had a receipting clerk, and that signing of such receipts was the only duty of that clerk; but that he had seen Tillinghast sign a great many of the ordinary receipts, which it was the duty of the receipting clerk to give.

Winchester testified, on his cross-examination by the plaintiffs’ counsel, that Tillinghast “sometimes performed other duties than those of manifest clerk; that is, such duties as he was called upon from time to time, giving ordinary receipts in our ordinary business. He sometimes received packages and gave receipts in the ordinary transaction of business.” And he, on being asked by the said counsel whether he (Winchester) did not often receive packages to be carried by a particular steamer, answered, “not to my knowledge. We never gave receipts to go by particular steamers. My instructions were always to the contrary.” He afterward qualified the answer by making “ an explanation,” as he called it, stating that it was often the case that steamers were advertised that did not go; that his instructions always were not to give receipts by particular steamer; but that they had “ agreed to take by particular steamer, provided she wentand being then asked whether in such case the receipt would show the fact that it was to go by the particular steamer, provided she went, he answered “ I think I know of such cases, and I have *332

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.Y. 324, 1871 N.Y. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodrich-v-thompson-ny-1871.