Graf Bros. v. D & E Realty Co.

244 A.2d 806, 1968 Me. LEXIS 235
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 9, 1968
StatusPublished

This text of 244 A.2d 806 (Graf Bros. v. D & E Realty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graf Bros. v. D & E Realty Co., 244 A.2d 806, 1968 Me. LEXIS 235 (Me. 1968).

Opinion

WILLIAMSON, Chief Justice.

This is an action by a common carrier to recover freight on two truckloads of structural steel from Houston, Texas to Portland, Maine. The decisive question is whether the defendant was the undisclosed principal of the consignee to whom the steel was delivered in Portland. The plaintiff has appealed from judgment for the defendant.

The steel was shipped from Houston by Mes-Tex Steel Bldg., Inc. on a Uniform Straight Bill of Lading consigned to “NESBC” (New England Steel Building Co., Inc.), Box 12, Chelmsford, Massachusetts with destination “Portland” and with route “Sea Train.” The Bill contained a notation “Deliver to: D & E Realty, Warren Ave., Portland, Maine; call collect, A.C. 617 256-9471, Chelmsford, Mass.” The telephone number and the Chelmsford address were those of NESBC.

The shipment was accepted by the carrier without recourse on the consignor, with the provision, over the signature of the consignor by its agent, that “the carrier shall not make delivery of this shipment without payment of freight and all other lawful charges.” The steel went via “Sea Train” to New Jersey and thence by connecting motor common carriers, the New England Transportation Co., and finally the plaintiff, Graf Bros., Inc. to Portland.

In Portland the defendant, D & E Realty Co., Inc., stopped the attempt of the plaintiff to unload the steel at the defendant’s Warren Avenue premises. The plaintiff then communicated with the representative of NESBC and with the consent of the defendant delivered the steel to NESBC, the consignee, which accepted delivery at the same premises. To quote [807]*807from Graf’s reply brief, “plaintiff did not deliver or attempt to deliver to defendant.” The plaintiff has not been successful in recovering the freight from NESBC, now in bankruptcy.

The Court, sitting without a jury, in entering judgment for the defendant, said: “I find no evidence to support any contract, express or implied, whereby the Defendant agreed to pay the express charges of the Plaintiff here sought to be recovered.” We agree.

On its face the situation discloses: (1) a shipment of steel in Houston by a consign- or without recourse for the freight; (2) delivery to and acceptance in Portland by the original consignee, which thereby became liable for the freight; and (3) credit for the freight given to the consignee by the carrier, which thereby of its own will waived its lien for payment before delivery. There is nothing on the surface to indicate that the defendant has any responsibility for the charges. The plaintiff reaches beneath the transactions, so stated, to place liability on the defendant.

The bill of lading did not accompany the steel to Portland. Both motor carriers held waybills for the shipment. The plaintiff was unaware, it says, that the shipment was sent freight collect with denial of recourse against the consignor.

It is not clear what advantage the plaintiff seeks from its lack of knowledge of the terms of the bill of lading. In any event, it gains none. Surely the plaintiff, a common carrier, had opportunity of ascertaining the exclusion of the consignor from liability. It preferred, without inquiry it would appear, to carry and deliver the steel with payment resting only on the credit of the consignee. No more is heard of the consignor in Texas.

The claim that the defendant was the undisclosed principal of the consignee NESBC, rests on substantially the following situation appearing from the record.

On September 9, 1965, NESBC and the defendant entered into a contract whereby NESBC agreed to build a terminal for the defendant on the latter’s premises on Warren Avenue in Portland. The contract called for a “turn key job,” meaning that NESBC agreed to erect a completed building ready for defendant’s occupancy. The contract price of the completed building was $76,800, with the steel to be shipped “F.O.B. Houston.”

The parties agreed that freight from Houston would be borne by the defendant and added to the contract price. It was then understood that the shipment from Texas would be made by a carrier in which the defendant was interested. In November 1965 NESBC and the defendant altered the agreement to the end that the shipment would be made by “Sea Train” from Houston to New Jersey and there “picked up” by the defendant. For reasons not disclosed, the shipping instructions did not include the change in routing.

The steel unexpectedly and without notice reached Portland on the plaintiff’s trucks. During the delay in the unloading and before the defendant permitted delivery to NESBC at Warren Avenue, the parties again altered their agreement by providing that NESBC and not the defendant would pay the freight. At no time did the plaintiff, or the other carriers, know or have reason to know of the agreement or the changes therein between NESBC and the defendant relating to payment of freight.

On December 9, 1965, in a letter addressed “To Whom It May Concern:” NESBC acknowledged receipt of $10,000 paid on behalf of the defendant by a bank “on account of steel and material for a steel terminal building on land at Warren Avenue, Portland, Maine. This payment is made on account of a written construction agreement between D & E Realty, Inc. and the undersigned. In return for this payment the undersigned transfers to D & E Realty, Inc. all of its right, title, and interest in said steel and materials.” There were also additional payments for the same purpose by the defendant to NESBC of [808]*808about $5,000, making a total of about $15,000.

In our view, the defendant in advancing money on the contract did no more than take normal protective steps by obtaining or attempting to obtain the security of the steel to be purchased by NESBC for the proposed building.

It further appeared that the defendant hired the subcontractor to complete construction of the building site, although this work was included within the NESBC contract. The plaintiff argues that this fact bears upon the asserted agency of NESBC.

At most, the record establishes that NESBC’s ability to complete the contract was in some doubt when the steel was delivered. The evidence, however, does not deny, as we read it, that NESBC was then acting under the contract and was an independent contractor. The step from contractor to agent for an undisclosed principal had not been taken.

The case, in our opinion, falls within the principle set forth in Brown Transport Corp. v. United Merchants & Mfrs., 21 A. D.2d 303, 250 N.Y.S.2d 440 (1964). In holding there was no liability for freight on the owner, the Court said, at p. 440:

“The question presented is whether a common carrier by motor vehicle has a cause of action for freight charges against the owner of the goods transported even though the owner had no contract or dealings with the carrier, was neither consignor nor consignee of the shipment, and the goods were not at any time diverted or reconsigned * *
“* * * Defendant owner played no part whatever in making the arrangements. It made no agreements with any carrier, delivered none of the machinery, received none of the machinery, exercised no control over the shipment, and it did not sign or receive any bill of lading with respect to the shipment.
“The machinery was shipped to Griffin as consignee on a collect basis.

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Bluebook (online)
244 A.2d 806, 1968 Me. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graf-bros-v-d-e-realty-co-me-1968.