Gray v. Jackson

51 N.H. 9
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 51 N.H. 9 (Gray v. Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gray v. Jackson, 51 N.H. 9 (N.H. 1871).

Opinion

Dob, J.

“ Whenever any subject takes upon himself a public trust for the benefit of the rest of his fellow-subjects, he is eo ipso bound to serve the subject in all the-things that are within the reach and comprehension of such an office, under pain of an action against him,” says Holt, C. J., in Lane v. Cotton, 12 Mod. 472, 484, where he names innkeepers and common carriers as engaged in public official duties. One who, in the language of Lord Holt, “has made profession of a public employment,” or “ exercises a public employment ” ( Coggs v. Bernard, 2 Ld. Raym. 917), is bound to serve the public while he remains, or professes to remain, in that employment. The obligation of a common carrier of goods is “ to receive and carry goods according to his public profession.” Johnson v. M. R. Co., 4 Exch. 367, 373.

The defendants have taken upon themselves the public office, trust, and duty of common carriers between Portsmouth and Boston, but not between Boston and Reading. They were under an obligation as com[11]*11mon carriers to receive the plaintiff’s parcel and carry it to Boston. That was their official duty. Assuming the office, they promise to perform its duties. • This is common law. But it was no part of their 'official duty to carry the parcel to Reading, or to receive it coupled with a contract to carry it to Reading. And when the plaintiff accuses them of violating a contract to carry it to Reading, the plaintiff must prove the.contract on which he relies. ’It is not proved by the official duty of their public employment, because that does not extend beyond Boston. A contract to carry the parcel to Reading must be a mutual understanding of the parties. It may be proved expressly or by impli-/ cation, by direct or circumstantial evidence, by writing or parol, by/ words or conduct or usage. The understanding may be mutual, in' contemplation of law, if the defendants are estopped to deny that it is mutual.

In Hyde & a. v. T. N. Co., 5 T. R. 389 (decided in 1793), the defendants, a navigation company, carried cotton to Manchester, wlipre it was put in a warehouse and burned the same night. In the bill, made out by the defendants arid paid by the plaintiffs when the cotton was received by the defendants, was a charge for cartage, which was intended for the cartage to the defendants’ warehouse in Manchester. Formerly the defendants employed their own carts, but had latterly given up this business, together with the profits derived from it, to their bookkeeper ; and the plaintiffs knew that the cartage was received for him. A verdict was found for the plaintiffs, and the defendants moved to set it aside. The only ground upon which the 'motion could be granted was, that there was no evidence to sustain the verdict. The only question for the court was, whether there was any evidence from which the jury could have found the fact that the defendants undertook as common carriers to cart the cotton to the plaintiffs’ warehouse ; and the decision was in favor of the plaintiffs. Mr.'Justice Buller said, It is like the case of an innkeeper, who agrees with his head ostler that the latter shall supply the customers with'post horses ; in which case, if goods be lost, the innkeeper is liable because he holds himself out to the public as the responsible person.” All'the judges held that the charge for cartage showed that the defendants undertook to deliver the cotton at the plaintiffs’ warehouse. Whether such an undertaking was shown by such a charge under the circumstances, was a question of fact which the jury had decided ; and the court .could decide nothing more than this, — that the charge was evidence from which the jury might properly have found the undertaking. But the court, in accordance with the English custom of the judge giving his opinion on the weight of the evidence, spoke of the evidence, not as tending to prove' or competent to prove the fact, but as proving it.

Judge Redfield says, that in England, until a late period, the usage of inland common carriers was to employ their own porters to deliver parcels ; that those who dealt with them acted upon the faith of their making a personal delivery ;' and that “ Hyde v. Tr. and M. Nav. Co., 5 T. R. 387, is decided upon this ground, and upon the additional fact that the carriers charged for cartage to the house of the consignee, thus [12]*12showing that they so understood the contract.” F. & M. Bank v. C. T. Co., 23 Vt. 208, 209. In that -view of the subject there are no legal elements except the common doctrine of estoppel and the general principle that a mutual understanding may be a contract. If the carrier and the consignor understand that the carrier undertakes to deliver a parcel at the town to which it .is directed, or to the person to whom it is directed, or at his house or shop, the mutual understanding is the contract. The usage of making such delivery may be evidence tending to show the fact of an understanding that a particular parcel is to be delivered according to the usage. If the consignor had and the carrier had not such an understanding, the carrier’s usage may be evidence tending to show the fact that he held himself out and practically represented himself as undertaking to do what he usually did; and if the consignor acted on the faith of such holding out and practical representation, the doctrine of estoppel may be applied. The carrier may be estopped to deny that he understood the contract to be what his conduct induced the consignor to understand it to be. And the usage of other carriers may tend to show the fact that the defendant, by carrying on their kind of business, held himself out as undertaking to carry goods according to the usage of his neighborhood ; and an estoppel may be raised in that way.

In this view there is no law peculiar to this branch of the contract, of a common carrier. There is no law in it, except the elementary and general principles applicable to all contracts, that a contract is a mutual understanding, and that a party may be estopped to deny that his understanding was such as he induced the other party to believe it to be. All the rest of the question whether by an implied contract a carrier undertook to carry goods beyond his route, is a question of fact to be" determined upon the evidence by the tribunal authorized to try the questions of fact involved in the issue.

How can so plain a question of fact be changed into a question of law ? In Muschamp v. L. & P. J. R. Co., 8 M. & W. 421 (decided in 1841, and everywhere accepted as the leading case on this subject), it was held to be a question of fact. A parcel directed to a place beyond the defendants’ route, and carried by them through their route and forwarded, was afterwards lost. Baron Rolee “ stated to the jury, in summing up, that where a common carrier takes into his care a parcel directed to a particular place, and does not by positive agreement limit his responsibility to a part only of the distance, that is prima facie evidence of an undertaking on his part to carry the parcel to the place to which it is directed: and that the same rule applied, although that place were beyond the limits within which he in general professed to carry on his trade of a carriel’.” The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff, and the defendants moved “ for a new trial, on the ground of misdirection.”

“ Lord Abinger, C. B.

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51 N.H. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-jackson-nh-1871.