H. A. Gogarty, Inc. v. T. D. Downing Co.

8 Mass. App. Div. 66
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedJanuary 6, 1943
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Mass. App. Div. 66 (H. A. Gogarty, Inc. v. T. D. Downing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H. A. Gogarty, Inc. v. T. D. Downing Co., 8 Mass. App. Div. 66 (Mass. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Spiegel, J.

This is-an-action of contract or tort in which the plaintiff seeks to recover $2,086.75 on account of money paid to the defendant under the circumstances hereinafter set forth. The trial judge found for the defendant. The plaintiff filed twenty-four requests for rulings, and claims to be aggrieved by the trial judge’s rulings and refusals to rule as requested. The following facts appeared:

The plaintiff is a customhouse broker licensed to do business at the Port of New York, but not licensed to do business at the Port of Boston. The defendant is a customhouse broker licensed to do business at the Port of Boston.

The Nissho Co. Ltd., not a party to this action but one whose relationship to the parties is material, is ah importer doing business in New York City and importing merchandise through various ports of the United States.

The plaintiff was the customhouse broker in charge of clearing through customs the importations of Nissho Co. Ltd. which were entered at the Port of New York. The [67]*67plaintiff also customarily acted for the Nissho Co, Ltd, with respect to imports that were entered at other ports, at which the plaintiff was not licensed to do business, by serving as a means through which the various customs documents relating to imports of Nissho Co. Ltd., were transmitted to licensed customhouse brokers at the various ports involved, for their attention and disposition. Instructions as to delivery or other disposition of the merchandise imported at such ports were given by Nissho Co. Ltd. to the plaintiff and the plaintiff transmitted such instructions to the locally licensed brokers.

For two years prior to and including the time of this controversy, the defendant, at the request and direction of the plaintiff, and with the knowledge of Nissho Co. Ltd, had cleared through customs all of Nissho Cb. Ltd.’s imports at the Port of Boston, amounting in all to several hundred shipments.

On October 1, 1937, the plaintiff sent to the defendant two letters containing instructions and enclosing customs .documents relative to two different lots of merchandise then in process of importation by Nissho Co. Ltd. (hereinafter respectively referred to as “Lot A” and “Lot B”),

. The first letter instructed the defendant to pay the customs duty on Lot A, by means of plaintiff’s certified check therein enclosed, and to deliver Lot A to the American Woolen Co. The second letter instructed the defendant to store Lot B in bond at a Boston Warehouse, without paying any customs duty thereon, to obtain a nonnegotiable warehouse receipt in the name of the National City Bank of New York, and to forward the receipt to the plaintiff.

On October 2, 1937 the defendant sent two letters to the plaintiff respectively relating and confirming the plaintiff’s two letters of October 1, 1937.

[68]*68Through the defendant’s mistake, the defendant paid the custom’s duties (amounting to $2,086.75) on Lot B, instead of Lot A, and shipped Lot B to the American Woolen Company. Also through the defendant’s mistake, Lot A was stored in bond instead of Lot B, as instructed. This error was discovered after delivery of Lot B to the American Woolen Company, which notified Nissho Co. Ltd.

By letter of October 7, 1937 the plaintiff notified the defendant of the defendant’s error and requested the defendant to deliver Lot A to the American Woolen Company. By letter of October 8, 1937, the plaintiff repeated this request, adding that Nissho Co. Ltd. was unable to pay the duty on Lot A for the time being.

By letter of October 8, 1937, a copy of which it transmitted to the defendant, Nissho Co. Ltd. wrote to the American Woolen Company, referring to “our broker at Boston, T. D. Downing, 88 Broad Street,” and continuing as follows: “We have already instructed our broker to give you the correct delivery order immediately ... If there is any further difficulty . . . please get in touch with our broker at the above mentioned-address.”

The defendant, out of its own funds, paid the duty on Lot A, and sent Lot A to the American Woolen Company, as it had been originally instructed to do.

On October 11, 1937, the defendant wrote to the plaintiff informing it of the fact that Lot B had been recalled and was being stored in a warehouse in defendant’s name, on non-negotiable warehouse receipt. In a letter dated October 14,1937, defendant requested payment of a balance of $2363.83, after payment of duties, and asked for confirmation from the plaintiff that Lot B was insured for its value plus duties and charges.

By letter dated November 23, 1937, plaintiff notified the defendant that the National City Bank of New York was [69]*69insisting that Nissho Co., Ltd. surrender the warehouse receipt covering Lot B, and asking whether defendant would accept the guarantee of Nissho Co., Ltd. to reimburse defendant for the duty paid in error. By letter of November 24, 1937, the defendant asserted a lien on Lot B, stating: “As we have a lien against this shipment for duty money paid we cannot see our way clear to surrender the warehouse receipt unless the amount owed is paid to us.” In a letter dated November 26, 1937, plaintiff again requested surrender of the warehouse receipt. To this the defendant replied on November 27, 1937: “As previously advised we have a lien against this shipment and propose holding the warehouse receipt until the amount due for duties and charges is paid us.”

On December 8, 1937 the plaintiff forwarded its check for $2,086.75 to the defendant, stating in an accompanying letter that it was so doing “in order to satisfy our principal here and the bank. ’ ’ On December 16, 1937 the plaintiff wrote to the defendant, stating, in part: “We wish to straighten you out in connection with the . . . check for $2086.75. . . . We did this in order to obtain the warehouse receipt which was due the principal, and for your information, we paid it out of our own pocket. In other words, we advanced this sum to you in order to maintain a worth-while business relationship with our friends, the Nissho Company ... To conclude, we sent you the check because we appointed you as our agent, so to speak, to look after the Nissho business in Boston, and therefore, having employed you to do a certain job, we felt responsible to the shipper regardless of what your viewpoint may have been.”

Sometime in 1938, the defendant, under instructions from Nissho Co., Ltd., placed Lot B on a steamship, for export from this country. On March 7, 1938 the defendant rendered a statement to the plaintiff, stating that the United [70]*70States Customs had audited the duty on Lot B and that there was a balance due of $300. This the plaintiff paid to the defendant.

The $2,086.75 duty paid on Lot B was not recoverable from the United States, and the plaintiff was never reim.bursed for the money it paid to the defendant. In answers to interrogatories, plaintiff admitted that “as a matter of office routine, a statement of the duty paid on its merchandise was sent (by the plaintiff) to the Nissho Co., Ltd.”

Other facts in evidence were that the defendant recognized that Lot B was the property of Nissho Co. Ltd., but believed that the defendant had a lien thereon for the duty paid by it; and that no claim for reimbursement from the defendant was made by the. plaintiff until the intervention of counsel. There was no evidence that the plaintiff ever became liable to the United States for customs duties on either Lot A or Lot B.

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8 Mass. App. Div. 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-a-gogarty-inc-v-t-d-downing-co-massdistctapp-1943.