Higgins v. United States Express Co.

85 A. 450, 83 N.J.L. 398, 54 Vroom 398, 1912 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 2
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedDecember 23, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 85 A. 450 (Higgins v. United States Express Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Higgins v. United States Express Co., 85 A. 450, 83 N.J.L. 398, 54 Vroom 398, 1912 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 2 (N.J. 1912).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Minturn, J.

The suit was instituted before the small cause court in the county of Hunterdon, to recover damages upon a contract entered into between the plaintiff and defendant for the shipment of certain mill castings from Plemington to the Bacas Water Motor Company in Newark, where they were to be repaired and returned to Plemington for use in the mill. The substantial facts are not in dispute.

At the time of the shipment on March 2d, 1911, the castings were tied in a bag and taken to the office of defendant company at Plemington, placed on the scales and weighed by the agent in charge, who having made the necessary in[399]*399quiries as to the destination of the bag, made out a receipt. The defendant admitted the receipt of the goods, and the giving of the receipt to the plaintiff; also admitted a delay in the shipment whereby the eastings were not delivered to the consignee until some time about the middle of May, and shortly thereafter were returned by defendant to the plaintiff at Elemington, and that the plaintiff then refused to accept them. The plaintiff in the interim attempted to trace the shipment but unsuccessfully, and as a result was obliged to procure the necessary parts for his mill machinery. In this action he seeks to recover the cost of the new parts and incidentals, including time necessary to adjusting them in place, besides expenses incurred in tracing the shipment, and six days of time lost by the shutting down of the mill.

The conspicuous facts in the case upon which liability must he predicated, if at all, axe that no value was placed upon the goods at the time of shipment, and that the shipping receipt contains a limitation of $50 as the extent of the defendant’s liability in sucli case, and that the plaintiff at the time of shipment gave no notice to the defendant of the particular use to which the castings were put in the operation of the mill, and the consequent necessity for a speedy delivery of the same, in order to continue the operation of the mill.

The briefs deal at length with the legal effect of the limitation of. liability contained in the receipt, but our difficulty has been to ascertain under the well settled legal rules applicable to the plaintiff’s status, how under the circumstances a recovery can be had for the loss of profits resulting from the closing down of the mill until the repairs were made.

Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch. 341, supplies the rule applicable to this phase of tlie case, and there the now well settled doctrine was enunciated that “No recovery can he had for loss of profits in contracts of sale, made or contemplated by the shipper, unless the facts and circumstances of such sale are communicated to the carrier upon shipment.” The rule in its application is not limited to contracts of sale in contemplaiion by the shipper, hut is applied to the varying phases of mercantile life, upon the theory that unless the carrier he [400]*400made aware by the shipper, at the time of shipment, of the urgency, and the circumstances that require unusual dispatch or care in transportation, he cannot be presumed to know the facts, the existence and knowledge of which upon his part present the legal status upon which his liability for more than ordinary damages can be predicated.

In Wolcott Johnson v. Mount, 7 Vroom 270, Mr. Justice Depue, speaking for this court applied this rule, and held, adopting the language of Hadley v. Baxendale, that the damage recoverable in such cases is “such as might arise naturally, i. e., according to the usual course of things, from the breach of the contract or such as might reasonably be supposed to have been in the contemplation of both parties at the time they made the contract, as the probable results of the breach of it.”

In Hadley v. Baxendale, the facts were not in the main unlike those in the case at bar. There the plaintiff, the owner of a flour mill, sent'a broken iron shaft to the defendants, who were common carriers, to be conveyed by them to certain mill-wriglits. The defendant’s clerk was told at the time of shipment that the mill was stopped and that the shaft must be delivered immediately, and that a special order should be given'to hasten its • delivery. The delay in delivery by the carrier caused the closing of the mill for some days, and resulted in a loss of profits to the mill owner. These profits were held not to be recoverable in the action for a breach of the contract, for the reason that the special circumstances of •the case, i. e., that the mill owner was depending upon the return of the shaft for the purpose of continuing operations at the mill, had not been communicated to the carrier at the time of shipment.

The case at bar presents no facts at all analogous in .strength or force to those of the English case upon which it can be urged that the parties had in contemplation such an exigency-resulting from delay in transportation as the shutting down of the plaintiff’s mill. On the contrary the case is ■entirely barren of the very element of notice which distinguishes the English ease;

[401]*401Our Court of Errors and Appeals has recently in Pope v, Ferguson, 53 Vroom 566, had this subject before it in a, discussion of tlio ruling in Hadley v. Baxendale, upon the question of the effect of the sale of scrap iron to a vendee, who subsequently sold the entire -output to a subcontractor; and in an opinion by the learned Chief Justice, the test of liability for more than the ordinary decrease in value of the material was made to depend upon the fact of notice by the vendee.

The cases, both English and American, are collected in a valuable foot-note to Horne v. Midland Railway Co., L. R., 8 C. P. 131; 5 E. R. C. 506, 524, from a perusal of which it becomes manifest that this rule of notice has been nniformly adopted as the correct test of liability.

Another feature of this case, however, presents a different aspect. The castings in question were delivered to defendant for carriage on March 2d, 1911, and were not delivered by it to the consignee until the middle of May, and some days thereafter were tendered to the plaintiff at Elenaington, who refused to accept them.

This unusual interval of time in transit presents the inquiry whether the delay thus occasioned was reasonable because the duty of the defendant was manifestly to deliver in a reasonable time. Hale Carr. 408.

What is a reasonable time is dependent on the circumstances. Coffin v. Railroad Company, 64 Barb. 379; Missouri Pacific Railway v. Hall, 66 Fed. Rep. 868.

An unreasonable delay, however, conceding this to be such, does not amount to a conversion, and the owner therefore is bound to receive the goods when tendered at the proper place, however long the delay. Scovill v. Griffith, 12 N. Y. 509; Michigan Central Railway Co. v. Burrows, 33 Mich. 6; Hutch. Carr. 328.

The measure of damages therefore under such a status is not the value of the goods, since the bailor still retains his ownership, but the loss proximately caused by the delay. Hale Carr. 408; Scovill v. Griffith, 12 N. Y. 509; Fox v. [402]*402Railroad Company, 148 Mass.

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Bluebook (online)
85 A. 450, 83 N.J.L. 398, 54 Vroom 398, 1912 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/higgins-v-united-states-express-co-nj-1912.