Holbrook v. Vose

19 Bosw. 76
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJanuary 21, 1860
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Bosw. 76 (Holbrook v. Vose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holbrook v. Vose, 19 Bosw. 76 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1860).

Opinion

By the Court—Woodruff, J.

If, upon the undisputed facts, it must be held that, at the time when the property in question was taken, the defendants, Vose, Livingston & Company, had the right to stop the goods in transitu, and duly exercised that right, neither they nor their sureties incurred any liability to the plaintiffs by the taking complained of.

Whether such right existed may properly be considered by inquiring—First. Whether, as between Vose, Livingston and Company, as vendors, and the Railroad Company, as vendees, [103]*103the former were entitled to stop the goods ? and, Second. Whether the transactions between such vendees and the present plaintiffs, Holbrook & Nelson, had defeated that right ?

I. First, then, we inquire whether, if no advance had been procured from Holbrook & Nelson upon the security, or supposed security, of the iron, the vendors, as against the vendees, had the right to stop the goods ?

If there be any difficulty in determining this question, it arises rather from uncertainty in regard to what constitutes a delivery to the vendee sufficient to prevent the application of the general rule or to defeat it, than from any doubt respecting the rule itself.

Goods, sold on credit to a vendee, who becomes insolvent while the goods are in the hands of a carrier or middleman in their transit to the vendee, may be stopped before they come to the possession of the latter. Whether goods, in a given instance, are to be deemed in transit, and what circumstances amount to such possession in the vendee as will defeat the right of stoppage, are questions to be answered in the application of the rule. It is material to observe, that, whether the delivery be to a carrier or warehouseman, or to an agent of the purchaser, is not important. So long as such carrier or agent receives and holds the goods for the purpose of carrying or forwarding them to the vendee, they may be stopped.

In the present case the goods were sold at the city of New York to the Chicago, St. Paul and Fond du Lac Railroad Company, upon credit.

It is not denied that the vendees became insolvent before the credit expired, and before the vendors attempted to exercise the right, which they assert, to stop the goods.

The goods, when this right was asserted by the vendors, were in the actual possession of common carriers, who received them at New York, for transportation from New York to Milwaukie, on their way to the vendees at that place; and when the seizure took place for which this action is brought, the goods had reached Oswego in course of the transportation thus assumed by the carriers.

If, therefore, before the goods left New York, there had been no such delivery to the vendees, and there was no such posses[104]*104sion in them as would defeat the right to stop, or, in other words, if the goods were, in a legal sense, in their transit from the vendors to the vendees, then, as between Vose, Livingston & Company, and the Railroad Company, the right of the former to stop the goods was clear.

. The delivery which had taken place in Hew York was to the carriers, and for the purpose of transportation to Milwaukie. Every act done or assented to by Vose, Livingston & Company contemplated such transportation of the iron to Milwaukie, tobe used by the vendees in the construction of their railroad. The discharge of the iron from the ship in which they had imported it was directly into the boats of the carriers: their authority to withdraw it was indorsed upon the entry of the goods for transportation to Milwaukie; and the whole transaction showed the mutual intent of both buyers and sellers that the iron should be transported to Milwaukie, to be laid upon the vendees’ road; . and this was the destination contemplated at the time by both.

The presence ófthe agents of the vendees in Hew York should have no effect on this question, for they had at no time actual possession of the iron. They are not shown to have even seen the iron. • They did not, while the iron remained in Hew York, exercise any actual control over the iron itself, except in aid of the forwarding of the same by the carriers.to its destination; and what was so done consisted in making the proper entry of the ■goods at the custom-housé for transportation.

■ Delivery of goods to an agent of the vendee, or to a person employed by him, if it be done with the view and for the purpose of forwarding them- to the vendee himself, is not enough to prevent the exercise of the vendor’s right. The possession of such agent or employee, in such casé, is not the possession which terminates that right.

• Here, although the agent's of the purchasers were in Hew York, the goods -were, at most, only delivered to be carried forward.

By

By the decisions, in Harris v. Hart & Pratt, (6 Duer, 606, and 17 N. Y. R., 250,) and in Mottram v. Heyer, (5 Denio, 629,) it is settled in this State that tbe entry of goods at the custom-house, by the vendee, for the payment of duties, does not terminate the right of stoppage in transitu. In such case the goods are in the legal possession of the United States or their officers, and have [105]*105not come to the possession of the vendee so as to deprive the vendor of his right. (Nix v. Olive, cited in Abbott on Shipping, 393; Burnham v. Winsor, 5 Law R., 507.)

We do not perceive that an entry of the goods by the vendee for transportation can have any greater effect; the goods still remain in the legal custody of the United States; bonds are given that the goods shall be transported and delivered to the collector of customs at the port of Milwaukie, or in default thereof, that double the amount of duties shall be paid, and in order that the possession of the United States may not be deemed divested, carriers are selected, whose boats have been previously made government warehouses for the purpose of receiving and holding goods under bonds for the safe keeping and delivery thereof to the proper officers of the United States.

The actual possession was, therefore, in the carriers. The legal possession of the United States, as security for the payment of duties, was the only qualification of the carrier’s possession; and neither the vendees nor their agents had at any time such possession. And we apprehend that the true principle upon which it must be held that the entry of the goods and their being held by the government to secure the payment of duties, does not defeat the vendor’s right to stop, is, that so long as the goods are in the custody of the government, there is not, and cannot be, any reduction of the goods by the vendee, to his own possession. They are kept, for the time being, from reaching such possession.

By this, of course, we do not mean that enough was not done by the vendors to perfect the contract of sale, nor that the possession of the carriers was not for many purposes to be deemed the possession of the actual owners, (the vendees,) but the possession of the carriers was a possession for the purpose of transportation to the vendees, and was subject to the right of the vendors to stop the goods, if those events which create that right should happen while the goods were in course of such transportation.

The goods had not come to the actual possession of any agent of the vendees, for the purpose of disposal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 Bosw. 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holbrook-v-vose-nysuperctnyc-1860.