Johnson v. Three Hundred & Eighteen Tons of Coal

44 Conn. 548
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 15, 1877
StatusPublished

This text of 44 Conn. 548 (Johnson v. Three Hundred & Eighteen Tons of Coal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Three Hundred & Eighteen Tons of Coal, 44 Conn. 548 (Colo. 1877).

Opinion

Shipman, J.

The New Haven and Northampton Company is a railroad corporation duly incorporated by the legislature of the state of Connecticut, and owning and operating a line of railroad for the transportation of persons and goods from New Haven, Connecticut., to Northampton, Massachusetts. [549]*549Said corporation is a common carrier, and a considerable portion of its regular business is the transportation of coal from New Haven to the various places upon the line of its railroad. This coal is brought from different coal ports to the port of New Haven in coal barges or in coal vessels, and is delivered to said railroad company upon its dock in said city, commonly called the Canal Dock. About 140,000 tons of coal are annually received at this dock. By the universal custom of the port of New Haven, which custom was known, understood and assented to by the libellants, and in conformity with which custom the contract evidenced by the bill of lading hereafter recited was entered into by them, coal consigned to a railroad company, or to consignees upon the line of a railroad company, and which coal is to be transported by the railroad company as an intermediate carrier, must be delivered to said company in its coal cars, unless some other place of delivery is expressed in the bill of lading. The said New Haven and Northampton Company, for the convenient, speedy and economical delivery of said coal, has erected upon the Canal Dock derricks, furnished with buckets or tubs, which derricks and buckets are operated by steam power. The buckets being lowered upon the deck of a coal barge lying alongside of the dock are filled with coal by shovelers upon the vessel, who are paid by the owners of the barge, and the buckets are moved by steam power over the coal car and the contents are dumped into the car. For the use of this machinery and these appliances the railroad company receives ten cents per ton from the barge owner. This method of delivery is the ordinary one, and is the method which the railroad company has provided both for its own accommodation and for that of the barge owners. In the present condition of the wharf, which is traversed on one side with railroad tracks, which are being occupied with cars and engines, the only practicable method of delivery is by the use of the derricks, and the only practicable place from which delivery can be made is under the derricks. The duty of the shovelers is simply to fill the buckets from the vessel. Prior to September 4th, 1871, the shovelers were always selected by the [550]*550captains of the barges, and were paid directly by them. On that day said railroad company established the following rule, printed copies of which were posted conspicuously upon the wharf.

“ New Haven and Northampton Company.

Special Notice.

“ All coal vessels discharging at the dock of the New Haven and Northampton Company will be under control of the dock master from time of arrival till discharged, and he will furnish men to discharge their cargoes.

Chas. N. Yeomans, Fice-Prest. Supt.

M. C. Parker, Gen. Freight Agt.”

Under this notice the railroad company has claimed the exclusive right to furnish at the regular price shovelers to discharge coal cargoes, and to refuse to receive coal unless these shovelers, so furnished at such regular price, were employed by the barge captains; and if tliis latter rule is not embraced in the notice, there has been such a rule in addition to the notice well understood by the owners of barges generally and by the libellants. The libellants have known that the railroad company would not allow coal to be discharged at their wharf except by shovelers whom they selected and furnished to the captains.

The company has derived no pecuniary benefit from furnishing the shovelers,' who were paid nothing except for shoveling, and who performed no service for the company. They were paid from September 4th, 1871, to the date hereafter mentioned, uniformly ten cents per ton, which sum was paid by the captains of the barges to the dock master with the amount of the bill for hoisting and dumping, and by hina paid to the shovelers. This rule was adopted by the company because they deemed its adoption to be a convenience and benefit to the freighting public. Previous to the time of its adoption a strike had occurred among the shovelers, and delays had occurred arising from the shovelers absenting themselves, or deserting after they had been hired. Since the adoption of the rule delivery of coal has been more rapidly [551]*551conducted, and fewer delays have occurred. The consignees of coal deem the rule a reasonable one. From September 4th, 1871, until a short time prior to April 22d, 1876, the uniform price for shoveling in New Haven had been ten cents per ton. In the spring of that year this price began to break, and coal was shoveled at other wharves at eight cents per ton and good shovelers could easily be obtained at that price. The general and customary price in New Haven had not however then dropped to eight cents, and had not been lowered at the Canal Dock. The officers of the railroad company were not aware of this breakage in the market. The Derby Railroad Company has a similar rule. The New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company, which receives about 250,000 tons of coal annually at its wharf, does not have such a rule. All the companies have similar facilities for hoisting and dumping, for the use of which compensation is paid by the barge owners. No question is made in regard to the reasonableness of requiring this compensation.

On April 19th, 1876, the libellants, who are the owners of the barge Joseph "Wilkins, received on board said boat at Brooklyn, N. Y., 318i tons of coal for delivery to the Glasgow Company at the Canal Dock at New Haven. The agreed rate of freight was sixty cents per ton. The Glasgow Company is a manufacturing corporation at South Hadley Falls in Massachusetts, a place upon the line of said railroad. Said coal was to be delivered to said railroad company as an intermediate carrier, and was by said company to be there carried and delivered to the owners. A bill of lading in the usual form was signed by the captain of the Wilkins.

The libellants were aware of said rule of the railroad company in regard to shovelers, and were also aware that shoveling could be hired at eight cents per ton. Said barge arrived at the Canal Dock on April 22d, 1876, and the agent of the libellants informed the railroad company of its arrival, and his readiness to deliver the coal. He also said that he should employ his own shovelers unless the railroad company would furnish laborers at eight cents per ton. He was willing to employ the shovelers whom the company might furnish if [552]*552they would furnish at eight cents. The boat was placed under the derrick designated by the company. The libellants’ agent •hired his shovelers at eight cents, and was ready and offered to enter upon the discharge and delivery of the coal into the coal cars of the company upon its wharf. The company refused to put on steam, or to receive the coal at that place, unless the barge employed its shovelers at ten cents per ton. The barge was removed to another point, so as to accommodate an incoming barge, and after various interviews between the libellants’ agent and one of the libellants, with the proper officers of the company, and a delay until May 1, 1876, the stipulation mentioned in the 12th article of the libel and the 12th article of the answer was entered into, and the vessel was discharged on May 2d, 1876.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Conn. 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-three-hundred-eighteen-tons-of-coal-conn-1877.