Martorana v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad

89 Misc. 272
CourtCity of New York Municipal Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 89 Misc. 272 (Martorana v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering City of New York Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martorana v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 89 Misc. 272 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

Ransom, J.

The plaintiffs are entitled to judgment against the defendant carrier for the value of the goods consigned to them, notwithstanding the carrier’s claim that it yielded custody under compulsion of legal process and gave notice thereof to the plaintiffs. Inasmuch as counsel asked me to hear the case without a jury and presented with much ability a number of ■ questions which apparently have not been passed upon in reported decisions, it seems due to them to make a brief statement of the facts as found and of the reasons why, in this instance, the carrier’s plea of justification breaks down.

On October 28, 1911, Frank Panno, a nephew of one of the plaintiffs, shipped 362 boxes or cases of mixed fruit from Chicago to the plaintiffs in New York, in car No. 14980, over the defendant’s lines. On the same day, Panno mailed to the plaintiffs the bill of lading and a bill for $1,057.50 for the fruit, as sold and delivered by him to them. The bill he receipted before mailing, as a credit on account of his indebtedness to the plaintiffs from previous dealings. The 362 cases were a part of a considerably larger quantity of similar fruit which Panno had purchased from various Chicago dealers, among others the Merchants’ Fruit Exchange and the Chicago Green Fruit Auction Company. Panno had been engaged in the buying, selling and shipping of similar fruit in Chicago for upward of a year, and had dealt frequently with the plaintiffs and with the concerns from which the fruit in question was bought.

The car-load of fruit arrived in New York on November first. On that day, it was taken from the defendant’s custody by a city marshal, under' a writ of replevin issued by the Municipal Court, upon an affidavit verified that day by James Fechteg, Jr., who made oath that he was the agent of the Merchants’ Fruit Ex[274]*274change and the Chicago Green Fruit Company, Illinois corporations, and that those corporations were “the owners and entitled to the immediate possession of ’ ’ the fruit in car No. 14980. The sole defendant in the replevin action was the carrier, but the affidavit stated that the present plaintiffs claimed the fruit. Although the sale price of the fruit to Panno in Chicago exceeded $1,000, the replevin action was started in the Municipal Court, and the affidavit for the writ stated that 11 the actual valué of the property is $400. ’ ’ The counsel who tried the present case for the defendant carrier appeared as attorney for Fechteg throughout the replevin proceeding. A surety company bond for $1,000 was furnished by Fechteg. On November second, upon an affidavit made by Mr. Bullowa, an order was entered, directing the sale of the fruit by the Connolly Auction Company. On November third the fruit was sold for the sum of $791.51, nearly $300 less than its market price in Chicago, but nearly twice the value stated in the two affidavits and nearly $300 in excess of the jurisdiction of the Municipal Court. No notice of the seizure or sale of the fruit, or of any of these proceedings, was given to the consignees or the consignor before November fourth. On the morning of November ninth the action was dismissed in the Municipal Court, but later in the same day the .defendant’s attorneys sent another letter, notifying of the pendency of that action and making no mention of its dismissal; Subsequently, without notice or information to the consignees, the carrier’s attorneys signed a stipulation reviving the proceeding and restoring the case to the calendar. The consignees took no steps to .intervene in or defend the . action until January 25, 1912, when they asked to be impleaded, and were informed by the defendant’s attorneys that, two hours before, they had joined in signing a stipulation which, [275]*275as later developed, in terms -consented to the entry of an annexed order directing that the Connolly Auction Company turn over the net proceeds of the fruit, $669.18, to the two Illinois corporations, releasing the carrier from liability, cancelling the surety bond which Fechteg had furnished as security against the event that other persons might establish title to the fruit, and formally discontinuing the action. Although notified on January twenty-fifth that the consignees wished to be impleaded in and defend the action, the carrier’s attorneys did nothing to withdraw their consent from the stipulation, upon which an order was entered four days later.

Under these circumstances, is the fact of the seizure of the fruit by a city marshal under a writ of replevin a sufficient excuse for the carrier’s failure to deliver the fruit to the consignees named in its bill of lading? Answer to this question involves some re-examination of the historic origin of the legal rules fixing the liability of common carriers. In the days when the functions of public carriers were fulfilled largely by use of stage-coaches and the carrier’s journey brought him into communities with widely differing degrees of respect for the property rights of the absent owner, the carrier was held absolutely liable for the safety of goods in his care unless act of God or public enemies destroyed them. If a highwayman demanded them or a thief tried to pilfer them, he must defend and keep them at his peril, or answer to their owner for their loss. This insurer’s liability was imposed on grounds. of public policy, especially to prevent fraud or collusive action on the part of the carrier himself, in yielding up goods to persons not entitled to them. Then, as courts and legal processes developed in the several communities, the question of an extension of the doctrine of vis major presented itself. Oftentimes the [276]*276appearance of a constable with a writ was no less the result of collusion and connivance than had been the appearance of the highwayman in the earlier day, but what was the measure of the carrier’s duty when confronted with a judicial writ for the seizure of goods in his care! Must he resist sheriff and constable with physical force! Must he tarry and delay his journey so as himself to contest in court the rightfulness of the seizure! To subject him to the first necessity would only make his calling extra-hazardous and bring judicial processes into disrespect; to subject him to the latter alternative would make impossible the seasonable completion of his journeys with the goods of other persons. It was felt that questions of title should be determined by trial in a court, and not by debate between a coach-driver and a constable. Stiles v. Davis, 1 Blackf. 101. Accordingly, the changed conditions and changed conceptions of public policy emancipated the carrier from those alternatives and prescribed a rule within which he could safely yield up goods claimed by writ of court.

In order to prevent the carrier’s custody from being an effective bar to. the recovery of stolen goods, it had very early been held that, under any circumstances and irrespective of the issuance or validity of' any writ, the carrier could excuse delivery to the named consignee by showing that he delivered instead to the person who was the true owner and the one really entitled to possession of the goods. Eytinge & Co. v. Atlantic Transport Co., 160 App. Div. 635; Western Trans. Co. v. Barber, 56 N. Y. 544; Mierson v. Hope, 32 N. Y. Super. Ct. 561, 573; Robinson v. Memphis & C. R. R. Co., 16 Fed. Repr. 57. In order, however, that the carrier might not be required, impromptu and at his peril, to decide whether the person suing out a writ was in fact the true owner, it came to be held in most juris[277]

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Bluebook (online)
89 Misc. 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martorana-v-baltimore-ohio-railroad-nynyccityct-1915.