Mottram v. Heyer

5 Denio 629
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedDecember 15, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 5 Denio 629 (Mottram v. Heyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mottram v. Heyer, 5 Denio 629 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1846).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

Two questions are presented for our consideration, to both of which the attention of the judge who tried the cause, and the attention of the counsel, was distinctly called at the time of the trial. First; whether the right to stop in transitu still existed at the time the agent of the plaintiffs applied to Heyer, the importer, and requested him to give up [630]*630the goods to them, on account of his failure 1 Second ; whether such a demand from the vendee was a proper exercise of the right to stop in transitu; and to enable the plaintiffs to maintain this action against the vendee, for detaining the goods which came into his actual possession after that demand 1

The general principles in regard to the right of stoppage in transitu, are now very well settled, both here and in England ; and the only difficulty is in applying those principles to the facts of particular cases, as they from time to time arise. One of those principles is that, though by the common law a sale of the goods may be complete without actual delivery, yet if the purchaser fails after such sale, and while the goods re- . main in the hands of the vendor, or while they are in the hands of a middleman in the course of their transit to the possession of the vendee, the vendor may retain them in his own custody, or may stop them in the hands of such middleman, and resume and retain the custody of them, until he is paid or secured for the price of the goods. And this right exists whether the time of credit which was given, has or has not expired, at the time the right to retain the goods, or to resume the possession of them by stopping them in transitu is exercised by the vendor, or by his authorized agent. (Feise v. Wray, 3 East’s Rep. 96. Brow. Law of Sale, 507.) Another principle is, that the right to stop in transitu continues not only during the time that the goods remain in the possession of the carrier, either by land or by water, but also while they are in the hands, or under the control of a middleman, in a place of deposit connected with the transmission or delivery of them, until they come to the actual or constructive possession of the vendee himself. (Buckley v. Furniss, 15 Wend. 137. Covill v. Hitchcock, 23 Id. 611. Abb. on Ship, 360.) But an actual delivery of the goods to the vendee, or a constructive delivery to him, by a delivery to his agent who is authorized by him to receive the goods as such agent, and not as a mere middleman, puts an end to the vendor’s right.

Here, the facts in.evidence would have authorized the jury to find that the goods were not deposited in the public store under [631]*631any of the warehousing provisions of the revenue laws, but had been taken there by the custom house officers, because the consignees had neglected to pay the duties and obtain a permit to land the goods. If so, they were in the same situation, substantially, as they would have been under the fourth section of the English statute, 26 Geo. 3, ch. 59, in relation to wines. Under our revenue laws, if the consignee of owner of goods neglects to enter them, and pay or secure the duties within the time prescribed by law for that purpose, so as to get a permit to land the goods, the revenue officers are required to take and retain the possession thereof; and if not claimed within a limited time, such goods are to be sold for the payment of the duties. The entry of the goods at the custom house on the 9th of May, without paying.the duties and getting a permit to land such goods, certainly did not deprive the plaintiffs of their right to stop the goods on board of the vessel which arrived the day before. And the removal of the goods from the vessel to the public store by the custom house officers, until the consignees should entitle themselves to claim the possession and disposition of the goods by completing their entry by the payment of the duties, was merely substituting the public store in the place of the vessel, as a place of deposit in the transmission of the goods to their place of destination; which place of destination was the place where the consignees expected to sell the goods, or to deposit them to await their further order and direction.

The fact that there had been no preliminary entry of the wine, in the cáse of Northey v. Field, (2 Esp. Rep. 613,) affords no grounds for distinguishing that case from the present in principle. Nor was that an isolated case in England. For it was followed by Lord Chief Justice Ellenborough, ten years afterwards, in the case of Nix v. Olive, (Abbott on Ship. 377,) where the goods were sent to the king’s warehouse, under the statute, because the consignee was not able to pay the duties. There the consignee, while the wine remained in the hands of the custom house officers, under the statute, for the non-payment of such duties, sold the wine to the plaintiff, who did not upon such sale pay the duties so as to obtain possession of the vt'ine. [632]*632And the consignee having become bankrupt, .the agent, of the consignors, after such sale to the plain tiff,, paid the duties árid’ obtained.possession^the wine.) Under thesé circumstances it was decided that the.right to stop the goods' was not divested.' í ' * * ,:.»*„ * '" ■, „• t, i r \. ‘ t , ' i ( 1 ‘ y Upon the authority of these two pases," which do riot appear éver to have been questioned in England, as well as upon principle, I think the goods in controversy had not come into the actual of constructive possession of the consignee's in the present,’case, prior to the claim of the goods by the agent of thé plaintiffs on the 28th" of April.; and that their right to stop the goods in transitu had’ not then terminated. _ The payment of the freight was wholly immaterial, except that the lien for the same would have remained,.although the goods were taken possession of by the custom house officers, if such payment had not been iria’de.' But the payment of the freight to the carrier does not divest the seller of his right to stop in transitu while the goods are in the course of transmission, or in the hands of a middleman."

Where goods are. placed in the public storé under the warehousing system, either in this country or in England, after a perfect entry of them "for that purpose, they‘are to bé considered as having come to the possession of the vendee, at the place where he.intends they shall remain until lie gives further o.rdef for their disposal; and the law recognizes his right to sell or dispose of them as he pleases ; subject only to the custody of the officers of the revenue for the security of the payment of the duties, at the time when by law those duties become dué and payable. Xnd in such a case, I have nó doubt that t'lie right of stoppage in transitu should be considered as at an end the moment the goods are thus deposited, after á perféct entry for that purpose has been made. This is also iri accordance with the decision of the court of sessions in Scotland, in the case of Strachan v. The Trustees of Knox Co. referred to by Brown, (Brown on Sales, 536.) There the "goods were imported and were deposited by the consignee in a boridéd warehouse, under the provisions of the statute, .(43 Geo. 3, ch. 132,) which statute was the commencement of the present warehousing [633]*633system in England.. And the court'properly decided that the transitas was ended.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Denio 629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mottram-v-heyer-nycterr-1846.