New York Central & Hudson River Railroad v. Frederick Leyland & Co.

222 Mass. 444
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 222 Mass. 444 (New York Central & Hudson River Railroad v. Frederick Leyland & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Central & Hudson River Railroad v. Frederick Leyland & Co., 222 Mass. 444 (Mass. 1916).

Opinion

De Courcy, J.

The plaintiff is an interstate carrier, with an ocean terminal at East Boston, where it delivers export freight to, and receives import freight from, the defendant, a foreign steamship corporation. During 1911 and 1912 the defendant was using one of the plaintiff’s piers under a written agreement which provided, among other things, that “delivery of freight by said [445]*445Railroad Company to said Steamship Company shall be considered to have been effected when the same has been unloaded from the cars into the sheds on the pier or piers occupied in whole or in part by the said steamship company.” The course of procedure was, that the plaintiff notified the defendant of the arrival of cars containing export freight at the East Boston yards adjoining the pier, and that the cars were held there until the defendant gave the plaintiff a written order to bring them on to the pier and there unload the contents.

The plaintiff had filed with the interstate commerce commission a storage tariff which was in force at the time of this controversy, providing that thirty days’ free storage would be allowed on export freight at East Boston, and that after the expiration of thirty days a charge of twenty cents per net ton per month or part thereof should be charged. By reason of a strike of the defendant’s longshoremen in January, 1912, there remained in the plaintiff’s yard for more than thirty days the goods on which the charges in question accrued. Before the sailing of each ship the plaintiff sent to the defendant a statement showing all charges claimed on account of the goods loaded on that ship. The defendant has paid all the account, except these storage charges; and, although not contesting the amount, it denies its liability therefor. This action is brought to recover them.

While the storage charges were accruing, on January 26, 1912, L. H. Peters, the foreign freight agent of the plaintiff, and J. H. Thomas, the defendant’s manager at Boston, had a conference on the subject of liability therefor. This was the situation confronting them: The plaintiff’s agents, recognizing that the charges were accruing as a result of strike conditions, were reluctant to impose the burden of them on the defendant. But the plaintiff was legally bound to collect this storage from somebody, in accordance with the terms of its tariff, filed with the interstate commerce commission. Act to regulate commerce as amended June 29, 1906, and June 18, 1910. (34 U. S. Sts. at Large, c. 3591, § 2; 36 U. S. Sts. at Large, c. 309.) See New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad v. York & Whitney Co. 215 Mass. 36; Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Maxwell, 237 U. S. 94. Without now considering the legal relation of the interstate commerce act to this defendant, a foreign steamship company en[446]*446gaged in transatlantic commerce (see Central Railroad of New Jersey v. Anchor Line, Ltd. 219 Fed. Rep. 716; Cosmopolitan Shipping Co. v. Hamburg-American Packet Co. 13 I. C. C. Rep. 266) it is agreed that the defendant’s agent deemed it important to forward this freight which he knew had been carried subject to the interstate commerce act, and on which also the plaintiff had a lien for charges. Miller v. Mansfield, 112 Mass. 260. At this time only two small shipments, on which the charges were but $48.73, had been delivered to the defendant.

It was in these circumstances that the agents made the agreement on which the plaintiff relies in the third count of the declaration, namely, that the payment of the charges should be held in abeyance; and “if it should be decided that the plaintiff was entitled to charge said storage on freight delivered to the defendant, the defendant would pay said charges, regardless of who might be liable for them.”

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Related

Libby v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad
177 N.E. 679 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1931)
Boston & Maine Railroad v. Oceanic Steam Navigation Co.
226 Mass. 509 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
222 Mass. 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-central-hudson-river-railroad-v-frederick-leyland-co-mass-1916.