P., B. W.R.R. Co. v. Roberts

106 A. 615, 134 Md. 398, 1919 Md. LEXIS 65
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 8, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 106 A. 615 (P., B. W.R.R. Co. v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
P., B. W.R.R. Co. v. Roberts, 106 A. 615, 134 Md. 398, 1919 Md. LEXIS 65 (Md. 1919).

Opinion

The only question in this case arises on the exception to the ruling of the Court below refusing to grant the plaintiff's prayer.

It is said by Mr. Poe in Vol. 1 of his work on Pleading andPractice, sec. 107, upon the authority of decided cases (Hutzler v. Lord, 64 Md. 534; Brinkley v. Hamilton,67 Md. 169): "If one is compelled, or in a situation to be compelled, to pay the debt of another, as in the case of a surety, and does pay it, the law implies a promise on the part of him for whom the money is paid to repay it," and the suit in this case was brought on the common counts to recover for money alleged to have been paid by the plaintiff for the defendants at their request.

The appellant, a common carrier, engaged in interstate commerce, had a station and freight yard in Cambridge, Maryland, and the appellees, spoken of as "Baltimore canners," operated a cannery at Cambridge, along the track of the appellant, about a quarter of a mile from the appellant's station, and had a private siding, upon which the cars desired by them and to be loaded with freight, were placed by the appellant.

In accordance with the terms of an agreement between the appellees and the appellant, the appellees loaded the cars on their siding and sealed them with their private seal without any inspection of the contents by the appellant, and the appellant issued bills of lading without examining the freight in the cars. The appellees also kept at their factory forms of bills of lading of the appellant, and when they loaded a car, they filled out the bill of lading, making three impressions or *Page 400 copies at the same time, with the name of the consignor and the name of the consignee, the contents of the car, the name and number of the car and its destination, and sent them to the station of the appellant at Cambridge to be signed by the appellant's agent. The appellant's agent would sign two of the copies, called the bill of lading and the memorandum, and deliver them to the shipper, and retain the other copy, signed by the shipper, called the shipping order.

In September, 1912, the superintendent of the appellees' factory at Cambridge received an order from the appellees in Baltimore to ship to the appellees as consignees, "notify Lafer Bros., Detroit, Mich.," via. "P.R.R., c/o Anchor line," 1200 cases Soughtafter brand 3 lb. tomatoes at 80c., and on the 9th of September, 1912, the agent of the appellant at Cambridge, at the request of the appellees' agent at Cambridge, signed and issued to them two bills of lading, called "order" bills of lading, for two cars on their siding each loaded with 600 cases of Soughtafter brand tomatoes, one in the morning for car S.A.L. 23595, and the other in the afternoon for car Southern 34014, both consigned to the order of the appellees at Detroit, Michigan, with a memorandum "notify Lafer Bros."

The superintendent of the appellees at Cambridge also received in September, 1912, an order from the appellees to ship to G.E. Howard Co., Newburg, N.Y., "600 cases of Big R. brand 3 lb. tomatoes at 82 1/2c., and on the 10th of September, 1912, the agent of the appellant, at the request of the appellees' agent, signed and issued to them what is called a "straight" bill of lading for a carload of 600 cases of Big R. brand tomatoes, incar Southern 34014, being the same car for which one of theorder bills of lading had been issued on the day before, September 9th.

Car S.A.L. 23595, containing the tomatoes called for in one of the order bills of lading issued on the 9th of September, consigned to Detroit, Michigan, left Cambridge that afternoon, and car Southern 34014, referred to in the two bills of lading, one the order bill of lading consigning the car *Page 401 to Detroit, and the other the straight bill of lading consigning the car to Newburg, New York, left Cambridge for Newburg, according to the plaintiff's evidence, on the afternoon of September 10th.

The two order bills of lading issued by appellant on September 9th, one for car S.A.L. 23595 and the other for car Southern 34014, endorsed by the appellees, with drafts attached, drawn on Lafer Bros. for the price of the tomatoes in each car, were placed by the appellees in a bank in Detroit. Lafer Bros. paid the drafts and received the bills of lading, and then requested delivery by the Anchor line, the terminal carrier, of the two carloads of tomatoes called for in the bills of lading. The Anchor line delivered to them the contents of car S.A.L. 23595, but was unable to deliver the contents of car Southern 34014 because that car had, in accordance with the straight bill of lading consigning it to Howard Co., Newburg, New York, been delivered to Howard Co., who paid the appellees for the tomatoes contained therein.

Lafer Bros. having paid the appellees the amount of the draft attached to appellant's bill of lading for car Southern 34014, and having failed to receive the contents of said car, called on the appellant for the amount of said draft and the appellant paid it, and is now seeking to recover it from the appellees.

It seems to be conceded, and the evidence is clear to the effect, that the appellant issued two bills of lading for carSouthern 34014, one an order bill of lading describing its contents as 600 cases of Soughtafter brand tomatoes, and consigning it to the appellees at Detroit, Michigan, "notify Lafer Bros.," and the other a straight bill of lading, describing its contents as 600 cases of Big R. brand tomatoes, and consigning it to Howard Co., Newburg, New York, and thatcar Southern 34014, containing the Soughtafter brand, was delivered to Howard Co.

The evidence adduced by the appellant tends to show that the appellees delivered only two cars to the appellant, one *Page 402 car S.A.L. 23595, the contents of which Lafer Bros. received, and the other car Southern 34014, consigned to, and delivered by the appellant to Howard Co., and that the appellees did not deliver to the appellant another car containing Big R. brand tomatoes, consigned to Howard Co. On the other hand the appellees offered evidence tending to show that their agent at Cambridge delivered three cars of tomatoes to the appellant, two consigned to themselves at Detroit for Lafer Bros., and one consigned to Howard Co., Newburg, New York, containing Big R. brand tomatoes, which evidence, assuming it to be true, can only be explained upon the theory that in making out the bill of lading for the car containing the Big R. brand they made a mistake in the name and number of the car, as the undisputed evidence shows that car Southern 34014 contained the Soughtafter brand.

Upon this state of the proof, the plaintiff submitted the following prayer: "The plaintiff prays the Court to rule as a matter of law: That if the Court, sitting as a jury, shall find from the evidence that in September, 1912, the plaintiff was a common carrier, engaged in the transportation of freight; and that Mr. W.M. Smith was its agent at Cambridge, Maryland, and was duly authorized to receive freight for transportation and to issue bills of lading therefor; and find that the defendants, Roberts Bros., maintained a factory at or near Cambridge, for the canning of tomatoes, at which there was a side-track, and that Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 A. 615, 134 Md. 398, 1919 Md. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/p-b-wrr-co-v-roberts-md-1919.