Pacific Aviation Co. v. Wells, Fargo & Co.
This text of 128 P. 438 (Pacific Aviation Co. v. Wells, Fargo & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
From the evidence before us we find the following facts: That the Pacific Aviation Company purchased an engine, manufactured by the Hall-Scott Motor Car Company, of West Berkeley, California, from the Pacific Motor Car & Aviation Company, of Los Angeles, the latter company having previously purchased it from the Hall-Scott Company and having brought it to Portland, Oregon; that the crank shaft of the engine, either through faulty construction or some other cause, broke, and injured other parts of the engine; that the condition of plaintiff’s contracts was such that speedy repairs were necessary, and E. W. Manning, the agent of plaintiff, took the engine to the Hall-Scott Company to have the repairs made; that the engine was taken into the shops of the Hall-Scott Company, extra workmen were put on the job, and the necessary repairs completed, for which the Hall-Scott Company made a charge of $700; that before the engine left the shops, and while it was still in the possession of the Hall-Scott Company, plaintiff’s agent made the claim that the Pacific Motor Car & Aviation Company were acting as agents of the Hall-Scott Company when they sold the engine, and that, the accident having happened by reason of a defect in the materials used in the construction of the crank shaft, the Hall-Scott Company should replace the broken parts without charge, which contention was disputed by the Hall-Scott Company, but was finally compromised by the company agreeing to reduce the charge to $442.70; that [532]*532the plaintiff’s agent, not having the money to pay this sum, agreed that the Hall-Scott Company should ship the engine by Wells, Fargo & Co. express to Portland C. 0. D., and that payment should be made at that end of the line; that the Hall-Scott Company then called a drayman, and instructed him to take the engine to the station and ship it by Wells, Fargo & Co. express to Portland C. 0. D.; that the plaintiff’s agent accompanied the drayman to the station, where the engine was unloaded, and during the temporary absence of the drayman fraudulently assumed to be the shipper, and procured from the express company’s agent a bill of lading consigning the engine to H. H. Manning, Portland, Oregon, with himself as shipper; that shortly after the drayman returned and explained the matter to the agent, and demanded that the agent place a C. 0. D. tag on the engine, and enter the name of Hall-Scott Company as shipper, which was done, and a letter was written to the Portland agent, directing him to collect $442.70 before delivering the engine; that the Aviation Company refused to pay the $442.70 demanded by the defendant’s agent in Portland, and upon his refusal to deliver the engine without such payment plaintiff brought this action.
When one agrees that goods shipped to him, and upon which an understood charge is'made, shall be shipped C. O. D., he, in effect, agrees that he will pay such charge, and that the shipper or his agent, the carrier, may hold possession until it is paid. This was practically the plaintiff’s contract here, so that the Hall-Scott Company was not only entitled to hold the property by virtue of its common-law lien, but by the agreement of the parties as well, and the express company as its authorized agent, of course, had the same right. Whether the common-law lien was waived by the agreement last referred to would seem to be a purely academic question, as the Hall-Scott Company was entitled to the possession of the engine under either view of the facts.
The judgment is affirmed. Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
128 P. 438, 64 Or. 530, 1912 Ore. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-aviation-co-v-wells-fargo-co-or-1912.