Pacific Car & Foundry Co. v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.

212 P. 159, 123 Wash. 98, 1923 Wash. LEXIS 723
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1923
DocketNo. 16623
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 212 P. 159 (Pacific Car & Foundry Co. v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacific Car & Foundry Co. v. Northern Pacific Railway Co., 212 P. 159, 123 Wash. 98, 1923 Wash. LEXIS 723 (Wash. 1923).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

This is an action by the Pacific Car & Foundry Company to recover the value of a car load of relaying steel rails consigned by it to the defendant Northern Pacific Railway Company for carriage from Renton, in King county, to the Great Northern Dock at Seattle. As originally instituted, the action was alone against the Northern Pacific Railway Company. After the answer of that company had been filed, the plaintiff amended its complaint, made the Great Northern Railway Company a defendant, and demanded a joint and several judgment against them. On its appearing in the action, the Great Northern Railway Company caused to be brought m and made defendants the Nippon Yusen Kabushiki Kaisha (Japan Mail Steamship Company), a corporation operating a steamship line between Seattle and Japan, also one T. Takiguchi, doing business as T. TaMguchi Company, and one H. D. Porter. To the amended complaint, all of the defendants except Porter filed answers, on which the plaintiff joined issue in so far as it was adversely affected by them. The defendants also cross-complained as between themselves, raising issues in which the plaintiff was not affected, but since [100]*100no. question depends upon the form or nature of the pleadings as pleadings, their contents need not be particularly noticed. A trial was had before the court sitting without a jury, Findings of fact and conclusions of law were made to the effect that the plaintiff was entitled to a judgment against the railroad companies for the value of the steel rails, with damages in the way of interest, and that the railway companies were entitled to judgment over against the Nippon Yusen Kabushiki Kaisha. Judgment- was entered accordingly, from which the Great Northern Railway Company and the Nippon Yusen Kabushiki Kaisha appeal.

The principal facts are not in dispute. In the early part of November, 1917, the defendant Porter contracted to purchase from the plaintiff, at a stated price, the steel rails in question; the contract requiring the delivery of the rails at the Great Northern Dock, in the city of Seattle. On November, 1917, the plaintiff delivered the rails to the Northern Pacific Railway Company for carriage to the place designated, taking from the railway company a straight or non-negotiáblé bill of lading, in which the plaintiff was named as both consignor and consignee; taking from it also a certificate of weights. Porter had not paid for the rails, and this method of consigning them was adopted by the plaintiff to insure payment before delivery to Porter. On receiving the bill of lading, the plaintiff attached thereto a draft against Porter for the amount of the purchase price, and forwarded the same to a bank in the city of Seattle, notifying Porter of its action. It also sent to Porter a copy of the railway company’s certificate of weights. After Porter had contracted to purchase the rails from the plaintiff, he contracted to sell them to the defendant Takiguchi, who is an exporter, at an advance over the original cost to him. [101]*101On receiving the certificate of weights, he turned it over to Takiguchi, knowing that he intended the rails for export and knowing that the certificate was necessary in making a declaration of export. Takiguchi thereafter made arrangements for exporting the rails on the Nippon Yusen Kabushiki Kaisha’s steamer Fushimi Maru, and thereupon paid Porter the agreed purchase price. Takiguchi was not told of the outstanding bill of lading and draft, and dealt with Porter on the' assumption that he was the owner and consignee of the rails.

The railway lines of the Northern Pacific Railway Company do not reach the Great Northern dock. Their nearest approach thereto is at its station in Seattle, known as Interbay, which is about one-half mile distant from the dock. Freight coming in over its lines consigned to the dock is transferred at this point to the lines of the Great Northern Railway Company and by that company carried to the dock. On receiving this shipment, the Northern Pacific Railway Company carried it in a single car to its station at Interbay. It did not, however, immediately deliver the car, or tender it for delivery, to the Great Northern Railway Company. The dock named was the property of the Great Northern Railway Company. At that place it received freight intended for export only. Owing to the war conditions then prevailing, there was a congestion of freight for export on the dock, and the Great Northern Railway Company had notified the Northern Pacific Railway Company that it would receive no freight coming in on the latter’s lines destined for the dock except when delivered upon its express order. When this car reached the Interbay station, it was therefore held awaiting such an order. To facilitate operations, the Northern Pacific Railway Company [102]*102maintained a clerk at the dock to transmit these orders.

At the time of this shipment, the practice of the steamship company was to give to the Great Northern Railway Company cargo lists of shipments intended for export on a particular boat, and that company would assemble the freight prior to the arrival of the boat. It sometimes happened, as it happened in the present instance, that, after the delivery of the first general cargo list, additional lists would be made out and handed to the company. If the freight desired was in a car then in the possession of the Northern Pacific Railway Company, an order would be made out, called an order for switching, containing the car initials, the car number, and the contents of the car, and delivered to the company’s clerk at the dock. This person would communicate the order to the company’s agent at Interbay, who would cause the car to be placed on the Great Northern Railway Company’s intersecting tracks. This practice was followed in the present instance.

After Takiguchi had reserved space for the rails on the steamer Fushimi Maru, the agent of the steamship company requested the car from the Great Northern Railway Company. That company, in turn, filled out a switching order and delivered it to the Northern Pacific Railway Company’s clerk at the dock, who in turn telephoned the order to the company’s agent at Interbay. This order bore on its face the name of the steamship on which the rails were to be exported. The agent at Interbay delivered the car to the Great Northern tracks, who transported it to the dock, where the rails were taken from the car onto the steamship and transported on Takiguchi’s order to Japan.

At the time of the delivery of the car to the Great Northern Railway Company, the agent of the Northern Pacific Railway Company did not inform the former [103]*103company of the outstanding bill of lading, nor did he give the company the name of the consignee, nor was the Great Northern Railway Company otherwise advised of these facts. In fact, the agents of the Northern Pacific Railway Company at Interbay did not know anything concerning the ownership of the freight, nor did they know the original destination of the car further than the car cards which were fastened to the sides of the car showed its destination. The waybill, which would and did contain the information, had not then reached Interbay, and did not arrive until some days after the rails had been loaded onto the steamer and the steamer had sailed.

Noticing,first, the appeal of the Great Northern Railway Company, we cannot subscribe to its contention that it was not liable to the plaintiff as for a conversion of the property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
212 P. 159, 123 Wash. 98, 1923 Wash. LEXIS 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-car-foundry-co-v-northern-pacific-railway-co-wash-1923.