Pacific Ins. Co. v. Conard

18 F. Cas. 946, 1 Baldw. 138
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 15, 1830
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 18 F. Cas. 946 (Pacific Ins. Co. v. Conard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacific Ins. Co. v. Conard, 18 F. Cas. 946, 1 Baldw. 138 (circtedpa 1830).

Opinion

BALDWIN, Circuit Justice,

charging jury

(HOPKINSON, District Judge, had been counsel

in the cause): In this case there- are two questions for your consideration: (1) Whether the plaintiffs can sustain this action. (2) The amount of damages to which they are entitled. The facts of the case are few. On the 10th and 11th of July 1825 the plaintiffs advanced 60,000 dollars to Edward Thomson on his respondentia bonds. He shipped the money for Canton, took bills of lading, deliverable to his factor John R. Thomson, and assigned them to the plaintiffs. The money arrived safely, and was invested in the teas now in controversy, The teas were shipped on board of the ships Addison and Superior, which arrived in the Delaware on the 15th of March 1826, when, with their cargoes, they were levied on by the defendant by virtue of an execution, at the suit of the United States, against Edward Thomson. The teas in question were landed and deposited in the public stores, under the care of the custom house officer, where they remained until the fall of 1826; when, by an agreement made between the plaintiffs and the secretary of the treasury, they were delivered to them and sold under their- direction for their account. Immediately on hearing of the levy, the plaintiffs, by their agent, offered to the collector to secure the duties, and demanded the teas. They were refused. On this state of the facts the counsel for the defendant contends that Edward Thomson remained the legal owner of the teas at the time of the levy; that the plaintiffs did not become the owners or the consignees thereof, or the agents of Thomson, so as to authorise them to enter the teas at the custom house according to the provisions of the thirty-sixth section of the revenue law, which he contends could only be made by Thomson himself. That he being indebted to the United States by bonds for duties unpaid, was, by the proviso of the sixty-second section of the law, prohibited from making an entry without the actual payment of the duties accruing, for [947]*947■which the United States had a lien until they were paid, and that therefore the plaintiffs not having offered to pay the duties on their demand. of the teas from the collector, had no right to the possession of the goods, and cannot maintain this action.

Were this a question open for consideration, I should have no hesitation in saying that the whole transaction between Thomson and the I)íaintiffs made them the legal owners and consignees of the property purchased by the outward shipment, and that as such they had a right to enter the teas on securing the duties without being affected by tire delinquency of Thomson at the custom house; as much so as if the shipment had been made in their own name, and on their own account. But it has not been left for me to declare the law in this case. It has been definitely settled by the supreme court in the case of Conard v. Atlantic Ins. Co. (decided at January term, 1828) 1 Pet. [26 U. S.] 386; and the case of [Conard v. Nicoll] 4 Pet. [29 U. S.] 291. The first of these cases was an action of trespass brought to try the right of property in the plaintiffs to teas shipped in the Addison and Superior, under circumstances in all respects agreeing with this case. The court decided that they were entitled to the proceeds of what had been sold under the agreement, being the owners and consignees by the agreement between them and Thomson, and the consequent acts. The second was a. similar action brought for th.e same purpose, as well as the recovery of damages for levying on certain goods, and a quantity of teas shipped, and in all respects circumstanced like the present. The cause was tried before Judge Washington in this place, and resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiffs, not only for the proceeds of the property which had been sold, but a large amount in damages. It was removed by writ of error to the supreme court, and the judgment ■ affirmed. That case embraced every point material to the decision of this, and connected with the opinion of the court in the former cáse, leaves for you and the court no other duty than acquiescence in the well established principles which control the cause before you.

The right of property in the teas, which are the subject of this action, has already been settled by the judgment of this court in a former action between the same parties, and is conclusive on that point in this. But the defendant’s counsel contends that in the case of Harris v. Denny [3 Pet. (28 U. S.) 292], decided at the' last term of the supreme court, a principle has been settled which will prevent the plaintiffs’ recovery. The case was this: James De Wolf, Jr., was indebted to the United States on duty bonds unpaid; goods consigned to him arrived in the port of Boston, which were attached by his creditors in Massachusetts by a writ in the hands of Denny, the sheriff. The marshal attached the same goods by process from the district court, at the suit of the United States. At the time of the attachment by Denny, the plaintiffs offered to secure the duties, and demanded possession, which the collector refused. On an action by the sheriff against the marshal, the court decided that he could not sustain it, because the plaintiffs in the attachment were neither owners, consignees nor agents; that De Wolf continued the owner, and being delinquent on former bonds, had no right to enter the goods till payment of the duties; and that the plaintiffs, claiming only as creditors, had no right to the possession on the mere offer to secure them. This case has no bearing on the right of an owner or consignee to enter goods on offering to secure duties accruing. It was there declared that the United States had no lien on the goods for the amount due by De Wolf on other importations. It only decided that a mere creditor could acquire no right to the possession of goods so imported consigned to De Wolf, until the duties were actually paid. [Harris v. Denny] 3 Pet. [28 U. S.] 292; [Harris v. De Wolf] 4 Pet. [29 U. S.] 148. The authority of'the two cases referred to, does not seem to me to be at all shaken by that of Harris v. Denny, and I am therefore clearly of opinion, that the plaintiffs have well established their right to maintain the present action for the recovery of damages for the seizure of the goods in question.

It is next alleged, that by the agreement of the 9th of October, and the acts accompanying it, the defendant is released from all claims for damages. The decision of this and 'the supreme court in the case of Conard v. Nicoll [supra], settles the reverse, and declares that damages may be recovered, notwithstanding this agreement. In this case, the defendant pleaded this agreement as a bar to this action: the court overruled the plea and rendered judgment for the plaintiffs, so that this question has already been settled, as a matter of law. and is not open for your consideration as one of fact.

The counsel for the defendant next contends, that the rule of damages in this case is furnished by the balance due on the re-spondentia bonds, after deducting the amount of the sales. This ground is assumed by considering the plaintiffs as mere mortgagees of the teas, an idea wholly inadmissible, after the two solemn decisions of the supreme court, each adjudging the legal right of property to be in the respective plaintiffs, as owners; and one of them awarding damages without any reference to the amount due on the respondentia bonds. These decisions are binding authority on this court, which must be governed by them to their full extent. We are not at liberty to say that the plaintiffs in those actions were legal owners, only to the extent of the debt due them by Edward Thomson.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 F. Cas. 946, 1 Baldw. 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-ins-co-v-conard-circtedpa-1830.