Redmond v. Liverpool, New York & Philadelphia Steamboat Co.

46 N.Y. 578, 1871 N.Y. LEXIS 301
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 46 N.Y. 578 (Redmond v. Liverpool, New York & Philadelphia Steamboat Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Redmond v. Liverpool, New York & Philadelphia Steamboat Co., 46 N.Y. 578, 1871 N.Y. LEXIS 301 (N.Y. 1871).

Opinion

Allen, J.

The Supreme Court has reversed the judgment entered upon the report of the referee and ordered a new trial. As it is not stated in the judgment of reversal, that it was on questions of fact, the judgment must be deemed to have been reversed on questions of law, and the facts are not open to review in this court. (Code, §§ 268, 272; Baldwin v. Van Deuzen, 37 N. Y., 487.) The referee has found that the defendants, as common carriers by water, received the plaintiff’s merchandise at Belfast, Ireland, to be carried from there to Hew York, and there delivered to the owner, the bill of lading exempting the carriers from certain risks, by none of which were the goods lost; that the vessel in which the goods were shipped arrived at her port of destination having the goods on board, and that twenty-two of the twenty-three cases were delivered to the plaintiff, and that the defendants failed to deliver the remaining case or box. *582 Upon these facts, if there was nothing to detract from their force, or excuse the defendants, the plaintiff was entitled to judgment for the value of the missing case.

It was not claimed in the answer, and the referee was not requested to find upon the evidence, that there was an actual delivery to the plaintiff or his agent, but it was claimed that the duty of the carrier was fully performed, so as to discharge the company from liability as such earner, without such actual delivery to and receipt by the owner and consignee; and the questions for consideration here are presented by three requests to the referee, and his refusal to find and decide as requested. The third of the propositions is very general, and presents no specific question of fact or of law. It is, that under the evidence presented and the law applicable to this case, the defendant was entitled to a report and judgment in its favor. A' request, in this form, is equivalent to and presents no other question, than is presented by the exception to the general conclusions of law of the referee adverse to the defendant; and as that is fully warranted by the findings of fact, and they are, in turn, supported by the evidence, and not controverted by the defendant, the request and exception to the refusal need not be farther noticed. The counsel should have specified some fact or facts to be found, or rules of law to be adjudged; that is, called the attention of the referee to the facts claimed to have been proved, or the particular legal principle intended to be presented for decision to entitle the defendant to any benefit from it’s request. To give effect to a request so general, would establish a rule to operate as a trap and a snare to suitors, as well as to courts and referees. The first request was, that the referee should find that the case of merchandise, in the complaint mentioned, was discharged at a proper and reasonable time and place, at the city of Hew York, on due notice; and that such discharge was a full delivery according to law, and the usage of the port of Hew York as proven, and discharged the defendant of all responsibility therefor. This request, in the form in which it was made was properly denied, even if it be con *583 ceded that the facts alleged were incontrovertibly proved. A discharge from the vessel at a proper place, seasonable hour, and upon due notice to the consignee, does not discharge the carrier from all responsibility for the safety of the goods. It may, under some circumstances be regarded as a delivery to the consignee, and a performance of the contract of affreightment, so as to discharge the ship owner from the stringent liability of a carrier, but such cases are exceptional, and as a rule, if for any reason the consignee does not appear to claim the goods, or does not receive them, it is the duty of the carrier to provide a proper place of deposit, or in case of imported goods, subject to duty, to see that they are in proper custody. The general rule is, and to it there are no recognized exceptions, if the consignee is unable or refuses to receive the goods, the carrier is not at liberty to leave them on the wharf, but it is his duty to fake care of them for the owner. (Story on Bailments, § 545 ; Ostrander v. Brown, 15 J. R., 39; Mayell v. Potter, 2 J. Cas., 371; Fisk v. Newton, 1 Den., 45.) Judge Grier, in Richardson v. Goddard (23 How. U. S. R., 28), which was an action for the non-delivery of cotton at Boston, shipped at Appalachicola, used this language : When goods are not accepted by the consignee the carrier should put them in a place of safety; and when he has so done, he is no longer liable on his contract of affreightment.” It follows that until this is done the liability of the carrier continues. (And see 2 Kent’s Comm., 605.) If it be conceded that a carrier by water may discharge himself from liability, by delivering merchandise upon a wharf, with notice to the consignee, the latter is entitled to a reasonable time to remove them, and they are at the risk of the carrier until a reasonable time for such removal has elapsed; and a right to put the goods in store for the consignee does not exist until the latter has had a reasonable time for their removal. (Price v. Powell, 3 Com. R., 322.) It was doubted in the case cited, whether a local custom might be shown in exoneration of the carrier, by which the delivery was complete, by landing merchandise on the wharf.

*584 The request to rule that the carrier was exonerated from liability by depositing the goods on the wharf, and before the consignee had time to receive them, was properly refused. A mere deposit of the goods by the defendants on their own wharf, without acceptance by the consignee, not separated ■and set apart from the residue of the cargo, and without a reasonable opportunity, and time for their removal, did not discharge the defendant, and they remained at the risk of the carrier, under all the circumstances suggested in the request as having been proved and established on the trial. Other circumstances not claimed to have been proved were necessary to relieve the defendant from liability as carriers. Cope v. Cordova (1 Rawle., 203), decided in 1829, is relied upon as sustaining the position of the defendant, and the syllabus of the case, as prepared by the reporter, goes the full length of the doctrine contended for. It is as follows: The master of a vessel arriving at the port of Philadelphia from a foreign port, is not bound by the bill of lading, to deliver the goods personally to the consignee. The liability of the ship-owner ceases when the goods are landed at the usual wharf. The first proposition, that a personal delivery to the consignee is not required, is correct. The other part of the statement, is not warranted by the judgment of the court, and should be essentially qualified and modified. The action came before the court upon a writ of error, upon a case stated. A ship arrived at Philadelphia from Liverpool with ten crates of iron for the plaintiff, all of which but one, were received by the plaintiff. The ten crates were entered by the plaintiff at the custom-house, and the plaintiff sent a porter with a custom-house permit and authority to receive the goods. The porter delivered the permit to "the inspector on board the ship and asked for the goods.

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.Y. 578, 1871 N.Y. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redmond-v-liverpool-new-york-philadelphia-steamboat-co-ny-1871.