Richardson v. Goddard

64 U.S. 28, 16 L. Ed. 412, 23 How. 28, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 750
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 16, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 64 U.S. 28 (Richardson v. Goddard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richardson v. Goddard, 64 U.S. 28, 16 L. Ed. 412, 23 How. 28, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 750 (1860).

Opinion

Mr. Justice GRIER

delivered the opinion of the court.

The barque “ Tangier,' a foreign vessel in the port of Boston,” is charged in the libel with a failure .to deliver certain bales of cotton, according to her contract of affreightment.. The answer admits the contract, and alleges a full compliance with it, by a delivery of the cargo on ’the wharf; and that after such delivery, a part of the cargo was consumed by fire, before it was removed by the consignees.

The libellants amended their libel, admitting the receipt of 163 bales, and setting forth, as a reason for not receiving and taking away from the wharf that portion of the cargo which was unladen on Thursday, “ that, by the appointment of the Governor of Massachusetts, that day was kept and regarded by the citizens as ‘a day of fasting, humiliation, and prayer,’ and that from time immemorial it has been the usage and custom to abstain from all secular work on that day; ” and consequently, that the. libellants were not bound to receive the cargo on that day; and that such a delivery, without their consent or agreement, is not a delivery or offer to deliver in compliance with the terms of the bill of lading.

Three questions of law were raised on the trial of this case below:

1. Whether the master is exempted from liability for a loss occasioned by accidental fire, after the goods are deposited on the wharf, by the act of Congress of March 3d, 1851.
2. Whether the.master is liable, under the circumstances of this case, for the loss of the cotton, on the general principles of the maritime law, excluding the fact of fast day.
3. If not, whether the right of the carrier to continue the discharge of his cargo is affected by the fact that the Governor had appointed that day as a general fast day.

*38 As our decision of the second and third of these points will dispose of this case, we do not think it necessary to express any opinion on the first.

We will first inquire whether there was such a delivery of cargo in this case as should discharge the carrier under this contract of affreightment, irrespective of the peculiar character of the day.

The facts in evidence, so far as they are material to the correct decision of this point, are briefly as follows:

The barque Tangier arrived in the port of Boston on the 8th of April, with a cargo of cotton, intending to discharge at Battery wharf; but at the request of the consignees, and for their convenience, she “hauled up” at Lewis’s wharf. She commenced the discharge of her cargo on Monday, the seventh, and on the same day the master gave notice to the consignees of his readiness to deliver the goods. -' The unlading was commenced in the afternoon, and was continued through the forenoon of Tuesday, when, the cotton not being removed, the wharf became so full that the work was suspended. Notice was again given to the consignees; and they still neglecting to remove their cotton, a third notice was added on Wednesday morning. On the afternoon of that day; all the cotton which had been unladen on Monday and Tuesday was removed, excepting 325 bales, which remained on the wharf over night. On Thursday morning, the wharf was so far cleared that the unlading was completed by one o’clock P. M. On that day, the libellants took away about five bales, and postponed taking the rest till the next day, giving as a reason that it was fast day. About three o’clock of this day, the cotton remaining on the wharf was consumed or damaged by an accidental fire.

The contract of the carrier, in this - case, is “to deliver, in like good order and condition, at the port of Boston, unto Goddard & Pritchard.”

What constitutes a good delivery, to satisfy the exigency of such a contract, will depend on the known and established usages of the particular trade, and the well-knowr usages of the port in which the delivery is. to be' made.

*39 A carrier by wagon may be bound to deliver his freight at the warehouse of the consignee; carriers by railroad and canal usually deliver at warehouses' belonging to themselves or others. Where the contract is to carry by sea, from port to port, an actual or manual tradition of the goods into the possession of the consignee,' or at his warehouse, is not required in order to discharge the carrier from his liability as such.

There is no allegation of a particular custom as to the mode and place of delivery, peculiar to the city of Boston, which the carrier has not complied with. The general usages of the commercial and maritime law, as settled by judicial decisions, must therefore be applied to the case. By these, it is well settled that the carrier by water shall carry from port to port, or from wharf to wharf. He is not bound to deliver at the warehouse of the consignee; it is the duty of the consignee to receive the .goods out of the ship or on the wharf. But to constitute a valid delivery on the wharf, the carrier should give due and reasonable notice to the consignee, so as to afford him a fair opportunity of providing suitable means to remove the goods, or put them under proper care and custody.

Such a delivery, to be effectual, should not only be at the proper place, which is usually the wharf, but at a proper time, A carrier who would deposit goods on a wharf at night or on Sunday, and abandonvthem without a proper custodian, before the consignee had proper time and opportunity to take them into his possession and care, would not fulfil the obligation of his contract. • 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.

Applying these principles to the facts of this case, it is clear that-(saving the question as to the day) the respondents are not liable on their contract of affreightment for rhe loss of the goods in question. They delivered the goods at the place chosen by the consignees, and where they agreed to receive them, and did receive a large portion of them, after full and fair notice.

The goods were deposited for the consignees in nroper order *40 and condition, at mid-day, on a week .day, in good weathei, This undoubtedly constituted a good delivery; and the carriers are clearly not liable on. their contract of affreightment, unless, by reason of the fact next to, be noticed, they were restrained from unlading their vessel and tendering delivery on that day.

Et. This inquiry involves the right of the carrier to labor on that day, and discharge cargo, and not the right of the consignee to keep a voluntary holiday, and to postpone the removal of the goods to his warehouse to a more convenient season. The policy of the law holds the carrier to a rigorous liability; and in the discharge of it, he is not bound to await1 the convenience or accommodate himself to the caprice or conscientious scruples of the consignee. The master of a ship usually has a certain number of lay-days. He is bound to expedite the unlading of his vessel, in order to relieve the owners from the expense of demurrage, and to liberate the ship from the onerous liability of the contract of affreightment as soon as possible.

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Bluebook (online)
64 U.S. 28, 16 L. Ed. 412, 23 How. 28, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-goddard-scotus-1860.