Rowland v. Miln

2 Hilt. 150
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedDecember 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2 Hilt. 150 (Rowland v. Miln) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rowland v. Miln, 2 Hilt. 150 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1858).

Opinion

By the Court, Daly, First Judge.

Before the plaintiffs could ./maintain an action for the freight upon the ninety-eight barrels Ü of ale, they were bound to show that they had delivered them to | the defendant, who was the consignee named in the bill of lading. ■ Forward v. Pittard, 1 T. R. 27; Harril v. Owens, 1 Dev. & Bat. 273. Common carriers by land or water are bound to deliver the goods, entrusted to them to carry, to the consignee personally at the place of delivery. Gibson v. Culver, 17 Wend. 305. In this case, it was the duty of the plaintiffs to have notified the defendant that the goods would be delivered on the wharf at a time specified; and even then, unless he should desire them to be left on the wharf until he sent for them, or should otherwise assume the control and custody of them, as was the case in Twiggan v. Duff, (1 M. & W. 174), it would be their duty to store them with some responsible person for and on account of the owner, if the consignee should neglect to send for them, or refuse to receive them. They would not be justified, in such a case, in abandoning the goods upon the wharf; and, if they did so, would be liable to the owner for their loss or injury. Ostrander v. Brown, 15 Johns. 39; Selwyn v. Holloway, 1 Ld. Ray. 46; Wardell v. Mowryllian, 2 Esp. E. 693; Twiggan v. Duff, 1 M. & W. [153]*153174; Eagle v. White, 6 Penn. R. 123. It was held, in Fisk v. Newton, (1 Denio, 45), that, where the transportation is by water, the proper place of delivery is on the wharf, upon due notice to the consignee of the time and place of delivery; and that, if the consignee is absent, dead, or cannot be found after due efforts, or if he refuses to receive them, the carrier, to discharge himself from responsibility, must place them in store with a responsible person, at the risk, cost, and charge of the owner. In the case of The Grafton (1 Olcott, 43,) there was proof that, by the established usage at this port, the landing of the goods upon the wharf, upon due notice to the consignee of the arrival of the vessel, and of the time and place of the delivery of the goods, was a sufficient delivery. So far as the question of delivery affected the decision of that case; the court was bound, upon this proof, to assume the existence of such a usage, and that the parties contracted with reference to it. In the case below, there was no proof of any such usage, and I am not willing to take the decision in the case of The Grafton as authority for assuming, as matter of law, that a usage prevails at this port in contravention of the well established rule in respect to the duties of carriers by land or water— a usage that would be attended with great inconvenience in many cases, and which would justify the carrier in abandoning the property upon the wharf, if the consignee, after notice, neglected or refused to receive it. I should want something more than the proofs presented in a single case, to recognize, as matter of law, that such was the general and universal custom at this port. Schooner Reeside, 2 Sumn. 567, per Story, J.; Turney v. Wilson, 7 Yerg. 340; Woodruff v. Merchant's Bank, 25 Wend. 673; Id., 6 Hill, 174; Rushforth v. Hadfield, 7 East, 225; Gibson v. Culver, 17 Wend. 308. In the case below, it did not appear that the defendant was notified that the casks of ale would be landed at the wharf on the 23d of January, except so far as the justice might be warranted in inferring that fact from a memorandum at the bottom of the freight bill, and from a cartman having taken forty-eight of the casks, the receipt of which the defendant acknowledged. Fifty casks were landed on that day, and, after remain[154]*154ing upon the wharf for two hours, the customhouse inspector sent them to the public store. On the 17th of January, six days before, the defendant paid the duties upon the ninety-eight casks, and obtained a permit to land them. He offered to show that his cartman went with this permit to the vessel on the 18th, and again on the 21st, but did not exhibit it, as the vessel was not discharging; but the justice excluded the evidence. The same cartman, it would seem, went again on the 23d. The permit was shown to the customhouse inspector, but it was after he had sent the fifty casks to the public store, and the cartman brought away the remaining forty-eight casks, of which the defendant has acknowledged the receipt. If the plaintiffs had notified the defendant that they would deliver his goods at the wharf on that day, or that they had commenced to deliver the casks, it was a simple matter for them to show it, either by proving the fact by the person who gave the notice, or by calling the defendant as a witness and interrogating him respecting it. They were bound to make out their case, by establishing that they had discharged themselves from all responsibility by a due delivery of the ninety-eight casks, before they could recover for their carriage ; and, in such an action, the justice was not warranted in inferring that the defendant had due notice of the time and place of delivery, upon evidence so loose and uncertain. If there was not, then, sufficient evidence to warrant the conclusion that the defendant had received due notice, it reduces the case to a landing upon the wharf of the ninety-eight casks, forty-eight only of which the defendant acknowledges that he has received. To entitle them to recover freight, they were bound to show that he had received the other fifty, or that they had duly delivered them. A common carrier undertakes to deliver under all events, unless the goods are lost by the act of God, or the public enemies; and he can maintain no action for freight, unless he has fully performed that contract. The plaintiffs claim that they have performed as fully as they could, and that they are not answerable for the act of the customhouse inspector in sending the first fifty casks to the public store. It appears that on the day when the casks were [155]*155landed, that is, on the 23d of January, the collector of the port issued a general order, to the customhouse inspector, to send all packages which might be landed from the vessel, for which no permit had been obtained, to the public store; and that the inspector sent the fifty casks in question to the public store, before he received the permit from the defendant’s cartman. The inspector says that, after he had sent them, a person, representing himself as the defendant’s cartman, and who took away the remaining forty-eight casks, asked him for a certificate of the delivery of the fifty casks at the public store, and that he made out such a certificate, and left it for the cartman in the cabin of the vessel. The demand, by the cartman, of this certificate, and the leaving it for him in the cabin, did not establish that the defendant had assumed the control of the property, or recognized the receipt and due delivery of it to him. In Twiggan v. Duff, (supra),

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Bluebook (online)
2 Hilt. 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowland-v-miln-nyctcompl-1858.