Ruhl v. James J. Corner & Co.

63 Md. 179, 1885 Md. LEXIS 78
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 12, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 63 Md. 179 (Ruhl v. James J. Corner & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruhl v. James J. Corner & Co., 63 Md. 179, 1885 Md. LEXIS 78 (Md. 1885).

Opinion

Irving, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellee being a commission merchant in Baltimore, between the month of August, 1881, and the month of January, 1882, received consignments of flour from Oliver Merion, of Minneapolis, Minnesota, for sale upon commission. Upon the 21st of January, 1882, Merion shipped to Corner & Co., without order, a car-load of' “ Champion ” flour, being one hundred and twenty-five barrels, by Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad and Baltimore and Ohio Railroad via Chicago. On the same day he wrote Corner & Co. advising of this shipment, and naming a price at which Corner, his factor, should sell the same. No hill of lading was sent to Corner & Co.; hut at the time of the shipment a shipping receipt was taken from the railroad for the flour, and that with a draft on Corner & Co. for five hundred dollars was placed in hank for transmission to Baltimore, hut was subsequently withdrawn, and was never sent. Subsequent to the shipment to Corner & Co., Merion received an order for flour from Conrad Ruhl & Son of Baltimore, and decided to change the shipment and to send to Ruhl & Son this car of flour on their order. Accordingly, on the 24th of January, 1882, the [183]*183railroad having been notified, its agent at Minneapolis telegraphed the Chicago agent to hold the car of flour, as Merion wished to change the consignment to Ruhl & Sou. On the 30th of January, the original receipt was surrendered to the railroad agent at Minneapolis, and a bill of lading for the flour was taken out to Ruhl & Son. The agent on the 24th had taken steps to have the address of Corner & Co. removed from the car, and to have that of Ruhl & Son substituted. He telegraphed to Chicago directing this 'change to he made, hut it was neglected, and the flour came through to Baltimore labeled for Corner & Co., and was delivered to them; the Baltimore .agents of the railroad not being advised of the change of destination, and Corner & Co. as yet, having received no information of Merion’s change of purpose, and the actual consignment, by bill of lading, to Ruhl & Son. The proof shows, that on the 24th of January, three days after the shipment spoken of, but before Corner knew of it, he wrote to Merion advising against further shipments unless Merion chose to ship a car of Clematis ” flour, without draft, as the margins on the flour still on hand were exhausted. On the 26th of January, Corner acknowledged the receipt of the letter telling him of the shipment of “ Champion,” promising it should he sold for the best prices, and saying, we note you have not made draft on this car, as if in anticipation of our request of the 24th to send us a car without draft to cover the margins on shipments now on hand.”

Corner says in the testimony he sold the flour on the 9th of February, although on the 27th of February he wrote Merion he had received no offers, and does not apprise him of a sale until the 4th of March.

The bill of lading, though issued on the 30th of January, was dated back to the 21st of January to correspond with the actual shipment. This hill of lading in favor of Ruhl & Son, with draft on them for $615, was presented by Merion to the Security Bank of Minnesota, and the [184]*184draft was cashed by the hank, which sent both bill of lading and draft to the Bank of Commerce in Baltimore, at which hank Ruhl & Son paid the draft and received in consideration of such payment, viz., the bilL of "lading for the flour. Ascertaining the flour had been received by Corner, appellants in the latter part of Eebruary, or early in March, demanded payment for the same; and the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad also in March demanded the flour.

Upon this state of facts the question arises, who was entitled to this flour — the appellants, or the appellee ? It is conceded that no bill of lading or invoice was ever sent to or received by Corner; whereas it is equally well established and not denied, that Ruhl & Son did receive a hill of lading, and did pay a draft on them for $615 on it.

The appellants insist, that although the flour was originally shipped to Corner & Co., it was so shipped without their order, and that afterwards, and while it was in the power of the shipper to do so, the consignment was changed, and the flour was sold to Ruhl & Sons, to whom a bill of lading and draft were sent, and who paid therefor. They claim that title never passed from Merion to Corner & Co., hut that it did pass to Ruhl & Son. The appellants further and strongly relied on the Act of 1816, chap. 262, in respect to bills of lading, and the effect of the possession of such bills of lading upon title. But the decision of this case does not involve any consideration by the Court of the effect of the Act of lS^, of what construction shall be given it; for there are .well settled principles established and acted upon in very many cases, which will control the decision of this case irrespective of any Act of Assembly.

It is the well-settled law, that the delivery of goods to a common carrier for one who has purchased and who has ordered them, is a delivery to the purchaser, though it does not amount to an acceptance of them. 1 Benjamin [185]*185on Sales, pp. 182 and 195. But it is equally well settled, that where goods have been shipped to one who has not ordered them, title does not pass to the consignee by delivery to the carrier, and the right to change the consignment and destination during the transportation remains in the shipper; and this is so far the manifest reason that there is a want of the essential element of mutual assent to constitute a contract of sale. So that in all cases where goods are shipped upon the account of, and at the risk of, the shipper, this right remains in him. The Francis, Boyer, Master, 8 Cranch, 418 ; Mitchel vs. Ede, et al., 11 Adolphus & Ellis, 888 ; Scothern vs. The South Staffordshire Railway Co., 8 Exch., 340; 3 Condensed Rep. U. S., 245, and notes; Elliott vs. Bradly, et al., 23 Vermont, 217; Hodges & Co. vs. Kimball Farnsworth, 49 Iowa, 577; Hutchinson on Carriers, secs. 134 and 337 ; Blanchard, et al. vs. Page, et al., 8 Gray, 285; and Walter vs. Ross, 2 Wash. Cir. Ct. Rep. 286. In this last case of Walter vs. Ross, the subject was fully considered, and Judge Washington says, “the factor has no interest or property in the goods beyond his commissions, and, of course, cannot controvert the right of his principal. If, indeed, he he a creditor of the shipper, he has a contingent interest in virtue of his right of lien which the possession would give ; hut for the perfection of his right he must acquire and retain an actual possession of this property — constructive possession will not do.”

The same principles are declared in Grosvenor & Starr vs. Phillips, 2 Hill, (N. Y.,) 147, and in Bank of Rochester vs. Jones, 4 Comstock, 500. In Bonner, et al. vs. Marsh, et al., 10 Sm. & Mar., 376; Chaffer vs. Miss. R. R., 59 Miss., 185; Woodruff vs. Nashville and Chattanooga R. R. Co., 2 Head, 87, and several other Tennessee cases, the law is laid down more stringently, as against the factor, than the weight of authority justifies.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Johnston v. Western Maryland Railway Co.
135 A. 185 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1926)
Pennsylvania Railroad v. S. M. Hamilton Coal Co.
125 A. 405 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1923)
Dudley v. Roberts
124 A. 883 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1923)
Nisbet v. Siegel-Campion Live Stock Co.
21 Colo. App. 494 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1912)
Catanzara Di Giorgio Co. v. F. W. Stock & Sons
81 A. 385 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1911)
Rowland v. Dolby
59 A. 666 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1905)
Bank of Litchfield v. Elliott
86 N.W. 454 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1901)
Rowe v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad
33 A. 761 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 Md. 179, 1885 Md. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruhl-v-james-j-corner-co-md-1885.