Sleade v. Payne & Harrison

14 La. Ann. 453
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 14 La. Ann. 453 (Sleade v. Payne & Harrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sleade v. Payne & Harrison, 14 La. Ann. 453 (La. 1859).

Opinion

Cole, J.

Plaintiffs instituted this suit for the recovery of freight on cotton consigned to the defendants, whereupon the latter reconvened, claiming the value of five bales of cotton, which, they allege, plaintiffs failed to deliver to them.

There was judgment in favor of plaintiff for the freight, and against him on the reconventional demand. He has appealed.

In order to relieve the owners of vessels from responsibility, there must be a delivery on the wharf to some person authorized to receive the goods, or some act which is equivalent to, or a substitute for it. 3 La. 226, Kohn & Bordier v. Packard; The Salmon Falls Manufacturing Company v. The Bark Tangier, American Law Reg., June number, 1858, p. 505 ; Parsons on Contracts, 1 vol., pp. 670, 671, Note C. and p. 673 ; Northern v. Williams, Phillips & Co., 6 An. 579.

In order to constitute the delivery, it is not sufficient to unload the vessel and place the goods upon the wharf; there must also be a reasonable notice to the consignee, giving him time to make the usual and necessary preparations to receive the goods. The manner of delivering the goods, and consequently the period at which the responsibility of the master and owners will cease, depend upon the custom of particular places, and the usage of particular trades. Abbott on Shipping, p. 378 ; Amer. Law Reg. p. 507.

There was not, in the present case, such a delivery as to relieve the boat from liability.

The only notice given, except so far as the consignees were aware of the consignment by the newspapers and their own bills of lading, was to Mike Iiynes, the receiving clerk of the press, where Payne & Harrison store their cotton. It is not shown that the latter saw the notice in the papers of the arrival of the [454]*454boat and the names of the consignees, or that they received any bill of lading for the cotton now in contestation.

j Conceding that notice to Hynes would have sufficed, on the ground that he was /the agent for such purpose of the consignees, still a reasonably sufficient time did ■' not elapse between the notice and the disappearance of the five bales of cotton, .to liberate the common carrier from liability for their loss.

The consignee is not obliged to accept delivery of goods at the moment he is " informed they are ready for delivery, but is entitled to a reasonable time for preparing to carry them away. Particularly must such be case in a port like that of New Orleans, with reference to steamboats. Several of these often arrive at once, with large consignments to the same house. If all goods were at their risk at the moment they were informed they were ready for delivery, it would work a serious inconvenience.

On Saturday afternoon, about sundown, I-Iynes went and asked Hodgson, who was employed to discharge the steamboat, if he had any cotton for him. It thus appears that the boat had given him no direct notice, until he went to inquire personally.

Hodgson showed him the cotton of defendants, and asked him to take it away. He replied, that he had but four drays and could take only twenty bales that evening. Hynes took twenty bales’away at that time.

Prom the evidence of the plaintiff’s own witness, it was about sundown, when he informed Hynes the cotton was ready for delivery.

If Hynes had not taken away any of the cotton, the boat could not have complained, because he was notified at the time when the business of the day was about closing.

The next day was Sunday ; Hynes was not obliged to take them away on that day, for it is considered a day of rest. If this could be considered a delivery, then there would be no safety for the commercial community. The agent of a boat might notify the consignee in the night or on Sunday, that his goods were ready for delivery, but at such times it is almost impossible to procure laborers, and the goods would be exposed to be stolen and to be injured by the weather.

It is true that the boat binds itself to deliver the goods at the port of New Orleans to the consignee, but this contract, like every other, must be supposed to impose upon the boat the obligation of carrying out its contract in such a way, that the spirit of the contract may not be violated.

The obligation of delivering the goods to the consignee, carries with it that of delivering them at such time that the consignee can get laborers to haul them away, and not at midnight, on Sunday, or some other day of public rest. It is the duty of the boat to exercise a watch over the goods, after notice is given at a proper moment, for the time which is reasonably necessary for hauling them away.

After the expiration of this reasonable time, if sickness or any accident prevents the hauling away of the goods, the boat is no longer liable as a common carrier, but as a bailee on deposit.

At eleven o’clock on Monday morning the remainder of the cotton was still upon the wharf: Hodgson at that time saw Hynes taking away cotton that had arrived by another boat. Hodgson went to Hynes and asked him to give him a receipt for the cotton, if he did not intend to haul it. He answered, he would be down directly and haul it way. He declined giving a receipt. At two o’clock, upon the same day, (Monday,) Hynes was there to carry away the cotton, but could only find one bale, five being missing.

[455]*455As notice was first given on Saturday night, and a day of rest intervened between them and Monday, the notice may be considered to have been given on early Monday morning, that the cotton was ready for delivery. Hodgson testifies, that it is a custom to keep a watch on cotton until it is hauled away. His asking for a receipt shows that he did not consider it as delivered. He says, that he put a watchman over the cotton on Sunday night “ as usual,” and that he always takes a receipt from the receiving clerk for cotton.

Hynes testifies it was 12 M., on Monday, when Hodgson told him he had the six bales, being the remainder of the shipment, ready for him. Hodgson wished him to give him a receipt for them and to take his word they were there ; this deponent declined to do, but told him as soon as the drays returned, he would receive them. As soon as the drays returned, deponent sent for the six bales. The discharging clerk, Hodgson, then told him there was but one bale to be found; deponent took that bale, and has never received the remaining five bales. At the time deponent received this last bale, there was considerable cotton on the levee, of the cargo of the Planter, which had not been delivered.

Deponent says, that the custom which prevails in discharging and delivering cotton in New Orleans, is this : The party to take and haul away the cotton, ascertains from the boat’s manifest on her arrival, the number of bales and their marks intended for Ms press. He commences to haul away the cotton when it is put upon the levee, as soon as practicable. Erom the numbers and different marks, it is impossible for the draymen to know positively whether he has all his cotton until toward the last.

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Bluebook (online)
14 La. Ann. 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sleade-v-payne-harrison-la-1859.