State v. Intoxicating Liquors & Lawrence Pembroke

64 A. 812, 101 Me. 430, 1906 Me. LEXIS 49
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 10, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 64 A. 812 (State v. Intoxicating Liquors & Lawrence Pembroke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Intoxicating Liquors & Lawrence Pembroke, 64 A. 812, 101 Me. 430, 1906 Me. LEXIS 49 (Me. 1906).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

This case comes to the Law Court upon the - following agreed statement of facts:

“On January 23rd, 1904, one box of intoxicating liquors consigned, C. O. D. express prepaid, by Crigler & Crigler, Covington Kentucky to Lawrence Pembroke, 4 Byron Street, Rumford Falls, Maine, was seized from the office of the American Express Company at Rumford Falls by H. L. Elliott, a deputy sheriff for Oxford County, and the liquors were thereafter duly libelled.
Pembroke filed a claim for the liquors at the return day of the libel, but upon the facts then presented the judge of the Rumford Falls Municipal Court found that the liquors were intended for illegal sale and were liable to seizure and the same were condemned, from which judgment the claimant appealed to the Supreme Judicial Court.
“It is agreed for the purpose of this case that the liquors were intended for illegal sale within this state by the consignee. It is further agreed that the box of liquors arrived at Rumford Falls on the 11.35 A. M. train January 23rd/ 1904, and were immediately taken by the express company to its office at Rumford Falls, and were there seized by a deputy sheriff for Oxford County, about 1.30 P. M. on the same day.
“It was the custom of the express company at Rumford Falls to deliver express packages at the residence of the consignee, provided his address was given or he was known to the express company and lived within the limits of Rumford Falls village. 4 Byron Street is within the limits of the village.
“Most of the express was not delivered until after the afternoon train went out at 2.40 P. M., and this box was intended to be delivered at that time.
“If upon the foregoing statement the Law Court decides that the liquors were liable to seizure and condemnation, the judgment of the lower court shall be affirmed, otherwise judgment is to be rendered for the claimant and the liquor ordered returned.”

It sufficiently appears from the foregoing statement of facts that [434]*434pursuant to an order from the claimant, the consignors entered into a contract with the express company for the transportation of the box of liquors in question from Covington Kentucky to number 4 Byron Street, Rumford Falls, Maine. It was the unquestioned duty of the express company either to make a personal delivery of the package to Lawrence Pembroke, or to leave it at his residence or place of business designated as No. 4 Byron Street.

The custom generally prevailing in the early history of common carriers, of depositing in a warehouse at the place of destination, all packages transported by them, either with or without notice to the consignee of such deposit, proved to be inadequate to meet the public demand for greater safety and dispatch in the transportation and delivery of valuable parcels. Hence arose the necessity for improved methods involving an obligation on the .part of the carrier to make delivery of such parcels to the consignee in person. “This necessity was supplied by what are known in this country as express companies, which undertake to carry goods of this class and to make a personal delivery of them to the consignee; and to this public profession they are held by the law with great strictness.” Hutchinson on Carriers, section 379, and authorities cited. In Packard v. Earle et al. 113 Mass. 280, the defendants were express carriers over the line of the Boston & Providence Railroad from Providence to Boston, and in that capacity, received the plaintiff’s trunk for transportation, marked, “Henry M. Packard, West Mansfield.” In accordance with the uniform course of business of the defendants at that station, the trunk was delivered to the station agent at that place. It was deposited with him in the morning and notice of its arrival given to the plaintiff in the afternoon; but before he had an opportunity to remove it, the station was forcibly entered and the trunk stolen. Although in that instance the place of delivery was not designated by street and number, the defendants were held liable for the loss of the trunk. In the opinion the court say: “It was the duty of the defendants, as common carriers, to deliver the trunk to the plaintiff personally, or at his residence at West Mansfield, and until such delivery their liability as carriers continued. See also Sullivan v. Thompson et als., 99 Mass. 258; Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, Vol. 12, [435]*435p. 550; and Cyc. of Law and Proc. Vol. 6, p. 466. But it should be unnecessary to cite authorities in support of a proposition so obvious and elementary.

Furthermore the package in this case appears to have been sent C. O. D. It would consequently have been impracticable, under ordinary circumstances, for the express company to perform the obligation thus assumed to collect the purchase price for the consignors without personal delivery to the consignee, or to his authorized agent at the place designated in the way-bill. The package arrived at Rumford Falls, on the 11.35 A. M. train and was immediately taken by the express company to its office at that place. The company was ready and willing to complete the transportation by delivering the box at No. 4 Byron Street on the arrival of the 2.40 P. M. train, according to its usual course of business. The express charges had been paid for a continuous shipment over the entire line from Covington Kentucky to the residence of the consignee at No. 4 Byron Street, Rumford Falls, Maine, and the express company in fact intended to deliver the box at the street and number designated, according to its established custom, on the arrival of the afternoon train, but was prevented from so doing by the seizure of the package made at the express office within an hour and a half after its arrival there.

The method of transmission was not specified except that the package was to be forwarded by express, and it is obviously immaterial that the means of transportation to be employed in making the delivery at either terminal point may have been by wagons or drays in lieu of railroad cars. The consignee was entitled to have his package delivered at No. 4 Byron Street, and the company had a right to select the means of transportation and to make the delivery in accordance with its established usage. And it is common knowledge that the time intervening between the actual arrival of the package at the office of the company and the usual time when it was intended to be delivered, was no greater than the delay ordinarily incident to the delivery of express matter in the usual course of business in similar places.

The conclusion is therefore irresistible that the transportation in this case had not been terminated and that the seizure of the liquor [436]*436in question was made while the package was in transit and before its delivery to the consignee according to the express terms of the shipment.

It is accordingly contended in behalf of the claimant that the seizure of the package under the circumstances stated was clearly in violation of the third clause of section eight of the first article of the Constitution pf the United States, conferring upon Congress the power “to regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the several states.”

In State v. Intox. Liquors, Grand Trunk Ry. Claimant,

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Bluebook (online)
64 A. 812, 101 Me. 430, 1906 Me. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-intoxicating-liquors-lawrence-pembroke-me-1906.