The Drew

15 F. 826, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 32
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 20, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 15 F. 826 (The Drew) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Drew, 15 F. 826, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 32 (S.D.N.Y. 1883).

Opinion

Brown, J.

The libel in this case was filed to recover $179, the value of certain goods sold by the libelants to J. Kastendike, Albany, and shipped to his address by the steam-boat Drew, May 3, 1880, on the ground thjit they were delivered in Albany to the wrong person.

A few days previous to th¿ shipment a man calling himself J. Kastendike, of Albany, called at the libelants’ store in New York, desiring to purchase goods. He selected what he wanted, and left his references with the libelants. Inquiry was made of one of the mercantile agencies, and, the report being satisfactory, the goods were shipped in two boxes marked “J. Kastendike,” or “Jos. Kastendike, Albany.” There was a tradesman by the name of John Kastendike in Pearl street, Albany, who was well known there, and of good repute, and responsible, though not known to the libelants, and the replies to [827]*827the libelants referred to that tradesman. The evidence also shows that there was another man who had a store in Central avenue, Albany, with the sign “J. Kastendike,” where one of the witnesses for the libelants testified that for two or three weeks previous he had at various times delivered goods forwarded by the American Express Company.

On the arrival of the Drew at Albany, on the morning of May 4th, the goods were sent from the steamer to the Pearl-street merchant, who had left the day before for New York. His wife and son, knowing, as they testify, that the goods could not be for them, refused to receive the boxes, and they were taken back to the steamer. On the same day a truckman employed by the Central-avenue man applied to the boat, exhibited a bill for them, received the goods, receipted for them, and took them to the store at Central avenue, and delivered them there, with the bill, to the same man from whom he received the bill. The libelants claim that this was a delivery to the wrong person, for which the carrier is responsible.

One of the libelants testified that the the two boxes were addressed “J. Kastendike, Pearl St., Albany;” but his testimony, as I understand it, is based upon his presumption from their usual course of business, and not from observing the direction on the boxes themselves. The shipping clerk who put up the goods and directed them was not produced as a witness, though without any fault of the libel-ants. The only other evidence that the goods were addressed to Pearl street is a receipt for them, signed by the proper agent of the Drew, dated May 3d. This receipt now contains the words “Pearl St.” as a part of the address. About two weeks after shipment, when the libelants first apprehended any trouble in regard to the payment for the goods, it was presented to the freight agent of the Drew, and two witnesses who then saw it testify that the words “Pearl St.” in the receipt were in different-colored ink, and presented a fresh appearance, as though the ink was scarcely dry, so as to excite remark at the time. The face of the receipt itself suggests strong suspicion that it was not written at the time the rest of the address was written. The words “J. Kastendike, Albany, N. Y.,” aro written underneath each other, in a free, easy hand, on three equidistant lines. The words “Pearl St.” are crowded in between the first two lines, and between the ends of the words “Kastendike” and “Albany,” and they are written in a constrained, cramped hand, where the paper is roughened and the letters somewhat blurred.

[828]*828Opposed to this evidence that the goods were addressed to Pearl street, there is the positive evidence of the carman who delivered them at the Central-avenue store, and the wife of the Pearl-street merchant who rejected the boxes, both of whom testify that the address, “Pearl St.,” was not on the boxes. Two witnesses from the-•steamer testify to the same thing; and their evidence is somewhat, corroborated by the entry in the steamer’s manifest of May 3d, and the delivery-book of May dth, in which the direction is entered without any street address. The weight of evidence, notwithstanding the-receipt, which cannot stand as an unimpeached voucher, is, in my opinion, altogether to the effect that the goods were addressed to-Albany only, without the designation of any street.

I am not entirely satisfied even that the purchaser gave the libel-ant his address as at Pearl street, although that fact is testified to by one of the libelants, near the close of his testimony. On the direct examination he stated that the references of whom he inquired “located” him in Pearl street. There is no doubt, therefore, but that-the libelants, when they shipped the goods, supposed the purchaser was the Pearl-street man; but no card or memorandum from the purchaser, no entry by the libelants made at the time, is produced, showing that the -address of Pearl street was given. The bill of the goods forwarded by them does not contain it; and the reply of the mercantile agency; which is in writing and produced, does not so-state, as the libelants wex’e understood at first to testify. The envelope containing the bill returned from the Pearl-street man is not produced; its return from the Pearl-street store is no evidence that it was specifically addressed there, since it would naturally have gone to him, as an old and well-known merchant, without such specific address.

But I do not find it necessary to pass upon this question, since the other undisputed facts in the case, coupled with the conclusion of fact that I have stated above, namely, that the goods were addressed only to J. Kastendike, Albany, without the designation of the street, are sufficient to exempt the steamer from liability. That the purchaser of the goods was a swindler may be assumed; but there is no evidence, and it cannot be taken for granted, that his name was not J. Kastendike. He evidently was dealing in Albany under that name, and, there being no evidence to the contrary, it must be assumed that such was his name. The case is, therefore, one of delivery by the carrier to the very man who had bought the goods in person; a [829]*829delivery at the purchaser’s store in the city where the boxes were addressed, without any intimation by the shipper of any intention that they should be delivered to any different person or at any different place. This would seem to bo a perfect fulfillment of a carrier’s obligation.

Counsel for the libelants contend that several authorities in this country show that the consignee must “identify himself as the real man of that name, and as the person entitled to the goods.” If this doctrine were applied in the sense claimed, it would make carriers insurers not only against frauds upon themselves, but insurers against frauds upon the consignor, of which they had no knowledge or grounds of suspicion. There is no question that the carrier must deliver to the person addressed, and must answer for the consequences of any mistakes, fraud, or forgeries practiced upon himself. Hutch. Carr. §§ 344, 350. But the person addressed in this case was the man to whom in fact the delivery was made, although the seller erroneously supposed him to be the Pearl-street man. There are several cases where the purchaser has personated some fictitious person or firm to whom the goods were addressed, in which the carrier has been held liable for delivering them to a person other than the person or firm addressed, or at a wholly different place from that designated. Price v. Oswego Ry. Co. 50 N. Y. 213; Winslow v. Vt. & M. R. Co. 42 Vt. 700; Amer. Exp. Co. v. Fletcher, 25 Ind. 492; Amer. Exp. Co. v. Stack, 29 Ind. 27; Stephenson v.

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Bluebook (online)
15 F. 826, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-drew-nysd-1883.