The Idaho

12 F. Cas. 1157, 5 Ben. 280, 14 Int. Rev. Rec. 134, 1871 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 193
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJuly 11, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 12 F. Cas. 1157 (The Idaho) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.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 Idaho, 12 F. Cas. 1157, 5 Ben. 280, 14 Int. Rev. Rec. 134, 1871 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 193 (E.D.N.Y. 1871).

Opinion

BENEDICT, District Judge.

This is a proceeding in rem to recover of the steamship Idaho for the non-delivery of certain cotton, valued at some $25.000, which was shipped in that vessel on the 3d day of May, 1869, to he transported from New York to Liverpool.

The original shipment consisted of 200 hales, claimed to have been then owned by Thos. Man, who, on the day of the shipment, and before any bill of lading was issued, sold the same to Hentz & Co., the libellants, free on board. The bill of lading contained the ordinary contract to deliver the goods to the order of Man as the shipper. It was signed on the 4th of May, and Man then indorsed on it a direction to deliver the goods to James Finlay & Co., who were agents of the libellants in Liverpool. The steamer duly performed her voyage, and delivered her cargo; but of this shipment of cotton, only 35 bales were delivered to James Finlay & Co.; the remaining 165 bales were delivered to Baring Bros., acting as agent of W. J. Porter & Co. For this failure to perform the contract in the bill of lading, the libellants now bring this action.

It is necessary here to state but one of the defences set up by the ship, which is, that neither Man, who received the bill of lading, nor the libellants, to whom it was transferred, were entitled to the cotton, but that it belonged to Porter & Co., and that the delivery to the true owner on his demand constitutes a defence to this action. The facts material to this issue are as follows:

In April, 1869, at New Orleans, W. J. Porter & Co., in due course of business and in good faith, advanced to one Porbes a large sum of money upon a bill of lading, which set forth a shipment of 140 bales of cotton at New Orleans in the brig C. C. Colson. The bill of lading was in the ordinary form, executed by the lawful master of the Col-son, but, in fact, no such cotton had been shipped at the time of its execution. Some few days after the date of the bill of lading, and after the acceptance of the drafts by Porter & Co., Forbes did, however, ship by the Colson 140 bales of cotton, as and for the cotton described in the bill of lading sent to Porter & Co. This cotton was duly delivered to the Colson, was receipted for by the officers of the brig, and although not then placed on board, was delivered to the vessel on the wharf alongside, and, in my opinion, duly shipped, as cotton to be transported and delivered according to the bill of lading which the master had already signed.

By this shipment the title to the 140 bales so shipped passed to Porter & Co., who had advanced upon the faith of such a shipment, and held the bill of lading which set forth the shipment in question. 12 Pick. 314; Halliday v. Hamilton, 11 Wall. [78 U. S.] 560.

Subsequent to this shipment, and on the same day, before the cotton was taken into the hold of the brig, Forbes accomplished its removal from the custody of the brig, and its shipment on the steamship Lodona, lying near and bound for New Xork. The previous shipment of the cotton on the Col-son was unknown to the officers of the Lo-dona, and they as of course issued bills of lading in the ordinary form for the cotton they received.

Forbes, it seems, shipped in the Lodona [1158]*115825 other bales, and took one bill of lading for the whole 1G5, on which second bill of lading he obtained a large advance from the firm of Shaffer & Co., of New York, to whom he made a second assignment of the cotton.

An issue has been raised as to the identity of the cotton shipped in the Colson with that shipped on the Lodona. But the weight of the evidence is, that the same 140 bales delivered to the brig went to the Lo-dona, and were included in the bill of lading for 165 bales which was sent to Shaffer & Co. Were the direct evidence upon this point less conclusive than it is, I should still be of the same opinion, becauseof the dealing of Shaffer & Co. with the cotton after it was delivered to them from the Lodona in New York. It appears that the Lodona arrived in New York on the 29th or 30th of April The 1© bales were taken directly to a warehouse by Shaffer & Co., who, on the 1st of May, engaged freight in the Idaho for 200 bales of cotton. On the same day, Saturday, Shaffer & Co. sent for one Corcoran, who went to Shaffer’s house on Sunday, and was then directed, as he says, to remove all the marks and numbers from the 1G5 bales, and to re-mark them with marks similar to 35 other bales which Shaffer & Co. had stored in West street. Cor-coran did this as. well as the short time permitted, and on Monday, May 3d, the whole 200 bales — 120 of them marked “S.A.L.” and 80 marked ,,V.O.X.” — were shipped in the Idaho. This shipment was not made in Shaffer’s name, but while Corcoran was at work on the cotton, it was nominally sold to Man, a clerk of Shaffer’s, ¿nd it was shipped in the name of Conklin & Davis, grocers, who permitted their names to be thus used, and indorsed the ship’s receipts over to Man. On the 4th of May, Man applied for and received the bill of lading of the Idaho for the 200 bales on which this action is brought. Mr. Shaffer testifies, that on the 3d day of May a bill of sale of the cotton had been given to Man, which, however, is not produced, and it is clear on the evidence that any transfer to Man was merely nominal, for the purpose of obscuring the title of the cotton. On the same day Man sold the cotton to Hentz & Co. free on board, but this was also merely nominal. Hentz & Co. were told to ask no questions, and, on the 5th or 6th, gave their note for the cotton to Man. who paid it to Shaffer, who held it till maturity, and when Hentz & Co. paid the amount of it to Man, they obtained Shaffer’s guaranty against loss. Man then paid the money over to Shaffer, who gave him a check for $897 30, as for a difference in price between the sales to Man and Man’s sales to Hentz & Co.; and Hentz & Co. acted under the direction of Shaffer & Co. in bringing this suit.

The statement of these facts, with the additional one that Man, although alive and in New York, is not called as a witness, are sufficient to show the nature of the transaction; and the effort, together with the fact that a few of the original marks on the cotton, which, owing to the shortness of time, escaped Corcoran’s knife, were still 1» be seen, affords support to the direct evidence of the witness who swears that the cotton, shipped on the Colson, was carted on his direction to the Lodona. Under such a state of facts, the presumption arises that the marks on the cotton, which arrived by the Lodona, would have proved its identity with that shipped on the Colson, otherwise why obliterate instead of carefully retaining them? Everything is to be presumed: against the despoiler of evidence.

I find, therefore, as a question of fact, that the 140 bales of cotton shipped on the Colson, and transferred by bill of lading to Porter, formed part of the 165 bales received by Shaffer & Co. from the Lodona, and of the 200 bales shipped in the Idaho under the bill of lading on which this action is brought; and I find further, that the present libel-lants are at least chargeable with notice that they were dealing in respect to property, of which the title was in dispute. Indeed, the. facts of the case, and the manner of the witnesses, satisfy me that Shaffer & Co. are the real parties in interest here.

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

Related

The Ferreri
9 F. 468 (E.D. New York, 1881)
Hentz v. Idaho
11 F. Cas. 1191 (S.D. New York, 1848)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 F. Cas. 1157, 5 Ben. 280, 14 Int. Rev. Rec. 134, 1871 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-idaho-nyed-1871.