The L. J. Farwell

15 F. Cas. 707, 8 Biss. 61
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedSeptember 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 15 F. Cas. 707 (The L. J. Farwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The L. J. Farwell, 15 F. Cas. 707, 8 Biss. 61 (E.D. Wis. 1877).

Opinion

DYER. District Judge.

It is claimed by the libellants that the wheat should have been delivered to the respective consignees, each receiving such share of the whole as should be in proper proportion to the quantity of wheat called for by his bill of lading: that the libellants were entitled to 4,736 bushels; that the vessel is liable for non-delivery of the same, and that the libel-lants are entitled to a decree for the value of the wheat put on board as and for the wheat embraced in libellants’ bill of lading, which, it is claimed, has been converted by the master and owners of the vessel. The question for determination involves, therefore, the ownership of this wheat under these two bills of lading.

The act of the master in signing and delivering the bills of lading in question, when there was no wheat on board the vessel, was unauthorized and irregular. A bill of lading is a contract by which the master engages to carry and deliver goods to the consignee, or to the order of the shipper. It acknowledges the goods to be on board, and they should be on board before the bill is signed. If. therefore, a master signs bills of lading before the goods are on board, or delivered to some one authorized to receive them, and they are never shipped, as the act of the master is not within the scope of his authority, the owners of the vessel are not estopped from showing the facts in a suit brought against them for non-delivery, by a bona fide indorsee of the bill of lading. In such case the owners are not liable. 1 Pars. Shipp. & Adm. 187, note; The Freeman v. Buckingham, 18 How. [59 U. S.] 191.

If. however, the bill is signed before the goods are on board, but upon the faith and assurance that they are to be delivered, and afterward they are delivered as and for the goods embraced in the bill of lading, as against the shipper and master the bill operates on the goods by way of relation and estoppel. This being so, the bill of lading then represents the property as effectually as if the execution of the bill and the delivery of the goods on board had been concurrent; and any bona fide holder for valuable consideration, who, by transmission to him or negotiation, has obtained such bill of lading, gets as valid and effectual a title to the goods so placed on board as could be acquired by an actual delivery of the goods themselves. Rowley v. Bigelow, 12 Pick. 314; Halliday v. Hamilton, 11 Wall. [78 U. S.] 560.

Another geheral principle may be here stated, namely, that priority of lien or of title does not depend upon the mere priority of signing either bill of lading. It is the shipment which gives the lien; the delivery of the property on board with notice to the party, which fixes the right and vests the property. Stevens v. Boston & W. R. Co., 8 Gray, 265.

As fundamental propositions, then, to aid us in settling the rights of these parties, it may be stated that, although there was no wheat on board this vessel when these bills of lading were issued, if subsequently wheat to the extent of 9,300 bushels was placed on board as and for a portion of the grain embraced in the bills of lading, as against both Dickinson and Driscoll, the bills of lading became operative to cover the property by way of estoppel, and in such proportions with reference to each holder of a bill of lading, as, upon a correct application of the facts and law of the case, may be established; further, that the priority in date of the bill of lading held by Reed & Co., does not alone fix their right or title to any particular proportion of the wheat.

The lien or title, if any, of both Reed & Co. and the libellants, as we have seen, springs from the shipment — the delivery of the property on board.

Now, had the bills of lading called for different kinds of wheat, and if such different kinds had been put on board, the appropriation to each bill of the kind of wheat called for, would seem clearly consistent with the rights of each holder of such bill of lading. So, too, if the master had received on board 8,000 bushels of wheat, and then given to the shipper a bill of lading therefor, and afterward had issued another bill of lading for S,300 bushels, and had then received but 1,400 bushels, there would be no difficulty in appropriating the 8.000 bushels to the first bill of lading. In these cases it would be apparent that the bills of lading covered specific wheat, and such appropriations would accord with the evident intentions of the parties as manifested by their acts.

But in the present case there was no wheat on board the vessel when either bill of lading [709]*709was issued. Alter both were issued, the shipper commenced delivering the wheat to the vessel, intending to fill both bills. Undoubtedly Dickinson could have controlled and directed the application of the wheat on either bill, and his direction in that respect might have been conclusive. But he made no such direction, and so far as his intentions were concerned, he delivered the wheat as much for one bill as the other, since it was his expectation to place on board the full amount of both consignments. He had it in his power to deliver first the wheat to fill the second bill, and could have refused to deliver any upon the first bill, and in that case the holder of the bill posterior in date would have taken his full quantum of grain. But there was no designation or appropriation by the shipper.

This being so, could the master, after receiving the wheat on board, appropriate it to such bill of lading as he chose, and bind the parties? After much deliberation upon this point, I am convinced he could not. and will presently state reasons for that opinion. Then, if there was no specific appropriation of the wheat on either bill by the shipper, and if there could be none by the master, how, according to legal principles, must it be appropriated?

As no wheat was placed on board until after both bills of lading were issued, and as there was no designation by the shipper, of specific wheat for either bill, but an intention on his part to deliver the entire cargo feecording to the charter, both bills, although bearing different dates, became concurrently operative; that is, both became effectual to cover their proportionate shares of the wheat delivered, as the wheat was placed on, board. "Without regard to the dates of the bills of lading, from the time the wheat delivered on both bills wTas in the custody of the vessel, the legal relations of Heed & Co. and of the libellants were fixed. As soon as the wheat wras deposited with the carrier, the title to it and right of property in it, was vested in those parties. Their bills of lading called for wheat of the same grade; the property tvas mixed and could not be distinguished, and there was not sufficient to satisfy the demands of both.

They stood, then, in the position of tenants in common, and determining their rights accordingly, each was entitled to v heat from the common mass in proportion to the amount called for by his bill of lading, and it wras the duty of the master so to ■deliver it. In my judgment this conclusion is not to be avoided, if it be conceded that the wheat wras put on board as and for the wheat covered by both bills of lading. And 1 think the proofs show7 that the shipper placed the wheat on board as a part of the 16,300 bushels embraced in both bills, and as both bills became concurrently operative to pass the title to the wheat, the holders of the bills of lading took title in common.

But it has been ably contended by the learned counsel for respondent that the master was justified in delivering the 8,000

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

Related

The Capitaine Faure
10 F.2d 950 (Second Circuit, 1926)
Cooper & Cooper, Inc. v. Cameron
10 F.2d 950 (Second Circuit, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 F. Cas. 707, 8 Biss. 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-l-j-farwell-wied-1877.