Court Opinion

ID: 7365459
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-27 23:51:11.033582+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:44.877536
License: Public Domain

SAYRE, J.
The complaint ivas reduced by the voluntary action of the plaintiff, and by rulings of the court not now in question, to counts 6 and 7. Count 6 declared upon the wrongful delivery of plaintiff’s goods by the defendant carrier to one Chas. Deans. Count 7 declared upon defendant’s failure or refusal to deliver to plaintiff. The bill of lading which evidenced the contract of carriage between the parties provided that the defendant was to make delivery to “onfy” Deans. In the complaint this collocation of letters was averred to have been employed by the parties as meaning “order notify,” and the court properly received in evidence the bill of lading, and along with ri^ the testimony of witnesses, familiar with the usage obtaining in the transaction of business between shippers and carriers, by which this sign or technical collocation, not in general use, was shown to have a meaning in accordance with the averment.— Mouton v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 128 Ala. 537, 29 South. 602. The direction in a bill of lading to “notify” a named person shows that such person is not intended as the consignee. Otherwise the direction would mean nothing. Moore on Carriers, 170. The meaning of the bill of lading, as explained by the testimony, was that Deans was to be notified of the arrival of the goods at destination, but that they were to be delivered only to plaintiff’s order. Plaintiff was both consignor and consignee. The sale was to be a sale for cash; at least, that is what the vendor understood it was to be. Tn pursuance of this understanding and purpose, plaintiff drew upon Deans, draft, with bill of lading attached, for the price. Deans refusing to pay, the draft and bill of lading were returned to plaintiff. Neverthe*622less defendant delivered the goods to Deans. Tbe carrier delivers at its peril goods to one without a bill of lading. So far no doubt arises as to plaintiff’s right to maintain the action. But it appeared that in the effort to mate a sale and in the shipment of the goods plaintiff was acting as the agent of the Armstrong Packing Company under the following conditions: The Armstrong Company shipped its goods to plaintiff company for distribution in the latter’s territory. Plaintiff shipped the particular goods in question, with a view of delivery to Deans, out of the Armstrong Company’s stock in plaintiff’s warehouse upon receipt of an order from the Armstrong Company’s traveling salesman. Plaintiff company passed on the credit of proposed buyers, exercising its own judgment in filling orders and accounting to the Armstrong Comipany, and receiving a commission of 2 per cent, on sales made by it. On these facts the appellant contends that the Armstrong Company alone could maintain an action for the loss resulting from the delivery of the goods to Deans. A number of cases are cited in which the question was whether the carrier should respond to the consignor or consignee, but they are without influence, for here the plaintiff is both. Certainly the carrier is discharged from liability when it surrenders property, taken for transportation, to the true owner, for that, is not a matter of choise. But, to justify a delivery without the order of the consignor, the carrier assumes the burden of proving that the person to whom delivery has been made was the true owner having the right of immediate possession. —Moore on Carr, 156. “The rule is that the depositary is bound to redeliver or restore the chattels bailed to the bailor, and the bailor may recover the goods of his bailee without proving bis right of property in them.”—Riddle v. Blair, 148 Ala. 461, 42 South. 560. This *623rule applies to the common carrier, and the carrier must deliver according .to the skipper’s order or tke terms of tke bill of lading, unless tke true owner has- interposed and asserted kis riglits. — Moore on Carr., supra; Hutch. on Carr., § 750. This disposes of a number of tke assignments of error in accordance witk tke rulings of tke trial court.
In count 6 “plaintiff avers that it drew a draft on May 21, 1909, through tke Montgomery Bank & Trust Company, witk said bill of lading thereto attacked, and sent tke said draft witk said bill of lading attacked to tke People’s Bank at Troy, Ala., for collection.”- Then follows an averment that Deans failed to pay, and that defendant delivered tke goods to kirn notwithstanding he had so failed and had not the bill of lading. Tke evidence was that the plaintiff drew tke draft in tke name of tke Armstrong Packing Company. It is insisted that this constituted a material and fatal variance. The purpose of the rule requiring correspondence between pleading and. proof is that tke opposite party may be advised of what he will be called upon to answer and to preserve a. record as a protection against another proceeding involving the same rights.—Bowie v. Foster, Minor, 264. At this time nothing more is insisted upon than substantial conformity. Tke averment that tke kill had keen drawn by tke Armstrong Company was not material-to a statement of plaintiff’s cause of action, nor was it descriptive of what was material. Tke material fact was that defendant had delivered to Deans goods consigned to plaintiff notwithstanding he had no bill of lading. The averment as to which tke variance is alleged was tke averment of a fact evidential of tke material fact otherwise sufficiently averred. The circumstantial particularity was unnecessary. The case was .as well stated without it. *624Tbe reason of the rule did not require that the mere circumstance be proved with literal exactness, or, indeed, at all. The case Avould be different, of course, if the suit had been upon the draft as for a failure to accept or pay. As for the point here taken, the general charge was well refused to the defendant.
Again, it is insisted that the fact that plaintiff through its agent presented its bill of lading to defendant at Troy, the place to which the goods were consigned, demanding delivery of the goods, and that defendant then and there failed or refused to deliver, as averred in count 7, did not constitute a conversion by the defendant, because it had before that time delivered the goods to Deans. Without considering the sufficiency of this excuse, the question here made may be properly disposed of on the ground that it could only arise under count 7 of the complaint. It did not affect count 6, which averred a conversion by the delivery to Deans. It being necessary, on considerations already stated, to-submit to the jury the case alleged in count 6, the affirmative charge on the whole case did not raise the question whether' plaintiff could recover on count 7. It was not raised otherwise, and need not now be considered.
Charge 1, refused to the defendant, was so refused without error. The language of this, and several other of the charges, was misleading to some extent, for it spoke of the reservation of title by the plaintiff, thereby seeming to imply necessity for the consideration of the case as one in which plaintiff might have parted with the possession to Deans while retaining the title. No phase of the evidence presented a case in which Deans may have acquired a rightful possession without the title. But apart from this, and without laying undue stress upon it, the charge assumed a sale of the *625goods to Deans; whereas, plaintiff’s case, finding strong if not undisputed support in the evidence, was that there had been no executed agreement of sale, because, though Deans may have supposed he was buying on credit, the minds of the parties to that transaction were not agreed to that effect, and that its goods had been delivered out of the possession of its agent and bailee without its consent and against its will.
Some charges requested by defendant set up, in different shapes, the proposition that- plaintiff could not recover if Deans “bought” the goods on credit. The giving of these charges would have been justified upon the ground only that if Deans bought the goods, as predicated in the charges, he became the true owner. Deans’ testimony was that he had “bought” the goods on credit. He leaves it in doubt whether he supposed he was buying the goods from the Armstrong Company directly or from the plaintiff. He based his conclusion that he had bought upon facts -which included no delivery — ■ upon what had passed betireen him and the traveling salesman, and upon either one or the other of two additional facts, viz., that plaintiff’s agreement to the terms of the order to the salesman, as he understood it, was to be implied from the subsequent negotiation and the shipment of the goods, or that when he received the goods from defendant he supposed they might have come from the Armstrong Company directly and in accordance with his understanding as to terms. Neither party to the suit produced'the correspondence which constituted the negotiation between plaintiff and Deans, and they differed diametrically as to its meaning and effect. Conceding the truth of Deans’ testimony in its entirety, he had at best acquired, not the title to tlie specific goods, but an executory contract for the purchase of goods which should answer a certain de*626scription. In advance of delivery no title passed. The only delivery shown was a delivery of goods in respect to which plaintiff had rights and responsibilities which could not be changed without its assent. A delivery to Deans of goods held by plaintiff for disposition on its own terms and responsibility, such delivery being unauthorized by plaintiff, was not to be justified on the .ground that Deans had a contract with the Armstrong Company for the delivery of goods of similar kind and quality. The testimony, then, as to the terms on which Deans bought the goods, amounted to nothing , and might well have been ignored. Defendant’s right to deliver to him depended upon the conditions of the plaintiff’s delivery to it — whether it thereby became bailee for plaintiff or for Deans — and that was the sole question in the case. If the word “bought” in these charges be taken as the equivalent of an executed contract of purchase, they were abstract. If taken according to the meaning attached to it by the witness Deans, the charges required the determination of the rights of the parties upon an immaterial issue.
After defendant had delivered the goods to Deans, and after the draft had been returned to plaintiff unpaid, the bill of exceptions shows that it was again “sent to the bank of Troy for collection.” Charges Avere requested by defendant to the effect that, if plaintiff had the draft presented to Deans a second time, plaintiff could not recover. If plaintiff with knoAvledge of the facts ratified the delivery to Deans, it could not hold defendant company liable. But that is not the statement of the charges. That statement is, in substance, that a second presentation constituted a ratification. Whether it did depended upon the intention. It may have been made for the relief of defendant. At best, this fact was some evidence of ratification, not ratification per 'se. These charges Avere properly refused.
*627What has been said will indicate onr opinion on all questions raised.
The judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Dowdell, C. J., and Andees'on and Evans, JJ., concur.