Court Opinion

ID: 4937240
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-24 01:17:24.064159+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:14:44.275413
License: Public Domain

Spear, J.
Seven cases are considered in this opinion, each involving the single question of constructive delivery of intoxicating *465liquors by a common carrier under the so-called Wilson Act. No •other question is raised either by the State or claimant of the liquors seized. The facts disclose that certain intoxicating liquors were shipped from different points without the State arriving at different times by way of the Maine Central Railroad at its freight station in the city of Lewiston. All the goods were shipped in the names of local firms who did not order nor claim them, or to fictitious names, persons to the railroad company unknown. The various invoices upon their arrival were placed in the freight shed of the defendant company and from time to time thereafter were seized upon proper warrants charging the liquors to be deposited within the State for the purpose of illegal sale. The warrants were served, the seizures made, the liquors libeled, the claimant appeared, a hearing was had, the liquors were declared forfeited and the claimant appealed. The fact that a portion of these liquors finally declared forfeited had been once seized and ordered returned on the ground that they then came within the protection of the interstate commerce clause of the Constitution, becomes immaterial in the consideration of the one issue involved. The longest time any package was in the custody of the railroad company after its arrival at Lewiston, before seizure, was a period of 24 days. The element of time makes this case the strongest for the State, as all the other elements are common to all the cases.
No question is raised that the goods seized were moving in interstate commerce unless they had been constructively delivered to the consignees. Heymann v. Southern Railroad Co., 203 U. S. 270; State v. Intox. Liquors, 102 Maine, 385.
In the Heymann case, the court intimate what facts may be regarded as sufficient to establish constructive delivery in cases of this kind. They say — "Of course we are not called upon in this case, and do not decide if goods of the character referred to in the Wilson Act, moving in interstate commerce, arrive at the point of destination and after notice and full opportunity to receive them are designedly left in the hands of the carrier for an unreasonable time, that such conduct on the part of the consignee might not justify, if affirmatively alleged and proven, the holding that goods so dealt *466with have come under the operation of the Wilson Act, because constructively delivered.” In this paragraph the court seems to have undertaken to state but not to decide the three essential elements of constructive delivery to be, notice to the consignee of the arrival of the goods; a reasonable time on his part after notice to receive them, and a mutual design or arrangement with the carrier to hold them for the consignee. The only evidence of constructive delivery in the case at bar is found in the fact that the goods were retained by the Railroad Company without actual delivery for a space of 24 days (giving the State the benefit of the strongest case) and that the consignees were represented by fictitious names and were to the claimant unknown.
In specifying the elements above named the court uses a phrase which ’seems to have peculiar significance in its application to the class of cases now under consideration, namely; "designedly left in the hands of the carrier for an unreasonable time.” This phrase was undoubtedly intended to allude to a passive or silent understanding between the shippers of liquors, the carriers and the consignees with reference to those transactions which operate to enable an evasión of the law and assist consignees in obtaining a safe delivery of their contraband goods. Yet, notwithstanding this interpretation of the phrase, if a correct one, and sufficient to authorize the inference of constructive delivery, we are unable to find any evidence in the statement of facts which warrants us in declaring that the-' goods in question were constructively delivered. It will be observed by a reading of the above paragraph that the conduct which might be sufficient for the predication of constructive delivery is ascribed to the acts of the consignee and not to the acts of the carrier. But in the case at bar, it is not the consignee but the carrier who is the claimant. Therefore it appears that the elements of constructive delivery referred to in the Heymann case as applicable to consignees are not found at all in the case at bar against the carrier, as the consignees were fictitious.
The essential elements of constructive delivery are well defined in law. The rule is Well established that a constructive delivery can be effected only by an agreement between the carrier or middle man *467and the buyer or person claiming under him whereby the former agrees to hold goods for the latter for some purpose other than that of carriage to and delivery at their original destination. In the absence of an agreement with the buyer to the contrary, the carrier will be presumed to hold the goods in his original capacity. The carrier cannot constitute himself the buyer’s agent for the custody of the goods, nor can the buyer make the carrier his agent for custody without the carrier’s consent. American and Eng. Encyc. of Law, Vol. 26, page 1096, and cases cited. See also Harding Paper Co. v. Allen, 65 Wis. 584; Jeffris v. Fitchburg Railroad Co., 93 Wis. 250; Brewer Lumber Co. v. Boston & Albany Railroad Co., 179 Mass. 228.
The last case involved the replevin of lumber, sold by the plaintiff to George A. Paul, claimed by right of stoppage in transitu. It appears that the car of lumber was shipped January 31, 1908, and arrived at the yard of the defendant in Boston on February 19, and Paul was notified by an agent of the defendant. On March 4, the defendant stored the lumber in one of its sheds and notified Paul of this fact. On April 9, Paul made an assignment for the benefit of his creditors and on April 16, the plaintiff notified the defendant not to deliver the lumber to Paul claiming the right of stoppage in transitu. The court held that the transit of the lumber was not ended when the plaintiff asserted his right to it and that it made no difference whether the goods were in the hands of the carrier as carrier or whether the carrier at the journey’s end put them in a ware-house, laying down this rule : "While the position of carrier may be changed to that of bailee or agent for the purchaser of the goods, yet this is a question of an agreement between the carrier and the purchaser.” In this case it will be seen that the goods were in the hands of the carrier about two months before they were claimed by stoppage in transitu, yet the court held that there was no constructive delivery.
The relation of carrier to the shipper, the consignee and the goods is originally fixed by law, and by a contract between the parties which is, that the carrier shall safely carry the goods to their place of destination and there deliver them to the consignee. *468This contract, once existing, can be changed only by the operation of law or by an agreement between the parties. When the goods arrive at their journey’s end it is the duty of the carrier to store them. This duty is imposed by law. When stored they are still in the possession and custody of the carrier and the only change in his relation to the goods is the extent of his liability. The goods are still in transit. State v. Intoxicating Liquors, 102 Maine, 385. The contract is still binding upon the carrier to deliver the goods to the consignee, and this obligation can be terminated only by actual or constructive delivery or by a new contract with the consignee in the place of the contract of carriage. As already seen in the case before us, no actual delivery of the goods was made and no evidence is found adequate to establish proof of constructive delivery. Therefore, the various packages of goods seized must be held at the time of their seizure to have still been in transit as interstate commerce in the hands of the carrier.
In accordance with the stipulation in the report, the entry must be in numbers 19 to 25 inclusive,

Judgment for the claimant.

Liquors ordered to he returned.