Court Opinion

ID: 3999564
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:56:47.511124+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:45:12.350823
License: Public Domain

The respondent made a shipment of some household goods on a boat owned by the appellant and operated on Lake Chelan. The goods were delivered to the carrier at Stehekin, at the north end of the lake, to be transported to Manson, at the south end. On the voyage the boat was wrecked, some of the respondent's goods were lost and the remainder was recovered from the water. The recovered portion was taken to the appellant's warehouse at Lakeside, where it still is. The respondent came to Lakeside on *Page 559 
several occasions and took some of the goods, the exact amount being in dispute. There is an open wharf at Manson, whereas at Lakeside, which is a landing not far from Manson, there are proper facilities for taking care of the shipment. The testimony shows that the respondent refused to accept the damaged shipment at Manson, and that the appellant did what was necessary to protect the goods and has the greater portion of them ready to deliver to the respondent. The jury returned a verdict in the full amount of the claim — $1,642.25.
The appellant first urges that the court improperly instructed the jury, in effect, that the appellant had converted the respondent's goods by failing to deliver them, and that, under such circumstances, the respondent was entitled to their value; and urges that the court should have given a requested instruction to the effect that the shipper had no right to abandon the goods and refuse to take delivery, although they were in a damaged condition, if delivery was offered at a place to which the shipper had consented that delivery might be made. These requested instructions properly stated the law applicable to the situation. As this court said, in Beedy v. Pacey,22 Wash. 94, 60 P. 56:
"The ordinary duty of a carrier, where the consignee refuses to receive the goods shipped, is to store them either in his own warehouse or that of some responsible third party, notify the shipper or owner of such refusal, and hold them for a reasonable time subject to further orders. But if the shipper be the owner and consignee, no such duty is imposed on the carrier. The refusal of the owner to accept the goods, under such circumstances, constitutes an abandonment of the goods, and the owner is estopped from afterwards asserting that the carrier has converted them, no matter what disposition the carrier makes of them. The owner *Page 560 
cannot make a sale of his goods to the carrier in that way."
This but expresses the legal and moral duty of one who is seeking recovery for another's wrong that he minimize his damages. The testimony shows that the respondent consented to delivery not being made at Manson and that he acquiesced in the goods being taken to Lakeside. It was his duty to have accepted them at the latter place and to reduce the amount of his claim for damages by the value of the goods so delivered.
Error is also assigned on the court's taking away from the jury the question of whether the appellant was a gratuitous bailee. We find no error in this.
Objection is also made to the instructions as to the measure of damages. The instruction was possibly erroneous, but was more favorable to the defendant than otherwise.
We are satisfied from an examination of the record that the verdict returned by the jury was exorbitant, and unless the respondent will consent to a reduction of the amount of the verdict to the sum of $900 and accept the goods at Lakeside, the trial court is instructed to grant a new trial.
TOLMAN, C.J., FULLERTON, HOLCOMB, and MITCHELL, JJ., concur. *Page 561