Court Opinion

ID: 6696283
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 21:52:13.495353+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:01:14.536314
License: Public Domain

IIokb, J.
In Williams, Black & Co. v. R. R., 93 N. C., 42, it was held that “A common carrier is not bound by a bill of lading issued by its agent unless tbe goods be actually received for shipment and tbe principal is not estopped thereby from showing ‘by parol that no goods were in fact received, although the bill has been transferred to a bona fide holder for value.’ ”
This decision, fully approved in the more recent case of Peele v. R. R., 149 N. C., 390, has since been the accepted and unquestioned law of the State and to our minds the ruling is in accord with right reason and sustained by the decided weight of authority in other jurisdictions. Mo. R. R., v. McFaden, 154 U. S., 155; Pollard v. Vinton, 105 U. S., 7; Ray & Ray v. Northern Pacific R. R., 6 L. R. A. (N. S.), 302; Baltimore R. R. v. Wilkins, 44 Md., 11; National Bank of Commerce v. R. R., 44 Minn., 224.
The position and the principles upon which it may be properly made to rest are very impressively stated by Mitchell, J., in the Minnesota case, supra, as follows: “The reasoning by which this doctrine is usually supported is that a bill of lading is not negotiable in the sense in which a bill of exchange or promissory note is negotiable, where the purchaser need not look beyond the instrument itself; that so far as it is a receipt for the goods it is susceptible of explanation or contradiction, the same as any other receipt; that the whole question is one of the law of agency; that it is not within the scope of the authority of the shipping agent of a carrier to issue bills of lading where no property is in fact received for transportation; that the extent of his authority, either real or apparent, is to issue bills of lading for freight actually received; that his real and apparent authority, i. e., the power with which his principal has clothed him in the character in which he is held out to the world ... is the same, viz., to give bills of lading for goods received for transportation ; and that this limitation upon his authority is known to the commercial world, and therefore any person purchasing a bill of lading issued by the agent of a carrier acts at his own risk as respects the existence of the fact (the receipt of the goods) upon which alone the agent .has authority to issue the bill, the rule being that if the authority of an agent is known to be open for exercise only in a certain event or upon *417tbe happening of a certain contingency, or tbe performance of a certain condition, tbe occurrence of tbe event, or tbe happening of tbe contingency, or tbe performance of tbe condition must be ascertained by him who would avail himself of tbe results ensuing from tbe exercise of tbe authority. An examination of tbe authorities also shows that they apply tbe same principle whether tbe bill of lading was. issued fraudulently and collusively, or merely by mistake.”
And further in tbe opinion, while recognizing tbe force of tbe opposing position, going so far as to say that if tbe question was res integra, it might be allowed to prevail, tbe learned judge gives tbe practical suggestions in support of tbe court’s decision as follows:
“But, on tbe other band, it may be said that carriers are not in tbe business of issuing and dealing in bills of lading in tbe same sense in which bankers issue and deal .in bills of exchange-; that their business is transporting property; and that if tbe statements in tbe receipt part of bills of lading issued by any of their numerous station or local agents are to be held conclusive upon them, although false, it would open so wide a door for fraud and collusion that tbe disastrous consequences to tbe carrier would far outweigh tbe inconvenience resulting to tbe commercial world from tbe opposite rule. It is also to be admitted that it requires some temerity to attack either tbe policy or tbe soundness of a rule which seems to have stood tbe test of experience, which has been approved by so many eminent courts, and under which tbe most successful commercial nation in tbe world has developed and conducted her vast commerce ever since tbe inception of carriers’ bills of lading.” Suggestions that to our minds embody tbe weightier reason.
It is argued for tbe plaintiff that as a recent Federal statute, chapter 415, Laws 1916, 39 U. S. Stat. at Large, part 1, p. 538, makes these bills of lading negotiable, tbe question of public policy involved in these cases and so far as tbe Federal decisions are concerned, is no longer of weight'.
On a cursory examination of tbe statute in question, there is doubt if tbe law does or was intended to make bills of lading negotiable in tbe full sense of tbe term, that is, to tbe extent that ordinary commercial paper is so. Nat. Bank v. R. R., supra, and see an-interesting article on this subject in Michigan Law Beview for April, 1918, p. 402. But if this be conceded, tbe fact that such a law was deemed necessary to bring about a change and that Congress considered tbe subject with its attendant results of such perplexity and importance as to require a statute of 45 sections to deal with it adequately and safely, makes rather against tbe plaintiff’s position as to what tbe law now is, for ours is only tbe jus dicere and leads to tbe conclusion also that, if any change is found desirable, it should be by tbe law-making body, where all the *418practical suggestions that are presented in sucb a problem may be fully discussed and determined.
As now advised, we must adhere to our former decision and the judgment for defendant is affirmed.
Affirmed.