The action is brought to recover damages for breach of contract. The contract is a bill of lading calling for the shipment of goods from the port of New York to be delivered “ at the port of Genoa unto order or to his or their assigns.” The margin of the bill of lading contained the following statement: “ Party to be. notified: Quirino Borelli Ortono, Sardinia. N. B. When goods are shipped ‘ to order ’ it is desirable to have the above information. ’ ’
The bill of lading also contained the provision: “ It is mutually agreed * * * 17. That this bill of lading, duly endorsed, be given to the steamer’s agent in exchange for a delivery order.”
Two weeks after the steamer sailed the shipper wrote the steamship company that the consignment should have been addressed Ortona a Mare, Province of Chieti, and said: “I wish that you would kindly instruct your agents abroad to ship these goods to the address as corrected with the least possible delay and expense.” Defendant’s steamships do not touch Ortona a Mare and the distance by rail between that place and Genoa is about 300 miles.
The bill of lading was an “ order ”• or negotiable bill of lading, which merely required the defendant to carry the goods to Genoa, the end of its route, and place of final destination, and there deliver them “ unto order ” of the shipper, that is to say, to such person as might present the bill of lading there duly endorsed. If Borelli, the party named in the bill of lading as the one to be notified of the arrival of the goods, became the holder of the bill of lading, he could only require delivery, at the place of destination mentioned in the bill of lading, Genoa, and he was bound to take the goods there and ship them to his own address at his own expense. Neither he nor the consignor could require the defendant to do this under the terms of the bill of lading.
The subsequent request of the shipper by his letter of September 23, 1912, requesting defendant to ship the goods “ wdth the least possible delay ” and expense to Borelli’s corrected address, 300 miles beyond the agreed place of destination, was not only something that defendant was in no way obligated to do but was wholly inconsistent with the “ order ” bill of lading and outside of its terms, and was contradictory of and cancelled the clause in the bill of lading requiring that the original, duly endorsed, be given to the steamer’s agent in exchange for a delivery order.
The shipper’s instructions are at least capable of being interpreted as waiving the clause in the bill of lading requiring the defendant to keep the goods at Genoa until the bill of lading was presented. An agent cannot be held liable for the ambiguous instructions of his principal when he acts in good faith, particularly where the agency is undertaken without any consideration. In forwarding the goods beyond the agreed destination, without waiting for the bill of lading, the- defendant acted at the shipper’s request, as the shipper’s agent, solely for his accommodation and complied with the shipper’s request in good faith as the request might fairly be interpreted, and in so doing.was guilty of no breach of contract.
Judgment- reversed, with costs, with the direction that judgment be entered for the defendant on the stipulated facts, with costs.
Guy and Pendleton, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, with costs, with direction that judgment be entered for defendant on stipulated facts, with costs.