Johnson v. New York Central Rail Road

By the Court, W. F. Allen, J.

There is no dispute as to the relations which the parties occupied towards each other, in respect to the lost property. They agree that the property was delivered to the defendants at Little Falls, to he by them carried and conveyed to Albany and to be by them forwarded thence to Few York, with directions to forward it by a particular line of steamboats. It is conceded that the liability of the defendants as carriers ceased with the arrival of the goods at Albany, and that from that time they occupied a different relation, and Were charged with different duties and responsibilities, The defendants then became mere warehousemen and forwarders, and liable only fot á breach of any duty growing out of those relations. They were in the situation of one receiving goods to forward, having no concern in the means of transportation, or interest in the freight, and were therefore mere warehousemen and agents of the plaintiffs. (Story on Bailments, § 502.) It can make no difference in their liability whether they became possessed of the property at Albany by receiving it from their own cars, of by receiving it by some other channel. It is their possession for a specific purpose, which determines their character and furnishes the rule of their liability. They were responsible only for ordinary care and skill and diligence. (Story on Bailments, §§ 442, 455. 1 Parsons on Contracts, 617. Roberts v. Turner, 12 John. 232. Platt v. Hibbard, 7 Cowen, 497.) In the absence of any specific directions as to the mode or route of conveyance, the duty of the defendants would have been well discharged *198by forwarding the goods in the accustomed and usual manner, according to the cbutse of trade, by a responsible and reputable individual or association. (Brown v. Denison, 2 Wend. 593. Ackley v. Kellogg, 8 Cowen, 223. Van Santvoord v. St. John, 6 Hill, 157.) Forwarders and warehousemen are, however, like other agents, bound by the directions of their principals. The directions constitute a part of their authority, and operate as a limit upon it. (Story on Agency, § 192. Dunlap’s Paley, 3, n. A.) Any unnecessary deviation or departure from the instructions is at the peril of the agent, and renders him liable for any loss resulting from it. He becomes the insurer of the goods of his principal if, without authority or contrary to instructions, he causes them to be shipped or forwarded to their place of destination by a route or means of conveyance of his own choosing. (Ackley v. Kellogg, supra.) But a deviation from the course marked out by the principal which is rendered necessary by the circumcumstances of the case, which were not foreseen by the principal, is justifiable, if the agent exercises the care and skill which the character of his agency calls for. He may, if it becomes impossible to execute his agency in the precise manner directed, adopt the ordinary and usual method for accomplishing the same purpose; and if he does so with ordinary care, skill and diligence, he will not be responsible for the consequences, but his acts will be the acts of his principal; unless, indeed, the instructions amount in substance to a prohibition of the act in any other than the prescribed method. (Forrester v. Boardman, 1 Story’s Rep. 51. Judson v. Sturgis, 5 Day, 556. Story on Agency, §§ 193, 194.) This would be so, especially in cases where the departure from instructions was circumstantial merely, and not substantial. All that the law requires is a substantial compliance with the orders of the principal, (Parkhill v. Imlay, 15 Wend. 431;) and a deviation from the appropriate course will not vitiate his act if it be immaterial, or circumstantial only, and does not in substance exceed his right and duty. (Story on Agency, § 85.)

*1991st. There is no evidence, and no circumstance from which it cah be inferred, that the intention of the plaintiff was that the goods should be. sent from Albany to Hew York only by the “ People’s Line,” and that if they could not be forwarded by that line they were to be detained at Albany, and not sent forward. It was not so expressed in the direction, and no provision was made by the plaintiff for the goods at Albany, in that contingency. In the margin or at the foot of the freight way-bill from Little Falls to Albany, not making a paft of the way-bill, or the direction of the goods, are the words via People’s Line,” designed only as a memorandum by way of direction to the rail road servants at Albany; and this is the only evidence in the case of any direction being given by the consignors.

2d. The substantial thing to be accomplished was the sending of the goods forward to Hew York. The particular boat or Vessel by which they should be forwarded was merely circumstantial ; atid if the directions in that respect could not be obeyed, the substantial thing to be done could be accomplished, and it devolved upon the agent, in the exercise of ordinary diligence, tti see that it was done. And had the defendants omitted to forward the goods in the usual manner and according to the course of trade, and detained them in their warehouse at Albany and harm had come to them there, or the plaintiffs had sustained damages by the delay, they would have been liable in damages. The established usage and course of business became the rule of duty binding upon the agent in order to carry out the substantial end and object of the agency, and evidence of this Uniform usage was' competent, and was controlling in the case. (Van Santvoord v. St. John, supra. Hinton v. Locke, 5 Hill, 437.)

3d. It became impossible to comply with the directions of the principal, without the fault of the agent, and it was a case, therefore, for a departure from those directions; and within all the cases it is only an unnecessary departure that renders an agent liable, or avoids bis acts.

*200[Oneida General Term, January 5, 1857.

4th. The defendants really, as the result of the refusal, in consequence of inability of the “ People’s Line'' to carry the freight, were in the possession of it as forwarders without any directions as to the route or means of conveyance, and therefore bound to exercise their discretion, and select the best that presented. The People’s Line could not take it; but this was not known either to the plaintiffs or defendahts at the time the direction was given, and it was as if no direction had been given. It was as if there had been no “ People’s Line,” or their means of transportation had been destroyed between the giving of the directions and the arrival of the goods at Albany. The direction was given in good faith, but was impossible of execution, and what is the innocent forwarding merchant to do ? He has to adopt a course without the aid of the property owners. They have intimated, by their consignment, a desire that the property shall be sent to Hew York, and the presumption is that the desire is that it shall be forwarded without delay or the expense and risk of intermediate storage. I think the duty was obvious to carry out, as near as might be, the plainly declared intentions of the principal. There was no time to be lost; the boat on which the freight was shipped was the last tow that went down the river, in the fall of 1854. A delay for instructions would have lost the opportunity. The freight by the river was 6 cents per hundred pounds; by rail road the charge would have been 25 cents per hundred pounds. The rule must be the same as to the duties and powers of the agent whether the owner and shipper of the goods resides within fifty or five hundred miles of the forwarding merchant, if he is not in fact present so as to be able to be counseled on the spot.

The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.

Hubbard, Pratt, Bacon and W. F. Allen, Justices.]