Porter Manufacturing Co. v. Edwards

Hardin, J.:

This action involves the question as to who was the owner of six steam boilers at the time they were attached by the defendant as sheriff, in virtue of an attachment issued out of this court against a foreign corporation known as “ Seymour, Sabin & Co., Stillwater, Min.” The boilers were made by plaintiff, and put on board cars of the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company, at Syracuse, on the 18th of July, 1881, and the attachment was levied July 19, 1881j after the property was locked up in the cars ready to depart for the west, under the arrangement between the plaintiff and the corporation. The property was to be manufactured and shipped by May, 1881. Plaintiff caused each of the boilers so shipped to be marked with stencil plate, Seymour, Sabin & Co., Stillwater, Min.,” and with the boilers the plaintiff delivered shipping bills to the railroad, and on the same day plaintiff mailed an invoice and bill, of lading of said boilers to Seymour, Sabin & Co., Stillwater, Minnesota. Prior to the shipment no objection had been made by Seymour, Sabin ,& Co. to receiving said boilers upon the ground that the boilers had not been shipped in time. After the attachment was levied, plaintiff was notified by telegraph thereof, and thereupon plaintiff notified Seymour, Sabin & Co. that, as by their contract the boilers were to be delivered in May, they would not thus receive them at that late day under the arrangement.

Plaintiff thereupon brought this action of replevin. The referee reported for the plaintiff. The defendant insists the title to the boilers vested in Seymour, Sabin & Co., by the delivery on board the cars. Plaintiffs insist the title had not passed.

The appellant insists that the common carrier was designated to receive and transport the boilers, and was the agent of the consignee or purchaser, and that such a delivery as was made was a delivery to the purchaser, and that Seymour, Sabin & Co. waived the right to a personal inspection and examination before acceptance, and that the plaintiff parted with all interest in the boilers and the right to control the same, and did not have the right to hold the same *512for the purchase-money after such delivery, as supposed the learned refereé. Our attention is directed to Krulder v. Ellison (47 N. Y. 36), where it was held that a consignor could not maintain an action against the common carrier for goods lost. There the order was in writing, and in pursuance of it the goods were delivered on board a canal boat and lost. The case differs from the one here presented, as there was a written contract which, with the delivery made under it, passed the title from the consignor to the consignee. Thompson v. Fargo (49 N. Y., 188), recognizes the case of Krulder v. Ellison (supra), and states that the consignee is presumptively the owner : but in that case it appeared the plaintiff did not own the money sent, and that he could not recover of the defendant for its loss. Bailey v. The Hudson River Railroad Company (49 N. Y., 70) is a somewhat similar case where a consignee of property brought an action to recover against the carrier, who had delivered to another party; there the bill of lading was sent, and there was a delivery under it to the carrier and no authority given by the consignee to the carrier. There had been a complete delivery to the carrier, and the title was held to pass to the consignee. The goods were not purchased, but were to be received by the consignees and sold, and there was the relation of a trustee having a title bound to accept to dispose of the property and apply the proceeds in a particular manner, and the consignors were the cestuis qui trust, having the legal right to enforce the terms of the agreement for their benefit. But in the case in hand, Seymour, Sabin & Co. had not subscribed any written contract, nor paid any part of the purchase-money, and the carrier had not been made their agent to accept the boilers.

If the bill of lading had been received by them and kept, an acceptance might have been inferred. Indeed, the bill of lading would have furnished evidence of an intent on the part of the vendor to deliver and the vendee to receive and accept. Before its receipt by Seymour, Sabin & Co., the shipment was countermanded. We ought not, under such circumstances, to hold that the title had passed out of the vendors, until we find some evidence of an acceptance by the vendee or its agent.

The acceptance of the bill of lading by the vendee would have changed the title. It had not taken place and there was not such a completed delivery, at the time the attachment was levied, as to *513work a transfer of title from the vendor to the vendee. (Rodgers v. Phillips, 40 N. Y., 519.)

There was no voluntary and unconditional acceptance of the boilers by the vendee before levy, and after the levy the vendee refused to accept. Nor was there any act or con’duct of the vendee evincing an intent to accept. (Caulkins v. Hellman, 47 N. Y., 449.) In this case the facts are found, and the referee in effect finds that within the intention of the' parties the title did not pass, and under such circumstances to reverse his judgment, we should be obliged to say, as a matter of lam, that the title did pass fully and completely from the seller to the purchaser. Upon the facts found, we are of the opinion that the referee’s conclusion was correct. We see nothing in the exception requiring a reversal of the findings.

The judgment should be affirmed.

Smith, P. J., and Barker, J., concurred.

Judgment affirmed.