Citation Numbers: 159 N.E. 708, 247 N.Y. 20, 57 A.L.R. 934, 1928 N.Y. LEXIS 1034
Judges: Cardozo
Filed Date: 1/10/1928
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
Plaintiff in Philadelphia delivered to defendant, a common carrier, a case of goods to be delivered to a buyer in New York. The merchandise was shipped C.O.D., and $3,524.41 was stated to be the amount to be collected. Defendant failed to exact cash upon the delivery of the goods, but accepted, instead, the consignee's check to the order of the consignor. The check appeared to be certified. In fact the certification was a forgery, and the check worthless. The plaintiff sues for the price on the theory that the *Page 22 carrier, by the acceptance of a check as a substitute for cash, has made the buyer's debt its own.
The case comes here upon an application for summary judgment under Civil Practice Rule 113, which is limited to causes of action for the recovery of "a debt or liquidated demand arising * * * on a contract, express or implied." If the carrier is chargeable as upon an assumption of a debt, irrespective of the solvency of the consignee or the value of the merchandise, the remedy invoked is proper. If the measure of the recovery is the loss suffered by the shipper, the damage, now unliquidated, must be proved, and the summary remedy must fail (Norwich PharmacalCo. v. Barrett,
An express company or other carrier receiving merchandise on a C.O.D. shipment acts in two capacities, as bailee to transport the goods and as agent to collect the price (Hutchinson, Carriers, § 726). For breach of its duty as bailee to carry and deliver to the person and on the conditions stated by the shipper, it is liable, as in the case of any other misdelivery, for the value of the goods (Murray v. Warner,
The law is settled that in the absence of agreement or custom to the contrary an agent to collect may accept money and nothing else (Federal Reserve Bank v. Malloy,
The subject has been much considered in actions against banks for negligence or other default in the collection of commercial paper. Prima facie, the amount of the damage is the amount to be collected (First Nat. Bank v. Fourth Nat. Bank,
We cannot doubt that any presumption in favor of the collectible quality of the consignor's demand has been rebutted by the circumstances. A consignee willing to utter a forged and worthless check would not have paid cash if the check had been rejected. In such circumstances, *Page 24
the limit of the recovery is the value of the merchandise surrendered. This for all that appears may have been less than the price to be collected. If the consignee had been able to pay at the time of the delivery, so that the price if exacted might then have been collected, the carrier would not be suffered to scale down the recovery upon the plea that the price was in excess of the value. The consignor could not be made to forfeit the benefit of the pressure that would have been put upon the buyer to pay what was asked that he might keep what had been tendered. In such circumstances the loss resulting from improper or negligent collection could fairly be found to be the sum to be collected, even if greater than the value. No such conclusion is legitimate, however, where there is not "a reasonable probability" (Allen v. Suydam, supra) that collection would have been possible if the agent had done his duty. In default of such a probability, the loss suffered by the shipper can be no greater than the value of the goods wrongfully surrendered. In any event, the cause of action is for damages, and not for a debt or its equivalent. (National Trust Co. v. Gleason,
We do not overlook decisions in which the negligence of a collecting agent in taking a check instead of money has been spoken of as imposing a liability for the face value of the substitute. Analysis will show, however, that in those cases the debtor was in funds at the time when the substitute was taken (See, e.g., F.N. Bank v. Ashworth, 123 Penn. St. 212;Anderson v. Gill,
We conclude that the plaintiff has failed to make out its right to the entry of a summary judgment under the provisions of the rule, and that the case must take the usual course.
The judgment of the Appellate Division should be reversed and the order of the Special Term affirmed with costs in the Appellate Division and in this court.
POUND, CRANE, ANDREWS, LEHMAN, KELLOGG and O'BRIEN, JJ., concur.
Judgment accordingly.
Murray v. Warner , 1875 N.H. LEXIS 124 ( 1875 )
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond v. Malloy , 44 S. Ct. 296 ( 1924 )
Swest, Inc. v. American Airlines, Inc. , 1985 Tex. App. LEXIS 6835 ( 1985 )
American Airlines, Inc. v. Swest, Inc. , 29 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 324 ( 1986 )
Justin v. Delta Motor Line , 1949 La. App. LEXIS 671 ( 1949 )
Tyler Refrigeration Corp. v. IML Freight, Inc. , 1981 Ind. App. LEXIS 1712 ( 1981 )
National Van Lines, Inc. v. Rich Plan Corporation , 385 F.2d 800 ( 1967 )
Young v. Santa Fe Trail Transportation Co. , 179 Kan. 678 ( 1956 )
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Crown Displays, Inc. v. Calore Freight System, Inc. , 115 R.I. 483 ( 1975 )
The Video Station v. Frey's Motor Express , 188 N.J. Super. 494 ( 1983 )
Keathley v. Hancock , 212 Miss. 1 ( 1951 )
National Diamond Syndicate, Inc., Cross-Appellant v. United ... , 897 F.2d 253 ( 1990 )
Mountain States Waterbed Distributors, Inc. v. O.N.C. ... , 44 Colo. App. 433 ( 1980 )
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Duderstadt Surveyors Supply, Inc. v. Alamo Express, Inc. , 1985 Tex. App. LEXIS 6464 ( 1985 )
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