Judges: Seabury
Filed Date: 11/15/1911
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
This is an action brought to recover damages for the alleged conversion of lumber. The defendant as-carrier refused to deliver the lumber, unless the demurrage which it claimed was due was first paid by the plaintiff’s consignee. The plaintiff and its consignee refused to pay the demurrage claimed, iipon the ground that it was not due.
If the demurrage claimed was not due or was in excess of the amount due and the defendant failed to deliver the lumber, it is liable for the -conversion of the lumber. Monda v. Wells-Fargo & Co., 20 Misc. Rep. 685, affd., 21 id. 308; Laverty v. Snethen, 68 N. Y. 522.
The question of the defendant’s' liability turns, therefore, upon whether or not the demurrage which the defendant claimed was due. In order to determine this question, it is necessary to examine the facts. After the lumber was shipped, the defendant was directed by the plaintiff to deliver it to one Boss at the foot of Bay Bidge avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. The delivery order which the defendant sent to Boss- when the lumber arrived at Jersey City, N. J., provided that, when a car or float reports at its destination, the shipper, consignee or steamship company must provide a berth and that, after two days (forty-eight hours) from the time the car or float reports, “ demurrage shall accrue ” at the rate per day of twenty-four hours, or a fraction thereof, of ten dollars for lighters or barges. On Tuesday, January 10, 1911, at ten a. m., the lumber arrived at foot of Bay Bidge avenue on board the canal boat Morse. The lumber of the plaintiff was in the bottom of the boat and was covered by other lumber consigned to other consignees. On the afternoon of the day of arrival, Boss took two truck loads of the lumber from the boat. The boat -remained at the foot of Bay Bidge avenue until Thursday, January twelfth, at three p. m., when it left for another place. Between the time when Boss took the two loads of lumber from the boat and the time •of the departure of the' boat, Boss refused to receive the balance of the lumber.’ Why Boss did this is the subject of dispute, but it appears that, before -the boat left the foot of Bay Bidge avenue, Boss returned, the two loads of lumber which he had taken from the boat and gave the defendant a
As the shipment was an interstate shipment, it must be assumed, in the absence of any proof to the contrary, that, so far as the rate is concerned, it is in accord with that established by law. Indeed, we do not understand that the appellant disputes this; and the rate charged is not in any way in controversy. The respondent contends that whether or not the lumber was accessible to Boss and whether he was able to unload it were questions of fact merely. It is also claimed that, if Boss could not remove the lumber, it was because of the fact that lumber — not of the defendant, but of other consignees — covered that of the plaintiff. For the purpose of determining this appeal, we may assume that these questions of fact have been properly' determined by the court below in favor of the defendant. Even with this concession it seems clear to us that the demurrage which the defendant claimed was in excess of that justly due.
Without discussing the other features of the case, it seems to us that there is no basis for the defendant’s claim that it was entitled to demurrage for three days. If we assume that
Judgment reversed, and a new trial ordered,'with costs to the-appellant to abide the event.
Guy and Cohalan, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed.