Citation Numbers: 5 A. 305, 15 R.I. 371
Judges: PER CURIAM.
Filed Date: 7/17/1886
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 1/13/2023
This is an action for the non-delivery of peas bought by the plaintiff in Canada, and shipped to him in Providence over the railway of the defendant corporation. The only evidence of shipment produced by the plaintiff is the bill of lading, signed by the agent of the defendant corporation, which acknowledges the receipt of the peas in good order, to be *Page 372 sent by the company, subject to the terms and conditions stated in and on the back of the bill of lading. Among the conditions on the back is one to the effect that, where goods are addressed to consignees beyond places at which the company has stations, the delivery of the goods by the company will be considered complete, and all responsibility of the company shall cease, when the other carrier shall have received notice that the company is prepared to deliver to such carrier said goods for further conveyance. The contract shown by this bill of lading is not a contract to deliver at Providence, but only a contract to carry to the terminus of the defendant's road, and there forward the goods over the other roads. Therefore it does not support the declaration.
In order to maintain the action it was necessary for the plaintiff to show some other contract different from that evidenced by the bill of lading. The only evidence offered of any other contract was a letter from an agent of the defendant corporation to the plaintiff, dated February 27, 1884, about two months prior to the shipment of the peas in question, in which the writer said: "I have been notified of the arrangement for quoting Boston rates to Providence, R.I. via Northern N.H. W.
N.R.R., and have so advised Mr. Lockhart. We can now take peas in car-load lots, Newcastle to Providence, R.I., by the above named route at 25c. per 100 lbs." . . . In Knight v.Providence Worcester R.R. Co.
In Pereira v. Central Pacific Railway Co. 18 Amer. Eng. R.R. Cas. 565, and Railroad Co. v. Pratt, 22 Wall. 123, cited by the plaintiff to show that he was not bound by the terms of the bill of lading, there was evidence from which the jury were warranted in finding that there was another contract under which the consignor supposed he was sending his goods. In Chicago N.W. Railway Co. v. Monfort,
The plaintiff makes the point that this is a Canada contract and governed by the English law. The question what is the law of a foreign state is a question of fact, and no testimony was submitted to show what is the law of Canada in this respect.
Petition dismissed.