Where a bank was accustomed, through an agent, to make
interstate shipments of cattle to another bank in care of a
commission company, sending its drafts on the commission company
for the purchase
Page 262 U. S. 696
price, with bill of lading attached, to the consignee bank, with
instructions to release the cattle on payment of the drafts, and
had ratified delivery of shipments to the commission company before
payment of such drafts, and where, on making a further shipment,
the direction in care of the commission company was, by mutual
mistake of the agent and the receiving carrier, omitted from the
bill of lading, but, at the command of the agent, was noted on the
way bill, and the terminal carrier delivered the cattle of this
shipment to the commission company without surrender of the bill of
lading or payment of the draft, and the draft was not paid,
held that the terminal carrier had a right to assume that
delivery might properly be made to the commission company, and that
delivery so made was delivery to the consignee bank; hence, the
provisions of the Carmack Amendment had no application.
225 S.W. 391 affirmed.
Certiorari to a judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals of Texas
affirming a judgment for the respondent railroad companies in an
action by the petitioner bank to recover for their alleged failure
to make delivery of a shipment of cattle in accordance with a bill
of lading issued by the initial carrier.
MR. JUSTICE BUTLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was commenced in the District Court of El Paso
County by the petitioner to recover $10,101.18 for alleged failure
to deliver, in accordance with a shipping contract, 847 head of
cattle shipped October 27, 1911, by the petitioner from El Paso,
Texas, to Kansas City, Missouri, over the connecting lines of
railway of respondents, [
Footnote
1] there to be delivered to the First National Bank of
Page 262 U. S. 697
that city. Judgment for the respondent was affirmed by the Court
of Civil Appeals of the Eighth Supreme Judicial District of Texas
(225 S.W. 391). The supreme court of the state denied a writ of
error. On petitioner's application, asserting that federal rights
claimed by it in the state courts under the Carmack Amendment (34
Stat. c. 3591, p. 595) are denied by the judgment, the case was
brought here on certiorari.
The petitioner declared upon alleged failure of respondents to
deliver the cattle to the First National Bank of Kansas City in
accordance with a bill of lading issued by the initial carrier; it
alleged the value of the cattle to be $20,000, and claimed
$10,101.18 on account of failure by the carriers to deliver the
cattle to the consignee named.
The shipment in question was the last of 18 or 20 trainload
shipments of cattle by petitioner from El Paso to Kansas City. The
record shows that, for some time prior to the date of this
shipment, one Cameron had been buying cattle in the interior of
Mexico and shipping them to Juarez, whence they entered the United
States at El Paso. A bank of Chihuahua furnished the money to pay
for the cattle. That bank consigned them to petitioner at El Paso,
making draft with bill of lading attached, for the amount of the
purchase price. After the cattle were delivered to the petitioner
on the American side, it paid the draft and refunded the purchase
price to the Chihuahua bank. It then shipped the cattle to Kansas
City for sale. J. P. Peters was a cattle broker doing business in
Kansas City under the name of J. P. Peters Commission Company. His
son, J. A. Peters, was employed by Cameron. He also acted for the
petitioner, and all of the shipments were handled exclusively by
him as its agent. All of the previous shipments were delivered to
the commission company
Page 262 U. S. 698
upon arrival at Kansas City, and, with the exception of some of
the earliest, were shipped by him to the First National Bank of
Kansas City, "care of the J. P. Peters Commission Company." This
practice was adopted because the bank was closed at the time one of
the earlier shipments arrived, and the day's market was lost.
At the time of the shipment in question, a bill of lading was
issued by the receiving carrier, signed by its agent and by the
"City National Bank, by J. A. Peters, Shipper." The waybill
contemporaneously made designated the consignee "First National
Bank, Kansas City, Mo. care J. P. Peters Commission Company. . . ."
The petitioner made a draft, with bill of lading attached, on the
commission company, and forwarded it to the bank at Kansas City,
with directions to release the cattle on payment of the draft, and
to wire petitioner for instructions if the draft was not paid. The
terminal carrier delivered the cattle to the commission company
without surrender of the bill of lading or the payment of the
draft. The bank returned the bill of lading and the draft to the
petitioner. The draft has never been paid in full, and this action
is to recover the amount remaining unpaid. The jury found that, at
the time of the execution of the bill of lading, it was agreed
between the petitioner, acting through J. A. Peters, and the
receiving carrier, that the cattle should be consigned by bill of
lading to the First National Bank of Kansas City, Missouri, care of
the J. P. Peters Commission Company; that, through mutual mistake,
the bill of lading omitted the words "care of the J. P. Peters
Commission Company," and that the petitioner, through its said
agent, directed the agent of the receiving carrier to note on the
waybill that the cattle were consigned to the First National Bank
of Kansas City, care of the J. P. Peters Commission Company. The
jury also found that prior shipments of cattle above referred to
had been delivered by the terminal carrier to the commission
Page 262 U. S. 699
company before the payment of drafts to which the bills of
lading were attached, and that the First National Bank acquiesced
in and ratified such deliveries; that, in reliance on such
acquiescence and ratification, the terminal carrier delivered the
shipment in question to the commission company without the
surrender of the bill of lading, and that such acquiescence or
ratification was reasonably sufficient to induce the belief that
the commission company was authorized to receive the cattle for the
bank.
The petitioner complained that the carrier failed to deliver the
cattle to the bank named as consignee or to the petitioner. If
delivery was made to that bank, or to the petitioner, or on its
order, the carriers did not commit any breach alleged, and there
can be no recovery. [
Footnote
2] And if, as in the case of previous shipments, the contract
had read "First National Bank of Kansas City, Mo. care of J. P.
Peters Commission Company," delivery to the commission company
would have been performance of the agreement.
See Ela v.
American Merchants' Union Express Co., 29 Wis. 611, 616;
Bell v. Windsor & Annapolis Ry. Co., 24 N.S. 521. The
bank had ratified the delivery of prior shipments to the commission
company before payment of drafts accompanying bills of lading. The
terminal carrier had a right to assume that delivery of this
shipment properly might be made to the commission company. J. A.
Peters acted for the petitioner in making all of the shipments. He
directed the prior shipments to be made to the consignee bank in
care of the commission company. At his instance, the waybill
directed delivery of this shipment to the named consignee in care
of the commission company. His orders and directions were binding
on the petitioner. Thus, in legal
Page 262 U. S. 700
effect, the petitioner at the time it made the shipment
expressly ordered delivery to be made to the consignee bank in care
of the commission company, and caused the agent of the receiving
carrier to so direct on the waybill. We think it must be held that,
under these circumstances, delivery to the commission company was
delivery to the consignee bank.
This being so, the provisions of the Carmack Amendment have no
application.
The judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals is
affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
The other respondents are El Paso & Southwestern Company, El
Paso & Northeastern Railway Company, El Paso & Rock Island
Railway Company, Chicago, Rock Island & El Paso Railway
Company, Chicago, Rock Island & Gulf Railway Company, and
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company.
[
Footnote 2]
See decision of this case in Court of Civil Appeals,
225 S.W. 391, 400, holding that the petition alleging failure to
deliver to consignee would not support recovery for a delivery
without surrender of bill of lading.