A ship trading from one port to another has not the means of carrying the goods on land, and, according to the established course of trade, a delivery on the usual wharf is such a delivery as will discharge the carrier. A Treatise on the Law of Bailments - Página 494de Isaac Edwards - 1855 - 667 páginasVisualização completa - Sobre este livro
| Samuel Comyn - 1807 - 646 páginas
...me that the difficulties fug. - gelled refpedting foreign fhips exift. When goods are brought hpre from foreign countries, they are brought under a bill...merely an undertaking to carry from port to port. A (hip trading from ene port to, another has not the means of carrying the goods on land ; and, according... | |
| George Frederick Jones - 1827 - 220 páginas
...consignee, so as to determine the transit. In this there is a decided distinction between ship-carriers and such as are inland. With regard to the former,...on the usual wharf will discharge the ship carrier (a), and be considered as a performance of his undertaking. The contract, too, of this species of carrier,... | |
| 1832 - 504 páginas
...' "§i 544. It was said in one case by Mr. Justice Duller, that when goods are brought into England from foreign countries, they are brought under a bill...of lading, which is merely an undertaking to carry them from port to port. A ship, trading from one port to another, has not the means of carrying goods... | |
| Joseph Story - 1832 - 460 páginas
...responsible.4 § 544. It was said in one case by Mr. Justice Buller, that when good's are brought into England from foreign countries, they are brought under a bill...of lading, which is merely an undertaking to carry them from port to port. A ship, trading from one port to another, has not 1 Hyde v. Trent M1v. Co.... | |
| Joseph Story - 1840 - 686 páginas
...foreign countries, they are brought under a bill of lading, which is merely an undertaking to carry them from port to port. A ship, trading from one port to another, has not *the means of carrying [*347] goods on land ; and, therefore, according to the established course of trade, a delivery... | |
| Great Britain. Court of Common Pleas, Thomas James Arnold - 1840 - 706 páginas
...action must fail It is expressly said by Buller, J., in Hyde v. The Trent Navigation (ij), that as " a ship trading from one port to another has not the means of carrying the goods on land ; according to the established course of trade, a delivery on the usual... | |
| Great Britain. Court of Common Pleas, James Manning, Thomas Colpitts Granger - 1841 - 1068 páginas
...countries, they are brought 1841. BOURNE GATLIFFE. MICHAELMAS VACATION, 184-1. BOURNE v. GATLIFFE. under a bill of lading, which is merely an undertaking...trading from one port to another has not the means of carrying the goods on land; and. according to the established course of trade, a delivery on the usual... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament. House of Lords - 1845 - 814 páginas
...was put still more emphatically by Mr. Justice Butter, who said (g) : " When goods are brought here from foreign countries, they are brought under a bill...trading from one port to another has not the means of carrying the goods on land ; and, according to the established course of trade, a delivery on the usual... | |
| Great Britain. Court of Common Pleas, John Scott - 1845 - 1114 páginas
...England after having landed them at their usual wharf." Buller, J., said : " When goods are brought here from foreign countries, they are brought under a bill...trading from one port to another has not the means of carrying the goods on land ; and, according to the established course of trade, a delivery on the usual... | |
| Joseph Kinnicut Angell - 1849 - 808 páginas
...ship-owner.1 Duller, J., in Hyde v. Trent and Mersey Navigation Company,2 says : " When goods are brought here from foreign countries, they are brought under a bill...merely an undertaking to carry from port to port." Ashhurst, J., in the same case, says: "The case of foreign goods brought to this country depends on... | |
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