Reports of this case on former appeals (16 Ala. App. 223,77 So. 61, 81 So. 76) will disclose the general nature of the questions involved. On the present appeal the steamship company contends mainly that the proof in the trial court on the last trial failed to support several of the material allegations of count 10 of the complaint upon which the cause was tried. Pretermitting other differences between the parties, we think the contention should be sustained as follows:
In order to bring his case within the rule of Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch. 341, as that rule is observed in this state (Bixby-Theirson Lumber Co. v. Evans, 167 Ala. 431, 52 So. 843,29 L.R.A. (N.S.) 194, 140 Am. St. Rep. 47) that is, in order to show that the parties to the contract for the carriage of lumber did contract with reference to insurance, *Page 691 plaintiff, doing business as Horace Turner Co., did allege that defendant steamship company "agreed with the plaintiff that upon the loading by the defendant onto one of its steamships of such shipment of lumber, the defendant would, by placing a notation or memorandum on the bill of lading which defendant would issue to the plaintiff for such shipment of lumber, inform the plaintiff if such lumber, or any part thereof, was loaded on deck of said defendant's steamboat, knowing that such information was necessary to enable the plaintiff to notify the insurance company if such lumber or any part thereof was loaded on deck of said steamboat, and obtain marine insurance on such lumber loaded on deck, which, as defendant knew, the insurance company had agreed to issue to the plaintiff, upon such information being furnished by the plaintiff." Plaintiff (appellee) sought to incorporate the alleged agreement (to place a notation or memorandum upon the bill of lading) into the contract by proof of a custom or usage to that effect, so general and well understood in fact, with reference to the business, place and class of persons affected thereby, that the parties must be presumed to have made their contract with tacit reference thereto, and to have intended to be governed by it in the same way and to the same extent as other like persons in like cases. Wald's Pollock on Contracts, 315. The evidence went to show a usage on the part of carriers by sea to indorse on bills of lading the words "on deck at shipper's risk," when shipments were to be carried on deck, and appellant contends that this was not the usage alleged, nor did it operate to the alleged purpose and effect, the whole intention of a notation according to the usage proved being, appellant says, merely to indicate that shipments on deck would be at the shipper's risk, and having no reference to insurance. But, conceding without deciding that appellant is in error as to that, the court is of opinion that, on the evidence shown in the bill of exceptions, appellee failed to sustain his allegations to the effect that the information to be afforded by such a notation was necessary to enable him to notify the insurance company whether the lumber or any part thereof was loaded on deck, and to obtain the insurance which appellant knew the insurance company had agreed to issue to the appellee upon such information being furnished by the latter.
On the last appeal (81 So. 761) we held that appellant's knowledge as alleged had been shown on the cross-examination of Cadzow, a witness for appellant. But at the trial now under review the witness Cadzow was not examined, and the question now is whether evidence was offered from which the trial court might reasonably have inferred knowledge as alleged. Certainly there was no direct testimony to the same effect as that delivered by Cadzow on the former trial. But appellee argues that proof of the usage was proof of appellant's knowledge of the usage, of the purpose it was intended to serve, and of the fact, as alleged, that the insurance company had agreed to issue to appellant a policy of marine insurance upon being informed by appellee of the fact of his shipment of lumber on deck. Appellee would extend the force and effect of the usage too far. Conceding that the purpose of the notation or memorandum was as appellee says it was, still proof of the usage, without more, did not suffice to prove the allegation that appellant knew that the insurance company had agreed to issue a policy to appellee, or even that such information was necessary to enable the plaintiff to notify the insurance company that the lumber was loaded on deck, for these things were not within the usage alleged and proved.
After appellee's shipment of lumber had been lost at sea, and in reply to appellee's claim, propounded to Gibbony Co., as agents of appellant at Mobile, to be reimbursed for the loss, Gibbony Co., wrote two letters to appellee, which appear in the record, and appellee relies upon them as evidence to prove the allegations to which we have referred above. These letters denied all responsibility on account of the loss, denied the authority of Cadzow, with whom plaintiff had negotiated, and asserted, in effect, that the writers had no knowledge of the transaction in question, except from Cadzow after the fact. Conceding to appellee rulings on all other objections taken against the introduction of these letters, they were without the probative force appellee would assign to them, for the reason that the effect of Cadzow's statement was that plaintiff relied for information as to the stowage of his lumber on board appellant's vessel, not upon any custom or usage, but upon a communication promised by Cadzow — and communicated in fact, according to his statement as reported in the letters — while, as for Gibbony Co., their knowledge, after the loss of the lumber, that appellee had desired to insure his shipment was not the knowledge alleged or necessary to be proved.
The parties for the purposes of the trial entered upon the agreement as to facts which appears on page 42 of the transcript, and appellee refers to that agreement as concluding inquiry as to the allegations in respect to the necessity for the notation upon the bill of lading for which appellee contended, and as well the allegation of appellant's knowledge that the insurance company had agreed to issue a policy upon information being furnished. Appellee says that —
"The only question which was left open under the agreement is whether or not the plaintiff [appellee] had notice of the location of the lumber." *Page 692
Appellee has not heretofore so construed the agreement, for on both trials much evidence was taken, to questions other than those to which the agreement specifically refers, without a suggestion that such questions had been concluded, nor do we so construe the agreement. We are clear to the conclusion that the agreement tended in no wise to prove that appellant knew that notice by notation on the bill of lading was necessary to enable appellee to procure insurance, or that appellant knew that the insurance company had agreed to insure appellee's lumber on being informed by such notation of its location on or under deck.
Permitting, as we said in the outset, other differences between the parties, our judgment on the record before us is that appellee failed to adduce evidence affording a reasonable basis for a finding that appellant had the knowledge alleged in the complaint and necessary to bring appellant's alleged default and damages flowing therefrom within the contemplation of the parties according to the rule of Hadley v. Baxendale. It results that the judgment must be reversed. Judgment will be here rendered for the appellant.
Reversed and rendered.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and BROWN, JJ., concur.
1 202 Ala. 574.