Smith v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad

This is an action to recover damages for injury to a horse and a mule, caused by the negligence of the defendant.

The following verdict was returned by the jury:

1. Was the mule mentioned in the complaint injured and killed by the negligence of the defendant: Answer: Yes.

2. If so, in what amount has the plaintiff been damaged thereby? Answer: $200. *Page 117

3. Was the mare mentioned in the complaint injured by the negligence of the defendant? Answer: Yes.

4. If so, in what amount has the plaintiff been damaged thereby? Answer: $50.

5. Did the plaintiff file claims with the defendant for said injuries, as set out in the complaint? Answer: Yes.

Judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff according to the verdict, and the defendant excepted and appealed. The plaintiff did not introduce a bill of lading, but he offered evidence tending to prove that on 4 January, 1911, he purchased several horses and mules in Richmond, which were delivered to a connecting line of railway, and were delivered to him at Greenville by the defendant; that he paid the freight to the defendant, and that one mule was dead and a horse injured, when the cars reached Greenville.

The plaintiff further testified that he was present and saw the stock loaded on the cars in Richmond, and that no bill of (145) lading was given to him. All of this evidence was objected to by the defendant, upon the ground that the contract of carriage could not be proven by parol, and at the conclusion of the evidence there was a motion for judgment of nonsuit, the defendant contending that as no bill of lading had been introduced, the plaintiff could not recover.

The position of the defendant cannot be sustained.

In Hutchison on Carriers, sec. 118, the author says: "No receipt, bill of lading, or writing of any kind is required to subject the carrier to the duties and responsibilities of an insurer of the goods. As soon as they are delivered to him for present carriage, and nothing necessary to their being forwarded remains to be done by the owner, the law imposes upon him all the risk of their safe custody as well as the duty to carry as directed. He is regarded as exercising in some sort the functions of a public office, and the law is said to impose upon him his duties and obligations upon this ground as well as upon the ground of the contract, and as soon as the delivery to him and his acceptance are shown, the law imposes the duty and responsibility in virtue of his public employment."

The Supreme Court of the United States also said in R. R. v. Jurey,111 U.S. 591: "No particular form or solemnity of execution is required for a contract of a common carrier to transport goods. It may be by parol, or it may be in writing; in either case it is equally binding." And our own Court declared in Berry v. R. R., 122 N.C. 1003: "Delivery of a bill of lading is not necessary to fix liability upon the defendant. Wellsv. R. R., 51 N.C. 47." *Page 118

No evidence was offered identifying the paper in possession of the plaintiff, or the one held by the defendant, or connecting either with the shipment in controversy, and as no bill of lading containing a valuation clause was in evidence, the classifications of the Interstate Commerce Commission were immaterial and were properly excluded.

The plaintiff testified that no bill of lading was given to him, and he explained the possession of the paper, in form a bill of lading, by showing that after the defendant filed an answer setting out certain (146) stiplations [stipulations], which it alleged were in the bill of lading under which the shipment was made, his counsel wrote to the party from whom the horses and mules were purchased in Richmond, asking for a form of bills for shipments of stock, for the purpose of comparison with the allegations in the answer, and that the paper he had was the one sent him in compliance with his request.

The paper in possession of the defendant's counsel purported to be a copy of a bill of lading, but no evidence was offered showing when it was made, or otherwise explaining it.

The defendant also excepted to the admission of the following question and answer:

The plaintiff was asked, "Would it have been possible, from your observation, for that mule's foot to have gone through the crack unless there had been a piece broken out?" He answered by saying that she could not have done so in his opinion; that he noticed the car, and that that was the only place that a mule could have gotten its feet through; that the plant at that point had been split off and was an old break.

It is not disputed that the foot of the mule was through the crack, and it was favorable to the defendant to show that there was no other hole in the car.

It follows that the only part of the answer of the witness that was material is the statement, "that the plank at that point had been split off and was an old break." This evidence was, in our opinion, competent, but if not, the defendant could not avail itself of the exception, as the same witness testified to the same facts in another part of his examination, without objection.

He said: "When the shipment reached Greenville there was a mule dead in one car, and one of the horses was severely injured in another. The mule had her feet hanging in a crack of the car about waist high from the floor, and she had apparently fallen down on her back while in that position and could not get up. That the car was slatted with narrow cracks between the slats about 2 inches wide, but at the (147) point where the mule's feet were hung a piece had been broken out, making the crack at that point much larger. The slats of the car were about 2 inches wide, and at that point about half of the slat *Page 119 had been broken out, making an opening about 4 inches wide, and large enough for the mule's feet to catch in. That he examined the car thoroughly, and that the break in the slat at the point mentioned had the appearance of having been done for some time, as the broken slat was dirty and colored different from a new break."

The principles announced in Express Co. v. Croninger, 227 U.S., and in other cases following it, are not involved in the decision of this case, as no bill of lading containing a valuation clause was in evidence.

The special instructions requested, predicated on the presence of a bill of lading, and the materiality of the classifications of the Interstate Commerce Commission, were properly refused, and as the exceptions to the charge are not considered in the brief, they are deemed to be abandoned. We find

No error.

Cited: McConnell v. R. R., post, 508; McRary v. R. R., 174 N.C. 564.