September 6, 1917. The opinion of the Court was delivered by Action for damages for alleged negligent delay in the transportation and delivery of a shipment of beans, consigned by plaintiff at Charleston, S.C. to S.H. E.H. Frost, commission merchants, of the New York.
The consignment was received by defendant on May 26, 1914, and arrived in New York, over the lines of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, at 2:25 a. m., on the 29th in time to be delivered for the market of that day, under ordinary conditions; but it was not delivered until Monday, June 1st. The undisputed evidence is that there was no unreasonable delay in transportation.
Defendant undertook to excuse delay in delivery by proving that, on account of an unusual congestion of perishable freight ahead of plaintiff's shipment, it was impossible to unload the cars containing it on the morning of the 29th; that it could not be delivered on the 30th, because that was a legal holiday, nor on the 31st, because that was Sunday.
Defendant, therefore, denied the charge of negligence, and set up as a defense a stipulation in the bill of lading to the effect that claims for loss or damage shall be made promptly in writing to the agent at point of delivery, and, if such notice is delayed more than ten days thereafter, no carrier shall be liable for such claims.
Plaintiff relied upon waiver and estoppel; the ground being that defendant received and considered his claim of its merits, when he filed it, on October 1, 1914, and refused it on the ground that there was no negligence in handling the shipment, and did not invoke the time limit of the stipulation, until it was set up in the answer.
The trial Court (the Civil and Criminal Court of Charleston) refused defendant's motion for a directed verdict and *Page 91 submitted the issue of waiver to the jury. From verdict and judgment for plaintiff, defendant appealed to the Circuit Court, which reversed the judgment, holding that the verdict should have been directed for defendant.
Plaintiff brings the case here on appeal, and asks for reversal on four grounds: "(1) It was right for the trial Court to send the issue of waiver to the jury." That ground is settled against appellant by the case of Dean v. Railway, 107 S.C. 25, 91 S.E. 1042.
"(2) The stipulation was matter of defense, and the burden was on defendant to prove that due notice of the claim was not given to the agent of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, the delivering carrier, at the point of destination within the time specified."
If so, that burden was assumed and met. On cross-examination plaintiff was asked: "Did you give them (referring to the Pennsylvania Railroad Company) any notice of your claim? Answer: No."
But plaintiff's counsel argue that the commission merchants might have given the notice. If they had, they would have done so as plaintiff's agents, and in that event plaintiff would not have answered the question in the negative. At any rate, plaintiff's answer warranted the finding that the require notice was not given.
"(3) That it should be presumed from the circumstances that the notice was given."
We know of no law that raises such a presumption; and the evidence does not raise it, but refutes it.
"(4) That the stipulation is unreasonable, because on account of the distance between the points of origin and destination of the shipment, ten days is insufficient time for the shipper to be informed of the damage, and file his claim therefor."
The time is not unreasonable. The notice was to have been given at the point of destination, not at the point of origin. The shipper could have given it by his agents at *Page 92 point of destination, and there was no necessity for them to communicate with him. They knew of the damage when the beans were delivered to them. Their knowledge is imputed to the shipper. No form of notice is required; nothing more than that it shall be in writing, and to the effect that a claim is or will be made for the loss or damage. That gives the carrier timely opportunity to investigate the cause and extent of loss or damage, and, when more than one carrier has handled the shipment, to determine, as among themselves, which is liable. That is what the carrier contracted for.
Much less time has been held to be reasonable, when the nature of the shipment affords opportunity for the perpetration of fraud on the carrier, as in shipments of live stock. Here the shipment was a highly perishable product, and the carrier was entitled, by the terms of his contract, to prompt notice of the damage of the reasons stated.
Judgment affirmed.