Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Jones

PER CURIAM.

This suit was brought in the city court of Selma for the recovery of damages which the plaintiff (appellee here) alleges in his complaint he suffered by reason of certain injuries which certain of his stock received while being transported by the defendant (appellant here), as a common carrier for hire, from Montgomery, Ala., to Bessemer, Ala. The *620plaintiff, it appears, lives in Selina, and desired to ship certain of his stock to Bessemer, via Montgomery. The Western Railway of Alabama is a common carrier of freight between Selma and Montgomery; but it is not a common carrier of freight between Montgomery and Bessemer. It appears that the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company runs a freight train, known as train 78, between Montgomery and Birmingham, a point near Bessemer, and that this particular freight train is scheduled to leave Montgomery for Birmingham before the arrival of an early morning freight train over the Western Railway of Alabama at Montgomery. The shipment was made in warm weather; and, as the plaintiff desired his stock (which were being shipped to be exhibited at a fair at or near Bessemer) to make the journey from Selma to the point of their destination in the cool hours of the morning, he entered into negotiations Avith the proper representatives of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company to have train No. 78 held in Montgomery until the arrival of the train from Selma over the Western Railway. The negotiations finally resulted in an agreement on the part of the defendant Avith the plaintiff that it would hold train No. 78 for the stock. Thereupon the plaintiff shipped the stock to Montgomery over the Western Railway Company, and they arrived there at 8:20 a. m.; the plaintiff being on the train with them. The stock was consigned to the plaintiff, under the bill of lading issued by the Western Railway, at “Ala. Agricultural & Inch Exposition, Montgomery, Alabama.” The jury were authorized to find, from the evidence, that when the plaintiff reached Montgomery with his stock, as above stated, he at once went to the general freight office of the defendant at that place and notified the official of the defendant, authorized to act for and bind the defendant in *621such matters, of the arrival of the stock; that he asked said official if said train 78 had been held for said stock, and was informed by him that this had been done; that he exhibited to said official the telegram above referred to; and that upon the promise and assurance of said official that said stock would be carried from Montgomery on said train 78, and acting solely upon such promise and assurance, the plaintiff paid to the defendant the freight charges on said stock from Montgomery to Bessemer, and accepted from it a bill of lading, containing the usual and customary stipulations contained in bills of lading issued by common carriers for the carriage of live stock, and in the bill of lading the defendant contracted to deliver the stock to the plaintiff at Bessemer, Ala. The jury were also authorized to find, from the evidence, that, after receiving the above bill of lading and the assurance that his stock Avould be taken from Montgomery on train 78, the plaintiff left Montgomery on a passenger train for Birmingham, Ala., which Avas scheduled to arrive, and which on said day did arrive, at Birmingham ahead of train 78; that, when train 78 arrived at Birmingham, he for the first time learned that said train left Montgomery Avithout his stock; that his stock was brought to Birmingham on a train which left Montgomery several hours after the departure of train 78; that some of the animals were dead when they did arrive; and that plaintiff’s damages amounted to a sum equal to that for Avhich the jury gave the plaintiff a verdict against the defendant. ■

2. The complaint, as originally filed, contained three counts. To the complaint, by amendment, Avere subsequently added tAVO other counts (A and B). These last counts base the plaintiff’s right of recovery upon the breach by the defendant of its contract to transport the stock on said train No. 78. Both of these counts allege *622that the plaintiff’s damages were proximately caused by the defendant’s said breach of said contract. If the contract set out in these counts was not made, or if it was made, and was subsequently changed, modified, or merged into another contract, this was defensive matter, and this situation, if it really existed, did not render the counts demurrable on that account. The defendant’s demurrers to these counts were, in reality, speaking demurrers; and, while they anticipated the principal point of controversy between the parties, the demurrers to these counts were properly overruled.

3. A plea, unless it follows a form prescribed by the Code for pleading a specific matter of defense to some specific action, should state the facts relied upon for a defense to the action, and not the mere conclusion Avhich the pleader has drawn from the facts in his possession.

It is also a familiar proposition that, Avhen a special plea sets up, as a defense to an action, facts Avhich may be given in evidence and relied upon as a defense to the action under the plea of the general issue, the trial court Avill not be put in error for sustaining a demurrer to such plea. For the reasons above given, the trial court was without error in sustaining the plaintiff’s demurrer to special pleas B, C, D, and E, filed in this cause by the defendant.

4. The real question in this case is Avhether, under the evidence, the bill of lading which was delivered by the defendant to the plaintiff in Montgomery, and which bill of lading was accepted by the plaintiff under the representation of the defendant that his stock Avould leave Montgomery on the above-mentioned train No. 78, was the sole repository of the contract of shipment, thereby precluding the evidence of the plaintiff that the defendant had agreed to hold said train until the arrival of his stock from Selma and carry that stock to Birmingham on said train.

*623The Supreme Court has often recognized and enforced the general rule that, when a bill of lading is issued by the carrier and accepted by the shipper before, or contemporaneously with, the delivery by the shipper of the freight to the carrier for shipment in the ordinary course of such business, such bill of lading becomes the sole repository of the contract of shipment, and cannot be altered, or contradicted by parol evidence. This doctrine was recently announced and enforced by the Supreme Court in L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Williams, 58 South. 315, in which an opinion of this court, prepared by the writer of this opinion, was declared to be in conflict with the settled doctrine of this state as declared by the Supreme Court. — L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Williams, 5 Ala. App. 615, 56 South. 865; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Williams, 58 South. 315.

The above decision of the Supreme Court, as well as many other cases and text-books, recognize that the foregoing rule does not necessarily prevail when the bill of lading is issued after the shipment of the goods under a previous contract. In L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Williams, supra, the cotton was delivered to the initial carrier contemporaneously with the issuance and acceptance of the bill of lading, and it was sought to hold the initial carrier for a default of a connecting carrier, when the bill of lading expressly exempted the initial carrier from such default, and the Supreme Court held that all prior negotiations between the shipper and the initial carrier Avere merged in the contract of shipment; that the bill of lading was the sole repository of the contract; and that any prior statement, declaration, or assurance, on the part of the initial carrier, that its connecting carrier Avould transport the cotton by a particular steamer on a named sailing could not be shown. In the instant case, before the bill of lading Avas issued *624and accepted, the plaintiff exhibited the telegram to that official of the defendant, who vas authorized by the defendant to issue it, and that official, at the time of the issuance and acceptance of the bill of lading, informed the plaintiff that train 78 was being held for said stock, and that the stock would go on that train. Upon the faith of this statement, the plaintiff paid the freight and accepted the bill of lading. The plaintiff could have shipped his stock to Birmingham over a route other than over the defendant’s route. The defendant knew that fact, and it knew that the plaintiff shipped it over the Western Railway to Montgomery upon the faith of its agreement to hold train 78 until the arrival of the Western train at Montgomery, and that it would carry that stock on said train 78 from Montgomery. The stock were in transit from Selma to Bessemer, via Birmingham, upon the faith of defendant’s agreement, above referred to, when the bill of lading was issued; and, as the bill of lading was issued while the stock were in transit, the rule announced in L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Williams, supra, does not necessarily control, and the bill of lading, issued as above stated, did not necessarily become the sole repository of the contract of shipment. When the stock left Selma, the plaintiff had two separate, independent contracts, one with the Western Railway Company to transport the stock to Montgomery, and the other with the defendant to transport the stock from Montgomery to Bessemer; via Birmingham, on train No. 78. A bill of lading is usually issued by the initial carrier before or at the time of the receipt of the freight for shipment; and when so issued, under the decisions of our Supreme Court, it certainly, as a general rule, becomes the sole repository of the contract of shipment; but, when not so issued, the question as to whether it is the sole deposi*625tory of the contract becomes a question of fact, and the facts of each particular case must determine that question.

It was fully understood between the plaintiff and the defendant, before the stock left Selma, that there was to be, in fact, one continuous, uninterrupted carriage of the stock from Selma to Bessemer, via Montgomery and Birmingham; that, upon the arrival of the stock in Montgomery, the car in which they left Selma was to be immediately taken up by the defendant and attached to its train 78, and at once proceed on its journey. The issuance and acceptance of the bill of lading, under these circumstances, and under the assurances which plaintiff received from defendant’s agent when the freight was paid and when the bill of lading was accepted, did not, as matter of law, render the bill of lading, which was silent as to what train the stock should go on, the sole repository of the contract. It was at least a question for the jury, under the facts of this case, to say whether the bill of lading was issued and received as applying to the particular train 78, which was to be held to get the stock, and which was, as plaintiff was informed,- when he accepted the bill of lading, in the yards ready to take the stock to Birmingham. — Elliott on Railroads, § 1423, and cases cited in note 47.

If, when the plaintiff shipped his stock from Selma to Bessemer, via Montgomery and Birmingham, the Western Railway Company had issued to him and he had accepted a bill of lading through from Selma, via Montgomery and Birmingham, and this suit had been brought against the Western Railway Company for the failure of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, a connecting carrier, to carry the stock to Birmingham on train 78, then a situation somewhat similar to the situation which prevailed in *626the ease of L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Williams, supra, would have existed. This situation does not obtain, however, in the present case; and for that reason the rule announced in L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Williams, supra, does not control the real issue presented by this record. In our opinion, therefore, the trial court committed no error in admitting the telegram, to Avhich Ave have referred, and the other evidence offered by-the plaintiff, tending to sIioav a contract on the part of the defendant, made prior to the issuance and acceptance of the bill of lading ■ to transport the stock from Montgomery to Birmingham on train No. 78.

5. The defense of contributory negligence, to be made available to a defendant, must be specially pleaded. In this case there Avas no plea of contributory negligence; and for that reason charge 6, requested in writing by the defendant, Avas properly refused.

6. We cannot hold that the trial court erred in overruling the defendant’s motion for a neAv trial. It was open for the jury, under the evidence in this case, to find that the defendant undertook to take the hogs from Montgomery on train 78, and that its failure so to do was the proximate cause of the injury to the animals.

The judgment of the court below is affirmed.

Affirmed.

Note. — The foregoing opinion Avas prepared by Judge de Graffenried Avhile he Avas a judge of this court, and is adopted by the court.