Cafter Stating the facts). I. Appellant argues that the defendant as a common carrier was compelled to accept this shipment when tendered to it; that, under the “Hepburn Act” of Congress, it had no right to make any special contract to compensate it for assuming the additional risk that the notice of the special damages- to flow from the failure -to promptly deliver would place upon it. The cases of Hooks Smelting Co. v. Planters’ Comp. Co., 72 Ark. 275, and Globe Refining Co. v. Landa Cotton Oil Co., 190 U. S. 540, are relied upon as. authorities fixing the principle that, to hold a party to a contract liable for special damages, there must be notice of the-special circumstances at or before the making of the contract, so that the party sought to be charged for the breach of the contract may be free to insist on such additional compensation as he may choose to demand, or -at liberty to refuse the contract.. The argument is not without force, and there is language in these and other opinions applying the doctrine of Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch. 341, to this effect.
However applicable that doctrine may be where the contract is between parties at liberty to contract, it is inapplicable-when applied to the implied contract of carriers, although the same language is frequently used in cases when discussing liability of carriers as when discussing the liability of manufacturers or machinists who enter into contracts to promptly furnish or repair machinery. In fact, Hadley v. Baxendale was a carrier-case itself, but the distinction was not then made. This difference is referred to in Crutcher v. Choctaw, O. & G. Rd. Co., 74 Ark. 358. One is a matter of contract, the other is a legal obligation.
The court recently had before it the question of special' damages flowing from the breach of the implied contract of a. carrier to furnish cars, and, following the authorities, particularly Vicksburg & M. Ry. Co. v. Ragsdale, 46 Miss. 458, the-court sustained such action. Choctaw, O. & G. Rd. Co. v. Rolfe, 76 Ark. 220. See also Choctaw, O. & G. Rd. Co. v. Crutcher, 74 Ark. 358, and St. Louis, I. M. & So. Ry. Co. v. Ozier, 86 Ark. 179. A much earlier case, likewise applying to it, is St. Louis, I. M. & So. Ry. Co. v. Mudford, 48 Ark. 502. TheRagsdale case, 'heretofore referred to, which has been approved' by this court in the Mudford, Crutcher and Rolfe cases, is a leading authority upon the subject, and has been much quoted and approved by text writers. See 4 Elliott on Railroads, 1731 3 Hutchinson on Carriers, 1369 (old ed.), 772; 3 Joyce on-Damages, i960. On this exact question the Mississippi court said: “6th. If the delay is in the transportation of machinery to be applied to a special use, and that is known to the carrier, he is responsible for such damages as are fairly attributable to the delay, such as the value of the use of the machinery, to he tested by its rental price, or other approximate means, the expenses of idle hands, the loss or gain on work contracted to be done for another person, if such work could have been done if the machinery had been delivered, and the gain thereby definitely ascertained in proper time. 7th. The party injured by the delay must not remain supine and inactive, but should make reasonable exertion's to help himself, and thereby reduce his losses, and diminish the responsibility of the party in default to him.”
Mr. Hutchinson says, in referring to the justice of the rule which gives special damages where the circumstances would make the general rule inequitable: “And if, with a knowledge of these circumstances, the carrier should unreasonably delay the carriage, or if, having expressly contracted to carry them within .a given time or for a given purpose, he should negligently delay them beyond that time, or so as to defeat their purpose, the difference in the value of the goods at the time of their actual arrival and at the time when they should have been delivered may prove a very inadequate recompense to their owner.” And again he says: “The fact that the carrier was notified of the special circumstances demanding greater diligence is thus seen to be a crucial one, and that the carrier was so informed must be both alleged and proved.” 3 Hutchinson on Carriers, 1367. See also 4 Elliott on Railroads, § 1724.
While it is true that the carrier cannot refuse to receive goods, and while it may be true that under the recent act of Congress he cannot make any special charge commensurate with his undertaking, yet such consideration can not change his duty to promptly carry. Notice of the special circumstances puts upon ¡him the duty to use diligence commensurate to the requirements of the case; and he has discharged his whole duty when he uses reasonable diligence to fulfill the implied contract which the law places on him to promptly forward the goods. It would not be consistent with the duties resting on a carrier to say that where he has broken his implied contract to promptly deliver he can escape responsibility for failing to exercise due car.e in promptly forwarding goods because he could not refuse the goods when offered, nor charge a different rate than for similar goods shipped without notice. The test of his liability is his care in the execution of his duty, and the amount of damage is dependent upon the nature of the shipment and the circumstances under which it is made.- Special damages present no question of liability, but a question of amount of damages where liability is otherwise fixed. The liability is dependent solely upon the negligence of the carrier in the performance of his duty to promptly carry. 4 Elliott on Railroads, § 1712. The exercise of reasonable diligence in forwarding acquits the carrier of negligence and defeats the action based on a failure to deliver within a reasonable time. And in this way the carrier can always protect itself.
II. It is insisted that the notice was not brought home to a person properly representative of the company. The notice was given to the party who actually made the contract of shipment. The company had thirty-five or forty employees in the freight office, only three of whom were authorized to make contracts of shipment. A shipper goes to the office, and is referred to a certain person as the proper one with whom to enter into his contract. He gives his notice to that person, and that person causes to be executed the contract — the bill of lading. It may be that that person did not personally sign it. That fact was not known to the shipper. Nor was it necessary to be known to him. Eor the man whom the company put forward to transact business did transact it for the company, did enter into the contract, and under the contract so executed the carrier received the goods, and shipped them; and notice to sucfh person was notice to the company.
III. Having determined that, the plaintiff has made out a case for special damages, it is necessary then to consider the damages recovered and sought to be recovered. Notice was given to the railroad company that contracts had been made for the purchase of seed by the oil company; but the evidence fails to establish this fact. On the contrary, the evidence of the president of the oil company shows that he only began contracting for the seed in the latter part of September or the first of October; and most, if not all, of the contracts for seed were made in October.
The machinery was delivered to the carrier on the 8th of September, and left Tittle Rock on the 9th. Under the undisputed evidence, seven to ten days was the usual and reasonable time to allow for its delivery to Baldwin, Miss. Where the time of delivery is not fixed by contract, the law implies the time necessary to complete the transaction. But “the law does not attempt to fix by rule what is a ‘reasonable time.’ Each case is referred to its own peculiar circumstances, an account being taken of the mode of conveyance, the nature of the goods, the season of the year, the character of the weather, and the ordinary facilities for transportation under the control of the carrier.” 4 Elliott oh Railroads, 1730. The testimony has fixed beyond dispute that a reasonable time for the delivery of these goods expired not later than the 19th of September. The president of the company says that the machinery had already been delayed an unreasonable length of time before he commenced contracting for seed. No assurance from this railroad company of its speedy arrival was shown. It may be taken under the facts of this case that the machinery was to have been delivered on or before the 19th of September, as if that date had been definitely settled and fixed by contract in the beginning.
The ground upon which special damages are allowed, where contracts have been made and they are breached, is that the carrier has notice of those contracts and the probable effect of the breach of them by reason of the carrier’s default in delivery of the shipment in time for the shipper to fulfill his contract. 3 Hutchinson, Carriers, 1367; St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v. Mudford, 48 Ark. 502. The Massachusetts court, speaking through Mr. Justice Endicott on this subject, said: “If, therefore, the defendant had received the ties for transportation according to its contract, and failed to deliver them at all, it would have been liable for their market value in Boston at the time when they should have been delivered; or, if it had negligently delayed the delivery, it would have been liable for the diminution in their market value during the delay. It would not in either event have been liable in damages for loss of profits sustained by the plaintiff under his subsequent contracts with other parties, unless it can be said that, by reason of the plaintiff’s announcement that he intended to make such contracts, it was necessarily within the contemplation of the parties when they made the contract of transportation, and as the probable consequence of its breach, that the defendant might be liable for damages resulting to the plaintiff from his inability to fulfill such contracts, the terms of which were not and could not then be disclosed.
“The damages for which a carrier is liable upon failure to perform his contract are those which result from the natural and ordinary consequences contemplated at the time of making the contract of transportation; and a larger liability can be imposed upon him only when it is in the contemplation of the parties that the carrier is to respond, in case of breach, for special and exceptional damages. In such a case the extent and character of the obligation he assumes should be known to the carrier, which in this case was impossible, as the contracts were not then made. The mere knowledge on the part of the defendant that the plaintiff intended to make contracts for the sale of the ties to be transported cannot impose liability upon the defendant for loss of profits on such contracts. * * * *
“We are therefore of opinion there was error in instructing the jury that the plaintiff could recover damages for loss of profits on his subsequent contracts. As the ties were not sent to Boston, the true measure of damages is the difference between the market price in Boston and the market price in Canada at the ..time when the defendant should have transported the ties according to its contract, deducting therefrom the price stipulated in the contract for transportation.” Harvey v. Connecticut & Passumpsic River Ry. Co., 124 Mass. 421.
In this case the contracts were not only subsequent to the notice of the company, but were subsequent to the default of the railroad company.
The second, third, fourth, fifth and ninth elements of damage set forth in the complaint grew out of the contracts made long subsequent to the notice to the carrier, and from ten to thirty days after the carrier had breached the contract by failing to promptly deliver the maohinery. A shipper cannot recover damages growing out of contracts made subsequent to the shipment, for it is only such matters as are then in contemplation for which the carrier can be held, and a fortiori a shipper cannot recover on account of contraots made after the carrier was already m default in making delivery. It cannot be said that when he made these contracts he was relying upon the carrier to fulfill its obligation, because it was already in default, and the oil company had no assurances from it that its default would be speedily remedied.
The seventh ground seems to be based upon the loss to the company of the saving in expense between a one-press mill and a two-press mill. This is but another form of recovering expected profits from a two-press mill, in that the fixed charges against the two-press mill would have got better results, as some of the hands were idle, while in' operating the two-press_ mill they would not have been idle. This is too remote and speculative to be recoverable.
The eighth item may be recoverable, but it is not sufficiently developed here to definitely determine. If at the time ’ fhe machinery was due the fixed charges against the mill were less than at the time when the machinery was received, and the cessation of business during the installation of the plant would be more expensive at that time than the earlier time, and if this was necessarily included in the notice, then the difference may well be recoverable.
The first item is recoverable, and the court erred in not giving instruction No. 3 asked by the oil company: “If you find that the plaintiff sustained actual damages by reason of being compelled to purchase a duplicate set of machinery and pay for same, after having paid for the set shipped over defendant's roads, and such damage was caused by the unreasonable delay of defendant in carrying said machinery, if you find there was an unreasonable delay, then the plaintiff is entitled .to recover such actual damages as it sustained by reason of being compelled to buy the second set of machinery. You will consider this item of damage apart from the other claims for damage about which you have been instructed.”
The oil company has also appealed, and assigns error for the failure of the court to give this instruction and permit it to recover on this item. The oil company waited long beyond the breach of the contract before purchasing other machinery. The railroad company had sufficient notice of the use for -which this machinery was intended and of the consequences which would attend the failure to deliver it to the oil company to make it liable for it for the purchase price of the duplicate machinery obtained elsewhere when it had failed to deliver it within a reasonable time. “It is the duty of the shipper to exercise reasonable diligence and care to minimize the injury to his shipment caused by delay.” 4 Eliott on Railroads, 1730. And he “must not remain supine and inactive, but should make reasonable exertions to help himself, and thereby reduce his losses and diminish the responsibility of the party in default to him.” Vicksburg & M. Ry. Co. v. Ragsdale, 46 Miss. 458.
Opinion delivered November 9, 1908.If the goods were absolutely worthless, the shipper could recover the full amount of the cost that he was put to in getting their duplication. Wabash Rd. Co. v. Harris, 55 Ill. App. 159. But, if they were of value, it was his duty to utilize them to. advantage. The machinery was his, and the railroad did not convert it to its own use by its unreasonable delay. 3 Hutchinson on Carriers, § 1372; 4 Elliott on Railroads, § 1710. His measure of damage would be the cost of the duplicated machinery, minus the value of the delayed machinery utilized to Its best advantage.
The judgment is reversed upon both appeals, and the cause ■remanded for new trial.