Kirk v. Lehigh Valley Transportation Co.

BROADDUS, P. J.

On May 29,1903, the plaintiff entered into a contract with defendant Lehigh Valley Transportation Company to transport four hundred sacks of flour from Kansas City to the city of New York and paid to it the freight charges therefor, which company issued to plaintiff a through bill of lading acknowledging receipt of the goods. The fact was, however, the said company having no line of railroad at Kansas City, the flour Avas delivered to the defendant Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co. to deliver *102over its switches at Kansas City to the Chicago & Alton Railroad Co. to be carried by it to the city of Chicago. The Atchison, Topeka & Santa Ee Company transferred the car containing the flour to the tracks of the Chicago & Alton. On May 31, 1903, while the cars were on the tracks of the latter company, an unprecedented flood caused the Missouri and Kansas rivers, which come together at Kansas City, -to overflow their banks and inundate the tracks of the different railroads in that locality, and the waters of which entered the car in question and wet plaintiff’s flour.

On June 10th, plaintiff, having learned of the location and condition of his flour, notified the Chicago & Alton Company to return it to him forthwith in order that he might recondition it and thus prevent further damage. On June 14th, the Chicago & Alton Company delivered the' (lour to the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Company, where it remained on its tracks until July 11th. The plaintiff’s warehouse is connected with the tracks of the latter company and the car containing the flour Avas placed upon them less than half a mile from said warehouse. For this service, plaintiff paid nothing. Just hoAV much the flour had been damaged by the original wetting it received or how much it sustained while on the tracks of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Avas uncertain. HoAvever, the evidence showed that it suffered material damage by being exposed to the air and sunshine from the 14th day of June until the 11th day of July.

The case was tried before a jury. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence, each defendant interposed a separate demurrer which the court sustained, whereupon plaintiff took nonsuit with leave to move to set it aside. Plaintiff’s motion to set aside the nonsuit Avas sustained and the defendants appealed.

The defendants are sued as joint common carriers. The primary and controlling question is, are they such. If they are, the plaintiff Avas entitled to recover, other*103wise not. At first, the flour was given in charge of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Company to deliver over its switches to the Chicago & Alton Company for transportation to Chicago under a contract it had with the Chicago & Alton Company; and it is immaterial whether or not the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Company may have by its undertaking assumed the duties of a connecting carrier, it having fully complied with them when it made the delivery to the Chicago & Alton on its own tracks and no complaint being made of any occurrence at that time. It was then .no longer the agent of either of the two companies. It owed them no further duty as connecting carrier or otherwise. But, as it did assume another duty when it again agreed to receive and return the flour to plaintiff at his warehouse, it is necessary to determine what that duty was in relation to the plaintiff and to defendant Le-high Valley Transportation Company.

If it is to be treated in the transaction as a common carrier, then it had no connection with the other defendants as such and was alone responsible for its negligence. When plaintiff ordered the goods returned to his warehouse, the contract of shipment made with the Lehigh Valley Transportation Company terminated and no further duty rested upon it but to return the freight charges paid in advance. It is held in a similar case that such an undertaking is not that of a carrier, hut that of a bailee. [Kingman St. Louis Implement Co. v. Railway, 133 Mo. App. 317, 112 S. W. 721.]

If the contract of shipment made with the Lehigh Valley Transportation Company had terminated, of which there can be no denial, it could have no connection whatever with the alleged negligence of the Atchi-son, Topeka & Santa Fe Company. They could be in no sense joint tortfeasors, nor connecting carriers. And in no event would the plaintiff be entitled to recover against the former.

*104Tbe Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Company was not acting in the capacity of a carrier. It was merely a bailee without hire. The original contract of carriage with the Lehigh Valley Transportation Co. having been terminated by the act of plaintiff in ordering the return of the flour to its warehouse, the Atchi-son, Topeka & Santa Fe Company, if it had been a connecting carrier in the first place, was thereby release.d from any obligation as such for any act after occurring. Having voluntarily received the flour, not for transportation, but to be returned to plaintiff’s warehouse connected with its own tracks for the purpose of being reconditioned, it was not acting in the capacity of a common carrier. The plaintiff, having failed to prove a case against defendants, or either of them, as such carriers, is not entitled to recover. [Kingman St. Louis Implement Co. v. Railway, supra.].

The duty of the defendant to the plaintiff as a bailee without hire is not involved in this case and therefore will not be discussed. The argument of plaintiff’s counsel is based upon the theory that defendants were liable as carriers and, such being the case, it is not necessary that we call particular attention to it.

Cause reversed with directions to vacate the order setting aside the nonsuit and to restore the original judgment.

All concur.