This is an action-to enforce the common-law liability of a common carrier, on account of damages suffered by live stock while being transported from Indianapolis to Chicago by appellant for appellee, The complaint was in one paragraph, and the answer was a general denial.
Appellant offered in evidence an instrument purporting to be a special contract of carriage between the parties, limiting the liability of the carrier in various respects. Upon appellee’s objections the court excluded the offered evidence; the objection made being that the contract is invalid on its face, under an act of congress, known as the “interstate commerce act,” and for the reason that appellee was not offered a choice of rates. The instrument contains a clause in terms as follows: “Tariff rate on this shipment from Indianapolis to Chicago is thirty per cent higher than the rates herein named, if shipment is not made under this live stock contract.”
1. A contract limiting the liability of a common carrier must be supported by a consideration other than the delivery of the goods and the agreement to transport, such consideration being usually found in a rate reduction. That clause of the instrument in question above quoted tends to show the existence of such consideration.
*4242. *423Its recitals are not conclusive, *424but they are prima facie, and, in tbe absence of other evidence upon tbe subject, would entitle appellant to a finding in its favor. United States Express Co. v. Joyce (1905), ante, 1; Lake Erie, etc., R. Co. v. Holland (1904), 162 Ind. 406, 63 L. R. A. 948.
3. This statement, in tbe nature of an admission, would be competent against tbe party making it, however evidenced.
Tbe instrument offered in evidence contains tbe statement of a consideration rendered by appellant. If there was in fact no consideration, it must be determined from all tbe evidence relevant; and, no matter bow well founded tbe claim may be, it did not justify tbe exclusion of the contract.
4. Tbe practice declared in Lake Erie, etc., R. Co. v. Holland, supra, requires one who has signed a contract which be claims is invalid because of tbe want of consideration to aver and prove facts from which tbe invalidity arises. Evansville, etc., R. Co. v. McKinney (1905), 34 Ind. App. 402. This procedure places tbe burden upon tbe shipper, but tbe incongruity therein is not of general importance; tbe procedure in cases not founded on breach of tbe special contract, and arising since tbe act of February 27, 1905 (Acts 1905, p. 58, §3297a et seq. Burns 1905), being governed by it.
5. It does not appear upon tbe face of tbe contract that it is one inhibited by tbe interstate commerce act, and in tbe absence of extrinsic facts tbe court declines to consider tbe question argued.
Inasmuch as tbe judgment will have to be reversed for tbe error indicated, other questions not likely to arise upon a retrial do not need to be taken up.
Judgment is reversed, and cause remanded, with instructions to tbe court to sustain appellant’s motion for a new trial, and to permit appellee to amend bis complaint, if he so desires.