Ireland v. Mobile & Ohio R. R.

JUDGE BURNAM

delivered the following dissenting opinion, in which JUDGE DuRELLE concurred; JUDGE WHITE not sitting.

Appellant alleges that he contracted with the defendant the Mobile & Ohio Railroad Company to transport three hogsheads of tobacco from Wickliffe to Louisville, Ky., over its road, by way of its connections, and that defendant the Mobile & Ohio Railroad Company delivered the tobacco to its co-defendants, the Chesapeaké, Ohio & Southwestern Railroad Company, at Rives, Tenn., the point of intersection of the two roads; that it was due to arrive at its destination on the 2d, but did not arrive there until the 6th day of June, having been unnecessarily delayed in transit four days; that the market price of the tobacco materially declined during this interval; and that, by reason of the negligence and carelessness of both defendants, the tobacco was permitted .to become wet while in their possession, and thereby greatly injured and damaged.

Defendant, Mobile & Ohio Railroad Company, says that by its bill of lading it agreed with the plaintiff to carry the tobacco from Wickliffe to Rives, and there deliver it to the Chesapeake, Ohio & Southwestern Railroad, to be carried by the latter company from the point of intersection to Louisville, and that it did so carry and deliver the tobacco to its co-defendant, in the same condition in which it was received, without delay, and relies upon the following provision of the bill of lading as limiting its liability: *407“In case of any loss, detriment, or damage done to or sustained by tbe property during transportation, whereby any liability or responsibility shall or may be incurred, that company shall alone be held responsible therefor in whose actual custody same may be at the time of said loss, detriment, or damage.”

The Chesapeake,. Ohio & Southwestern filed answer, denying negligence on its part. On the trial the testimony entirely failed to show which company was at fault, or in whose custody the tobacco was at the time it was allowed to get wet. Under this state of case, the court below held that the bill of lading, which is the contract between the parties, was not a contract for a through shipment by the Mobile & Ohio Railroad Company over its own line; that, by its terms, that company limited its liability to such damages as might occur while the property was in its custody, which it had a right to do; that the burden of proof was upon the plaintiff to show either that both of defendants were negligent, and that the injury resulted from the negligence of both, or to show which of the two defendants was the negligent party, and that, failing to do either, he could not recover.

On appeal the judgment of the lower court was reversed by this court, in an opinion written by the Chief Justice, a majority of the court holding that the receiving company is liable for any damage occurring anywhere between Wickliffe and Louisville.

It seems to me that the contract of shipment shows plainly that the Mobile & Ohio was simply to transport the. goods to the end of its own line, and then to act merely as a forwarder; and its duty in the latter capacity was discharged when the freight was delivered to the forwarding line. The undertaking on the part of the initial com*408pany is, in substance, that that company should be held liable for any injuries in whose custody the property was at the actual time of the injury. There does not seem to me to be any room to doubt that the parties to this contract necessarily intended by that stipulation that the initial carrier was to be held responsible only in the event that the property was injured while in its actual custody, and that every succeeding carrier should be responsible only in the same event.

Nothing is better settled than that the liability of a carrier beyond its own line is purely a matter of contract. In England, where a carrier receives goods directed to a destination beyond its own route, it is presumed to undertake, by the act of acceptance, in the absence of an express contract upon the subject, the transportation to the ultimate destination, tho liability depending upon the implied contract. If the implication is rebutted by an express contract to the contrary, no liability will exist on the part of the initial carrier beyond its own line. And, while this English doctrine of raising an implied contract- on the part of the initial carrier to carry beyond its own line by the mere fact of the acceptance of the goods directed to a destination beyond its own line has been accepted by some of the American courts, the great majority of them hold that there is no liability upon a carrier to carry beyond its own line, unless it specially contracts to do so. See 6 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d Ed.), 611, and Hutchinson on Carriers, Sec. 147.

The opinion says “that the. contract is susceptible of two constructions, either of which may be taken, and in neither of which appears more clearly the intention of the parties than in the other.” I do not think the contract is susceptible of this criticism. The stipulation is “that in case of loss, detriment, or damage sustained by any prop*409erty receipted for herein during transportation, whereby any legal liability or responsibility shall or may be incurred, that company shall alone be held responsible in whose actual custody the same may be at the time of the happening of such loss, detriment, or damage.”

It is conceded in the opinion that, in contemplation of the parties (and as alleged in the pleadings), the tobacco was to be shipped to Rives — the point of intersection of the two roads — by the Mobile & Ohio, and was thence to be transported over the Chesapeake, Ohio & Southwestern to Louisville. The only question is, what was the intention of the parties to the contract? Did the Mobile & Ohio undertake to carry the tobacco throughout the whole route at its own risk making the other line merely its agent for that purpose, or did it undertake to transport the freight to the end of its own line, and thence forward it over those of connecting carriers? A carrier may contract for a liability throughout the entire journey, or it may stipulate that it shall not be liable for loss not occurring on its own line. At common law no carrier was bound to accept goods for carriage beyond the terminus of its own line. See Hutchinson on Carriers, sec. 145. It is therefore not a question of power*, but a question of the intention of the parties as to what the original contract contemplated; and it is scarcely reasonable to presume that the initial company Would voluntarily assume any unusual responsibility. It therefore seems to me that the court is wrong when it accepts that construction of the contract which imposes such risks upon a railroad company, and it is clearly against the weight of authority.

The opinion says that, “if the contract is ambiguous, the carrier must put up with the construction most favorable to the consignor.” But when the contract under consideration is such that where one construction would impose no more than the usual and natural duties which fall upon *410railroad companies, and another construction would impose upon it unnecessary and unusual risk, the court should make the contract accord with the usual custom in such cases.

In Myrick v. Railroad Co., 107 U. S., 102, [1 Sup. Ct., 425], the Supreme Court says: “The general doctrine as to transportation on connecting lines approved by 'this court, and also by a majority of the State courts, amounts to this: That each road is only bound, in the absence of a special contract, to safely carry over its own road, and safely deliver to the next connecting carrier, but that any one of the companies may agree that over the whole route its liability shall extend. In the absence of a special agreement to that effect, such liability will not attach; and the agreement will not be inferred from doubtful expressions or loose language, but only from clear and satisfactory proof.” The same rule was laid down in Penna. Railroad Co. v. Jones, 155 U. S., 383. [15 Sup. Ct., 136], and this has been uniformly the construction put upon such contracts by the Kentucky courts.

In Bryan v. M. & P. Railroad Co., 11 Bush, 597, the general rule is thus stated: “The carrier, unless bound by special contract, is required to transport and deliver the freight at the terminus of his line, or at the place where, by the established usage of the business in which he is engaged, the delivery is to be made, to be transported on other lines or by a different carrier.”

In L. & N. Railroad Co. v. Tarter, [39 S. W., 698], opinion being delivered by Judge Hazelrigg, the court held the general rule to be: “A carrier is not liable beyond its own line unless by contract to that effect, express or implied,” — citing Bryan v. M. & P. Railroad Co., supra, and *411Elliott on Railroads, Sec. 433; tlie opinion continuing: "It is held in most of the courts that a mere ¿cceptance of goods directed to a point off the carrier’s line is not a sufficient basis for the implication of a contract for extraterminal liability; but, whether so or not, it has never been held that such liability existed in the face of á contract, to the contrary. This is not a case of attempted limitation of liability for negligence; hence the cases cited by appellee do not apply,” —citing Elliott on Railroads, Sec. 1435. The section referred to by the court says: “The vast array of authorities asserts the general rule to be that a carrier is not liable beyond its oion line, unless by contract.” The case of L. & N. Railroad Co., v. Cooper, 19 Ky. Law Rep., 1152, [42 S. W., 1134], was a suit for damages against a railroad company for failing to deliver a lot of mules shipped at Lynnville, Tenn., for Atlanta G-a. The answer of the company denied undertaking on its part to transport and deliver the mules at Atlanta, the answer going on to state that, by special contract, the appellant was only to transport the mules to Birmingham, Ala., which was the terminus of its road, and to be responsible only for damages from their receipt by appellant to their delivery to the connecting line, at Birmingham. Appellee contended that he had made a verbal contract for through carriage. The court held that there was no evidence to support the shipper’s contention for a sx>ecial contract to carry to Atlanta, quoting with approval Bryan v. M. & P. Railroad Co., and adding: “It seems to us that the testimony of plaintiff fails to show that there was a special contract made with appellant, by which it undertook to deliver the mules in Atlanta. It is therefore unnecessary to determine as to the validity of the written contract relied on, for the *412reason — in the absence of a special contract to deliver at Atlanta — that appellant is not liable for injury to the mules sustained after their delivery by appellant to the connecting line at Birmingham.” In the light of these decisions, we are bound to conclude that, if there had been no contract, the initial carrier would not have been liable beyond its own line, even though the goods were destined to an extraterminal point; and it seems to me to be untenable and illogical, to say that defendant could not be held liable in the absence of a contract, express or implied, as to liability for injuries resulting beyond its own line, but that it can be made liable where the contraer of shipment contains an express provision to the contrary.

The opinion, speaking of this contract for exemption; says: “Instead of being indicative of a contract of shipment terminating at Rives, we regard the insertion of this limiting clause as showing a knowledge or concession on thé part of the first carrier of its liability as a through shipper. If, by the terms of the contract, liability ceasecj at Rives, why provide against liability beyond that point?” The opinion reaches the conclusion that an express stipulation against liability puts the company in a worse position than it would have been if it had left the question open. Is this sound and rational reasoning?

It is the contention of counsel for appellant that the contract of shipment in this case is in contravention of section 196 of the Constitution, which provides that “no common carrier shall be permitted to contract for relief from its common-law obligation.”

At common law it is the duty of a common carrier to carry safely, unless prevented by the act of God or the public enemy, from one point on. its line to another point on its line, but not a point beyond its line; *413and tils duty is imposed by the law itself, and is wholly independent of any contract. There'is no obligation imposed by the common law upon a carrier to carry beyond its own line. Such obligation can arise only upon a contract, either express or implied; and the extent of such obligation must depend upon that contract. If the contract is implied or if it is an express contract to carry, without any stipulation as to the character or extent of the liability, then the presumption might be that the carrier assumed, by its contract beyond its own line, the same liability which the common law imposed upon it for the carriage oyer its own line. That, however, would be merely a construction of the contract, and could not override an express provision in the contract to the contrary. Section 196 of the constitution does not extend the common-law liabilities of common carriers, but simply provides that they shall not, by contract, restrict liabilities for obligations imposed thereby.

If the Mobile & Ohio Railroad Company had expressly contracted to carry this tobacco to Louisville, the stipulation as to liability for one loss occurring on connecting lines would have relieved it from liability, as the obligation to carry beyond the end of its own line would exist solely by reason of the contract. In making such a contract, it would have been doing something which the law did not require it to do, and its liability in the performance of the obligation so voluntarily assumed must be measured by the terms of the obligation. No liability at all would exist but for the contract.

In my opinion, the construction given the contract of shipment by the Chief Justice is unsound and utterly untenable; and, considering the importance of the question, I have felt constrained to present my views dissenting therefrom.