dissenting. These suits were brought against the railroad company to make them liable, as common carriers, for certain cottons consigned to the plaintiffs as factors of the owners of the *448cotton, which was taken upon their cars at station No. 12, under contract of affreightmeni, to be delivered in New Orleans, but which the company failed to deliver. The cotton was insured at the office of the Merchants’ Insurance Company. The loss of the cotton being ascertained, the consignees applied to the company under the contract of insurance and were paid the value of the cotton, and the money was paid over to the owners. It seems that the names of the parties appearing in these suits as plain tiffs,‘are used by their consent by the Merchants’ Insurance Company, the real plaintiff in both cases. The defense is:
First — That the cotton was burned by unavoidable accident in spite of due care and diligence on the part of defendant.
Second — And even if unavoidable accident be not established by defendant’s evidence, the burden of proof is on the insurance company to show negligence, inasmuch as its claim is not for non-delivery under a contract of affreightment, but is the claim of a third party claiming damages resulting from the fault of the defendant.
Third — The real owners of the cotton, the planters, have received from the insurance company, under its contract with them, the value of the cotton, and have no interest in the suit.
There was judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, and the defendants have appealed.
The cotton, it appears, was properly stored at Brookhaven in a close box car, having no other openings than the doors which v ere locked, and remained so until the fire burst forth while the train was on'the side track at Magnolia. The defendants contend that however the fire may have originated it seems to have been an unavoidable accident. It is clear that the destruction of the cotton by fire under the circumstances shown, does not relieve the railroad company from liability to pay for it.
The defendant contends that no conventional subrogation to the rights of the owner of the cotton is alleged or shown on behalf of the insurance company ; that the insurance company was not bound with or for the defendant, in the sense of the Civil Code, nor had an interest in discharging the debt.
The cotton was insured against fire. It was destroyed by fire. The railroad company was principally bound. Its liability was prima fade fixed and could only be avoided by showing affirmatively on its part that the accident and loss resulted from vis major. In every other contingency the law would attribute the loss to negligence on the part of the carriers, or to events which it was in their power, or that of their agents to prevent. The insurance company was bound to make good a loss arising from a casualty against which it had expressly *449insured the owners. It chose to pay the indemnity and look to the common carriers for reimbursement. If the latter were bound to make good the loss, what difference to them whether they paid the owners or the insurers? In a suit by the insurers against the carriers, the latter could set up all the defenses against the insurers which they might have made in a suit against them by the owners. Being bound to the owners to indemnify them for the loss that occurred, and having discharged that obligation I am clearly of the opinion the insurance company stands subrogated by law to all the rights of the owners against the carriers, as they certainly are upon general principles of equity. Civil Code, articles 2160, 2161.
Wrtr, J. I concur in this dissenting opinion.Rehearing refused.