182 Ky. 116 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1918
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
On June 23,1916, the appellant and defendant below, Adams Express Company, entered into written contracts with the plaintiff and appellee, Burr Oak Jersey Farm, whereby it agreed to transport by express from Turner’s Station, a suburb of the city of Baltimore, to Scotts, a way station in Shelby county, Kentucky, four car loads of Jersey cattle, consisting of about one hundred head. The consideration agreed to be paid was $1,008.00, which was according to the .regular schedule of rates for that character of freight transported in that manner between the points mentioned and which schedule was on file with the Interstate Commerce Commission. The cattle left Turner’s Station at about one o’clock in the afternoon of that day and reached the city of Washington in time1 to connect with and be attached to a section of the Chesapeake & Ohio fast passenger train, known as No. 5, which section left the city of Washington at about three o’clock p. m. on that same day. It arrived in Lexington at about eleven a. m. on the morning of the 24th, when the four cars were detached from the fast Chesapeake & Ohio train and placed upon a side track in the yards at Lexington, where they remained until three o’clock that afternoon, and were then attached to a local passenger train, operated by the Louisville & Nashville Railroad. Company, and taken to Scotts, the point of destination,1 arriving there about five-twenty-five p. m. The point of destination is about five miles west of the city of Shelby-ville, and was not a stopping point for the fast Chesapeake & Ohio train, and it was because of this fact that the shipment was detached from that train, as stated, and remained in Lexington from eleven a. m. until three p. m. The Louisville & Nashville train which delivered the shipment to the point of destination was the first train running over that road which stopped at Scotts.
The answer traversed the allegations of the petition and further relied upon a plea of res adjudicata which it claimed arose because of a suit which it had previously instituted against the plaintiff here in the Federal Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky to recover the freight charges, and in which it was successful. A reply denying the allegations of that paragraph of the answer made the issue, and upon trial the jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the sum of' $1,000.00,, upon which judgment was rendered, and complaining of it the defendant prosecutes this appeal.
Many errors are relied upon as grounds for a re-1 versal, among which are (1) that the court erred in submitting to the jury by a complained of instruction thei issue concerning the special contract alleged in the petition, and (2) failure of the court to sustain defendant’s' motion for a peremptory instruction in its favor. Unden' the view which we take of this record we deem it unnecessary to consider any of the complaints except the two¡ mentioned. '
In regard to complaint (1) the evidence is wholly insufficient to sustain the claim of any special contract of; shipment. True, there appears in the record some correspondence that took place prior to’ the date of the shipment, but this pertained to the procurement of cars for the transportation of the cattle, and we find nothing in the correspondence showing any agreement to enter into any contract of shipment other than the ordinary and usual one. The fact that plaintiff was endeavoring to have the cars ready to be loaded in time for the shipment to go out on that day so as to make connection with train No. 5 of the Chesapeake & Ohio at Washington (which was done) and the agreement of the defendant to have the cars ready for that purpose, present no features of a special contract, and the court was therefore in error in recognizing any such by giving the instruction objected
The Federal Statute governing the rights of the parties under interstate shipments, like the one involved here, is the act of Congress of June 29, 1906, amending; the Interstate Commerce Act of 1887, which amendatory act reads:
“No carrier, unless otherwise provided by this act,i shall engage or participate in the transportation of passengers or property, as defined in this act, unless the rates, fares and charges upon which the same are transported by said carrier have been filed and published in accordance with the provisions of this act; nor shall any; carrier charge or demand or collect or receive a greater) or less or different compensation for such transportation of passengers or property, or for any service in connection therewith, between the points named in such tariffs;' than the rates, fares and charges which are specified in the tariff filed and in effect at the time;- nor shall any carrier refund or .remit in any manner or by any device) any portion of the rates, fares and charges so specified, nor extend to any shipper or person any privileges or facilities in the transportation of passengers or property, except such as are specified in such tariffs.”
The cases from the United States Supreme Courts supra, in construing that act fully sustain the position! taken above, and this court has followed the same inter
Considering now the (2) complaint, supra, the evii dence discloses that both the manager of the defendant and his son accompanied the shipment. They both say,, in substance, that they have no complaint of the trip, from its inception to Lexington, Kentucky. On the contrary, they claim that it was “a nice trip,” made “inj reasonable good time,” and with no rough handling; nop is there any objection found in the testimony to the char4 acter of cars furnished and into which the cattle were loaded, although complaint is made on this ground in the petition, but abandoned as the trial progressed. There is no substantial evidence of any rough handling of the cars by the Louisville «fe Nashville train from Lexington to Scotts, there having been a delay of only about twenty-five minutes due to stopping once for water for the engine, and another time for a short while for the passage’, of a freight train, none of the stock was physically injured in any manner, not even to the extent of rubbing off or ruffing up of any hair on any of them.
It is insisted, however, that some of the cattle when!, unloaded appeared more or less fatigued and somewhat! gaunted, and that after being unloaded they laid down, upon the ground, but within a reasonable time they re-« covered from their tired and gaunted condition. Plain-; tiff insists that these conditions were due to the delay of four hours in Lexington, and that it was such a delay as constituted a violation of the contract for which it is entitled to recover. It is shown that the route over which the cattle were shipped was the most direct and quickest one to Scotts. It is also shown that the Chesapeake «fe Ohio train hauling the shipment from Washington to! Lexington was a through passenger train which did not,' under, its schedule, stop at Scotts. It furthermore appears that the defendant, although a common carrier,! does not own any* line or lines of transportation for the! handling of freight which it agrees to transport, and that in so doing it uses the various railroad lines and equip-! ment over which it does business. As a common carrier!
“A carrier is not an insurer against delay in the transportation of goods. The principle on which the carrier’s) extraordinary liability is founded does not extend to the' time occupied in transporting the goods. As to the time) of delivery, their liability stands on the same ground as) that of ordinary bailees for hire. Hence the rule is one of general application that, in the absence of special con-( tract binding the carrier to deliver within a specified) time, mere delay in transportation does not create any! liability to respond in damages. As to the diligence and care required in completing the express or implied con-i tract for transportation only, the rule is that the carrier, is bound to use reasonable diligence and care, and that only negligence will render it liable, unless a stipulatedi time is fixed in the contract. The shipper assumes the, risk of unavoidable accidents, and of usual and ordinary, delays incident to the ordinary conduct of the carrier’^ business. Nevertheless, if damage results from failure,! without good excuse, to deliver the goods at their desti-j nation within a reasonable time, the carrier is liable for) such damage; and the rule applies to shipments of live, stock as well as to other classes of property or goodsi shipped. When a common carrier undertakes to con-j vey goods, the law implies a contract that they shall be delivered at destination within a reasonable time, in the absence of any special agreement as to the time of de-, livery. This duty, it is said, is as obligatory as the duty to deliver safely. And the principle applies, although there is a written contract for the shipment which contains no stipulation as to the time within which the goods) are to be delivered. The law will nevertheless imply an undertaking to carry within a reasonable time. ’ ’
The same rule has been adopted in this state, as will be seen from the opinions in the cases of Southern Ry. Co. in Ky. v. Railey Bros., 26 Ky. Law Rep. 53; Louisville & Cincinnati Packet Co. v. Bottorff, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 1324 and L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Gormley, 23 Ky. Law Rep. 188.
“The law does not attempt to fix by rule what is aj reasonable time. What is a reasonable time is not susceptible of being defined by any general rule, but the circumstances of each particular case must be adverted toi in order to determine whát is a reasonable time in that case. The mode of conveyance, the distance, the seasons of the year, the character of the weather, the ordinary] facilities for transportation, and an unusual .rush of bus-, iness, if there was such, are to be considered in determin-; ing whether in the particular case there has been an un-, reasonable delay. So also in determining what is aj reasonable time for transportation the character of the,*123 freight shipped is a very important consideration. It, is obvious that what would be a reasonable time for the transportation of one kind of freight would not be for, another kind. Accordingly some cases hold that, when the goods are perishable or peculiarly liable to injury from delay, the carrier is bound to use more expedition than where ordinary freight is being carried, and the¡ reasonable time in such instances is a shorter period]' than in other cases owing to the special circumstances known to the parties at the time the undertaking was| entered into. And it has been said that where the freight shipped is perishable it is the duty of the carrier] to forward it by its earliest scheduled opportunity or byj the earliest train it makes up in the course of its busi-; ness. However, there is no absolute duty in every case] to ship goods immediately on receipt of them merely because they are perishable. While they should generally] be given a preference, the demands of the carrier’s business, time for regular departure of trains, contracts and; obligations already incurred, and other like considera-] tion ought to be regarded in determining whether'in anyj case the carrier has been properly diligent in forwarding the goods after the receipt thereof. In the absence of special contract or special circumstances which take the case out of the general rule the carrier is not bound to] use extraordinary means to forward even perishable] freight, or shipments of stock. The shipper must be un-j derstood to contemplate carriage by the regular trains on the ordinary schedule, and hence, -if he desires special) service, he should contract for it. ’ ’
Many cases found in the notes fully sustain the text,especially that portion of the excerpt which says £ ‘ the' shipper must be understood to contemplate carriage by] the regular trains on the ordinary schedule. ’ ’ It would be but a repetition unnecessarily encumberingthis opinion to set out those cases here, and we content ourselves with referring to the place where they may be found.
The shipment in question is free from any delay, unless the time while in Lexington intervening between the] running of the fast Chesapeake & Ohio train and the Louisville & Nashville train can be considered as negligent delay. In view of the law as we have found it; there does not appear to our minds any room for doubt upon this subject. The ordinary facilities for transporta
We therefore conclude that there was a total failure, on the part of plaintiff to show any legal liability against) the defendant, and its motion for a peremptory instruction should have been sustained.
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed, with directions to grant a new trial, and to proceed in accordance withj this opinion.