The action is to recover the damages sustained by plaintiff, a corporation, through the refusal of defendant, a railroad corporation, to transfer cars from its track to the freight yard of the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Company at Utica, New York. The judgment consequent upon the verdict of the jury at Trial Term in favor of the plaintiff was unanimously affirmed by the Appellate Division.
The complaint alleges and the recovery of plaintiff was upon three similar causes of action. The questions for our determination are correctly and adequately presented by the facts proven for the purpose of establishing one of them, as follows: On September 24, 1909, a car containing three hundred crates of peaches, which had been forwarded from Barker, Niagara county, New York, over the railroad of defendant to the plaintiff as consignee at Utica, New York, reached Utica. Evidence of the contents of the bill of lading or contract of shipment was not given. The defendant, complying with the wishes of the plaintiff and in accordance with the custom between them, immediately placed the car upon a public team track in order that the plaintiff should unload it. Thenceforth the plaintiff had free access to and from time to time took peaches from it. On October 2, 1909, the plaintiff, offering to pay the charges, requested the defendant to switch it, containing the peaches not removed, to the railroad of the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Company, about one-half of a mile from the public team track. A track connected the freight yard of that company with the railroad of the defendant. The plaintiff requested the switching of the car in order that it might ship and *Page 24 bill it by that company over and to a point upon its railroad. The defendant had not a tariff covering the switching, and its freight agent stated that it would not move the car because of that fact. The plaintiff introduced evidence of damages sustained by the refusal of the defendant. The jury were instructed, in effect, that it was the duty of the defendant at common law to have switched the car upon the request and offer of the plaintiff. The defendant excepted. The respondent in its brief and argument here bases the liability of the defendant upon a breach of its common-law duty in refusing to switch the car.
The common law has not a rule which required the defendant to switch or transfer the car. A common carrier, under the common law, was not bound to accept goods for carriage beyond the terminus of its line or to carry except on its own line. (Atchison, Topeka Santa Fe R.R. Co. v. Denver N.O.R.R.Co.,
At the time the request and offer of the plaintiff was made, the defendant had performed all the duties imposed upon it as a common carrier concerning the car and its contents under its contract of carriage. Those duties were to carry safely and with reasonable dispatch and *Page 25
to deliver to the plaintiff, the consignee, at the destination, Utica, New York. The facts here do not involve a lack of notice to the consignee of the arrival of the goods, or of diligence in finding or attempting to find the consignee, or a proper place of making the delivery. The placing of the car upon the public team track, in order that the plaintiff should unload it, concurred in and acted upon by the plaintiff, was a completed delivery and terminated the undertaking and obligation of the defendant as a common carrier. (Lewis v. New York, O. W. Ry. Co.,
Two of the three causes of action are based upon the refusal of the defendant to switch cars. Unreasonable delay in switching is the foundation of another cause. The erroneous charge to the jury applied to each cause.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., CUDDEBACK, CARDOZO, POUND, CRANE and ANDREWS, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, etc.