Opinion by
On August 24, 1909, the plaintiff delivered to the defendant carrier at Confluence, Pennsylvania, two horses and twenty-two colts, and consigned them to
The owner and an attendant went by passenger train to Hagerstown, where they arrived about eleven o’clock the next day. The car of stock did not arrive until midnight of that day. The owner was at the station when it arrived and was informed by the conductor of the train, that one of the colts had died, and its body taken out of the car at Cumberland, an intermediate station. The remaining horses and colts were unloaded when it was found that one horse “was damaged in the legs, stiff, and badly bruised up, swollen around the knees and around the ankle and hips and badly crippled. A number were scratched and rubbed — ■ scarred and hair rubbed off.” All were taken to a pasture about one mile distant from the station. The injuries were all received during transportation as they were not on when the horses were placed in the car. As soon as the stock was taken off, the car was removed so that when the plaintiff returned at daylight no examination could be made of it, to ascertain the cause of the injuries to the shipment.
This action of trespass was brought' on the common-law liability of the carrier to recover the value of the horse that was not delivered, and for the injuries sustained by the others. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case the learned trial judge entered a nonsuit, for the reason that there was no evidence to sustain the charge of negligence. Other reasons were given which we do not consider material, as they are based on the special contract which was not offered in evidence and is not before us.
While there is an apparent difference in the decisions of our appellate courts in íegard to the burden of proof in such cases, an analysis of them shows a consistent rule which has always been followed. In Schaeffer v. Railroad Co., 168 Pa. 209 (a live stock case), Mr. Justice Fell states: “As the action was founded upon the common-law liability of a carrier, the burden of proof as to any limitation thereof rested with the defendant, and unless it was admitted or clearly established by proof the question was necessarily for the jury. There was no evidence of an injurious accident to the train,
In Needy v. Railroad Co., 22 Pa. Superior Ct. 489 (a live stock case), we said by Rice, P. J., “It was held in Grogan v. Express Co., 114 Pa. 523, following American Express Co. v. Sands, 55 Pa. 140, that where the loss is wholly unaccounted for, a presumption of negligence arises which the defendant must rebut to escape liability. It is urged that this case rules the case at bar, and all agree that it would do so were it not for the special provisions of the contract under which the plaintiff voluntarily decided to ship the hogs at a reduced rate of freight, in preference to shipping them at a higher rate which he acknowledged he had the option of ,doing, .... it is an admitted fact that the plaintiff wholly omitted to perform his duties, under the. contract, to the care of the hogs and the car while being transported.”
The facts in the case before us are so radically different from the ones in the Needy case that it cannot be applied here. And so too in Penna. R. R. Co. v. Raiordon, 119 Pa. 577 (a live stock case), where the testimony showed that the plaintiff “was personally in charge of them, and at every stop examined the car, and that he saw nothing wrong with them to attract his attention. It showed that the death of his horse on the journey was
The learned trial judge filed an interesting opinion in refusing to lift the nonsuit, but we feel that under the above authorities the defendant should have been required to explain the manifest injurious accident to the colts that were delivered, as well as the failure to deliver the horse that was taken from the car at Cumberland, or the case should have been submitted to the jury under proper instructions: Delmont v. Express Co., 53 Pa. Superior Ct. 506.
The judgment is reversed with a venire facias de novo.
