79 Iowa 518 | Iowa | 1890
II. We will proceed to inquire as to the duty of defendant upon receiving the butter in a car from the Cairo. Short Line for transportation to New Orleans, without directions or instructions as to the character of the car in which it should be carried, i A carrier’s duty is not limited to the transportation of goods delivered for carriage.He must exercise such diligence as is required by law to protect the goods from destruction and injury resulting from conditions which, in the,-(exercise of due care, may be averted or counteracted. He must guard the goods from destruction or injury by the elements ; from the effects of delays ; indeed, from every source of injury which he may avert, and which, in the exercise of care and ordinary intelligence, may be known or anticipated. j Unknown causes, or those which are inherent in the nature of the goods, and cannot be, in the exercise of diligence, averted, will not render the carrier liable. The nature of the goods must be considered in determining the carrier’s duty. - Some metals may be transported in open cars. Many articles of commerce, when transported, must be protected from rain, sunshine and heat,
-In the case before us the marks on the packages and the way-bill disclosed that the subject of shipment was butter. The employes of defendant were endowed with intelligence which taught them that the season was summer, when warm weather prevailed; that butter, in common cars, would be greatly injured by the ordinary heat of the climate; and that the butter, as it approached its destination, would be subject, by reason of the change of latitude, to greatly increased heat from the weather. All these things are familiarly known to all men. Surely, the law will presume that defendant’s employes had full knowledge thereof. The law required the defendant, " having received the perishable cargo Í involved in this suit, to exercise the care and diligence necessary to protect it;'and, if improved cars for the® transportation of articles of commerce liable to injury from heat were in use, it was defendant’s duty to use such cars in carrying the butter. These views are supported by the following, among other, cases: Hewett v. Railway Co., 63 Iowa, 611; Sager v. Railway Co., 31 Me. 228; Hawkins v. Railway Co., 17 Mich. 62, 18 Mich. 427; Railway Co. v. Pratt, 22 Wall. 123; Wing v. Railway Co., 1 Hilt. 241; Merchants’ Dispatch & Trans. Co. v. Cornforth,. 3 Colo. 280. As to the duty of defendant to use cars so constructed and used as to avoid injury from heat, see Hutch. Carr., sec. 294; Boscowitz v. Express Co., 93 Ill. 525; Steinweg v. Railway Co., 43 N. Y. 123.
III. But it is said': (1) That defendant did not have refrigerator cars which it could have used on the day it received the butter; (2) that the cars were sealed; (3) that it was accustomed to haul the cars received
IY. It is said that the rate of charges, as shown by the way-bill, was for common cars, and the defendant, therefore, undertook to furnish no other kind. If the freight charges fixed in the way-bill do not express a contract that the butter may be transported so as to destroy its value, and that the carrier is excused from the exercise of the care required of him by law, we think the freight charges in no case will limit the care to be exercised by the carrier, and restrict his liability. /The defendant, was not restricted, by the rate of freight charges named in the way-bill, from claiming and enforcing the payment of a Just compensation for charges incurred on account of outlays made in order to safely transport the goods. Sumner v. Railway Association, 7 Baxt. 345. Many of the rulings of the district court upon the admission of evidence and instructions