56 S.E. 538 | S.C. | 1907
January 14, 1907. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This is an action to recover the value of thirty-three barrels of flour destroyed by fire while in the defendant's depot.
The Lexington Roller Mills Co. delivered to the defendant at Lexington, Ky., forty barrels of flour to be transported to Darlington, S.C. A draft with the bill of lading attached was sent to the bank, with the instructions to notify the plaintiffs when the flour arrived. On the 23d of September, 1899, the plaintiffs paid the draft, delivered the bill of lading to the defendant, and removed six of said barrels of flour. On the same day all the other flour except one barrel was consumed by fire. The contention of the defendant is thus set out in its answer:
"The defendant alleges that the forty barrels of flour shipped to the plaintiffs, as alleged in the complaint, were delivered at Darlington, their destination, several days before the 23d day of September, 1899; were unloaded from *12 the cars into this defendant's warehouse, and plaintiffs were immediately notified of said arrival and requested to remove the same; that this the plaintiffs, for their own convenience, failed and neglected to do, and waited until the 23d of September, 1899, when all of the said flour was received by them and a part thereof hauled away and a part thereof left by the plaintiffs in the warehouse of the defendant, for their own convenience and at their own risk, where the same, left as aforesaid, was destroyed by fire on the night of the 23d of September, 1899, through no fault or negligence of this defendant."
At the close of the plaintiff's testimony, the defendant made a motion for a nonsuit on the following grounds, which was refused:
"First. From the pleadings, the contract of carriage is alleged and admitted; that is, that the defendant undertook to transport the goods to Darlington, to notify the defendant, and upon surrender of the bill of lading to deliver the goods. The testimony of the plaintiff proves all this beyond cavil to have been done.
"Second. From this testimony, it appears that the defendant did all that it undertook to do. There is no question in this case of delivery. The plaintiffs prove delivery."
The defendant presented the following requests to charge:
"First. If from the evidence the jury believes that the freight on the goods was paid, and that they were receipted for by the plaintiffs, and then a portion of them left in the warehouse or depot, the contract of carriage was completed, and the defendant could not be held liable as a common carrier, and the verdict should be for the defendant.
"Second. That it was the duty of the defendant to transport the goods safely to their destination and notify the plaintiffs of the arrival of the same, and deliver the same to the plaintiffs upon surrender by them of the bill of lading and upon payment of the freight, and if the jury finds from the evidence that all this was done, and that the plaintiffs *13 accepted and receipted for the goods, the verdict should be for the defendant."
The presiding Judge charged these requests after adding:
"But if the railroad company put the flour into its warehouse, Brunson was entitled to a reasonable time to get it out."
The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs for $196.31, whereupon the defendant made a motion for a new trial on the grounds set out in the exceptions which will be reported.
The main question in the case is whether the undisputed testimony showed a delivery to the plaintiffs. As the fire occurred while the flour was in defendant's depot, and, therefore, in its actual possession, it sustained to the plaintiffs either the relation of common carrier, warehouseman, or gratuitous bailee. When goods transported by a railroad company arrive at their destination, its liability as a common carrier continues until the consignee has a reasonable time within which to remove them. But even after the lapse of a reasonable time after its liability as a common carrier has ceased to exist, it is nevertheless liable, by operation of law, as a warehouseman, although the goods may not have been unloaded and deposited in a warehouse used for storing freight, technically termed a warehouse. Spears Colton v. R.R.,
But whether the defendant sustained to the plaintiff the relation of common carrier, warehouseman, or gratuitous bailee, and conceding that there was a constructive delivery, the motion for nonsuit and new trial were properly refused.
When the plaintiffs showed that they were the owners of the flour and that the defendant failed upon demand to surrender to them the actual possession thereof, after it had arrived at its destination, they made out a prima facie case.Jenkins v. R.R.,
The presiding Judge's charge was too favorable to the defendant.
The appellant relies upon the case of Whitney Mfg. Co.
v. R. D.R. Co.,
It is the judgment of this Court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed. *15