92 So. 395 | La. | 1922
Lead Opinion
On Motion to Dismiss Proceeding.
This suit was brought originally in the city court. The defendant, railroad company, filed an exception of no cause of action, which was overruled. The suit was then put at issue and tried on its merits ; and judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff. On appeal, the exception of no cause of action was reargued and was sustained by the Court of Appeal. On application of plaintiff, a rehearing was granted, and the only question then argued was whether the petition disclosed a cause of action. The court overruled the exception of no cause of action and rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff, affirming the judgment which had been rendered by the city court on the merits of the case. The-case is before us on a writ of review, issued at the instance of the defendant.
In the ease before us, it was and is yet conceded by the relator, railroad company, that the allegations in plaintiff’s petition are true, and that the judgment complained of is correct, if the allegations disclose a cause or right of action. The opinion rendered by the Court of Appeal also shows that the only question presented is a question of law, i. e. whethen the facts alleged in plaintiff’s petition warranted the judgment that was rendered.
The motion to dismiss the proceeding is overruled.
Opinion on the Merits
On the Merits.
The argument on behalf of the railroad company is founded upon the doctrine that the liability of a common carrier for a failure to deliver a shipment of freight is limited to the value of the goods on the market, at the place where, and time when, the goods should have been delivered. Oakey v. Russell, 6 Mart. (N. S.) 58; Porter v. Curry, 7 La. 233; Rathbone v. Neal, 4 La. Ann. 563, 50 Am. Dec. 579; Price, Frost & Co. v. The Uriel, 10 La. Ann. 413; Y. Quadras & Co. v. The Daniel Webster, 11 La. Ann. 203; A. D. Grieff & Co. v. Captain Switzer, 11 La. Ann. 324; Lewis & O’Niel v. The Success, 18 La. Ann. 1; Simon & Loeb v. Steamship Fung Shuey, 21 La. Ann. 363; Silverman v. St. Louis, I. M. & S. R. Co., 51 La. Ann. 1785, 26 South. 447; Armistead v. Shreve
Inasmuch as'this is an interstate shipment, and therefore governed by federal regulations, the attorneys for the railroad company say that the case is controlled by the decision in Adams Express Co. v. Croninger, 226 U. S. 491, 33 Sup. Ct. 148, 57 L. Ed. 314, 44 L. R. A. (N. S.) 257. Our opinion is that the decision is not appropriate to the case before us. The question presented in Croninger’s Case was whether a stipulation, in a receipt issued by a carrier for an article received for shipment, limiting the carrier’s liability to a declared value, agreed to for the purpose of adjusting the rate, was forbidden by1 the provisions of the Carmack Amendment of June 29, 1906, to Act February 4, 1887, § 20 (U. S. Comp. St. §§ 8604a, 8604aa), that no contract, receipt, rule, or regulation should exempt the common carrier, railroad, or transportation company from the liability, thereby imposed. The ruling was that the carrier could, at common law, by a fair, open, just, and reasonable agreement, limit the amount recoverable by the shipper in case of loss or damage, to an agreed value, fixed for the purpose of obtaining the lower of two or more rates, proportioned to the amount of the risk. The shipper had, for the purpose of obtaining a lower rate, placed a value upon the article1 less than its actual value; and the court held him to the stipulation in the contract, that the liability of the carrier to the shipper, for the loss of the article, was limited to the value which the shipper had put upon it. The case before us has no such feature; for there was no agreement here between the carrier and the shipper, or stipulation
The judgment is affirmed.