111 Ga. 38 | Ga. | 1900
Carter sued the railroad company for damages resulting from the breach of a contract of shipment which the defendant had entered into with the plaintiff On the trial
But the plaintiff was the consignor of the goods shipped. The contract was made with him, and he is primarily liable for the transportation charges. The carrier dealt with him as the owner of the goods, and could not, in an action by the plaintiff to recover the goods, dispute his title, unless the title of the real owner was sought to be enforced against the carrier. Civil Code, § 2286. In the case of Haas v. Railroad Company, 81 Ga. 792, suit was brought by Haas upon a contract or bill of lading made by the defendant with one Ayres. It was held that “ the bill of lading for the flour not having been indorsed to plaintiff by the party in whose favor it was issued, the former could not maintain an action against the company upon it.” It appears from the record in that case that Ayres w'as the consignor and Haas the consignee. The present Chief Justice says in the opinion: “The record does not show that this bill of lading was assigned or indorsed by Ayres to Haas. This being true, Haas, under our code, could not bring suit on the contract made between the railroad company and Ayres.” The courts of both this country and England are now, with a few exceptions, all agreed that where the consignor makes the contract of shipment with the carrier, he may bring an action for loss of or injury to the consignment, although he may not be the actual owner of the property. In such a case the privity of contract between the carrier and the consignor is a sufficient foundation on which to base the action. It is also well settled by the authorities that where a consignor, who is himself not the real owner, recovers damages from the carrier for a breach of the contract of carriage, the recovery enures to the benefit of the owner, and the consignor is regarded simply as the trustee of an express trust. It would seem to follow necessarily from this-, that a recovery by the consignor for a breach of the contract would be a bar to an action by the owner in tort for the injury done him. The English courts have, so far as we are aware, uniformly adhered
In Moore v. Wilson, 1 Term Rep. 659, the doctrine announced in the case just referred to was reaffirmed; and the court held further that it was immaterial whether the hire was to be paid by the consignor or the consignee, as the former was, in law, liable to the carrier for the hire. In Joseph v. Knox, 3 Camp. 320, it was held that an action by the consignor would lie. The opinion was rendered by Lord Ellenborough, who said: “ I am of opinion that this action well lies. There is a privity of contract established between these parties by means of the bill of lading. That states that the goods were shipped by the plaintiffs, and that the freight for them was paid by the plaintiffs in London. To the plaintiffs, therefore, from whom the consideration moves, and to whom the promise is made, the defendant is liable for' the non-delivery of the goods. After such a bill of lading has been signed by his agent, he can not say to the shipper they have no interest in the goods, and are not damnified by his breach of contract. I think the plaintiffs are entitled to recover the value of the goods, and they will hold the sum recovered as trustees' for the real owner.” In Dunlop v. Lambert, 6 Cl. & F. *600, the House of Lords held : “Though, generally speaking, where there is a delivery to a carrier to deliver to a consignee, the latter is the proper person to .bring the action against the carrier, yet if the consignor make a special contract with the carrier, such contract super
A leading American case is Blanchard v. Page, 8 Gray, 281, where, after an elaborate review of the authorities, Chief Justice Shaw reached the conclusion that “the shipper named in. a bill of lading may sue the carrier for an injury to the goodsf although he has no property, general or special, therein.” The reasoning upon which this ruling is based seems to be unanswerable, and the decision ought to be accepted as decisive of this question. It must not be lost sight of that the present action was based upon a contract. If the action had been based upon the tort of the carrier in delivering the goods in a damaged condition, then a question entirely different from that involved in the present case would be raised. In such a case it would seem that the right of action is to recover for the injury
It was contended by counsel for defendant in error that the plaintiff in the present action failed to make out a prima facie, case of liability on the part of the defendant for injury to the goods, and that, this being so, even if the court erred in placing his decision granting a nonsuit on the ground indicated in the order, the judgment should be affirmed, as the right result, was reached, though the wrong reason may have been given for it. We think the plaintiff did make out a prima facie case of liability; and consequently the judgment of nonsuit was in any view of the case erroneous, and a trial upon the merits should be had.
Judgment reversed.