40 Ga. App. 113 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1929
Clark Milling Company brought suit in a justice’s court against the Central of Georgia Railway Company for a shortage in a shipment of corn, and the justice rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff. The railway company appealed to a jury in the justice’s court, and judgment was again rendered in favor of the plaintiff. The railway company then carried the case, by certiorari, to the superior court, and that court overruled tbe certiorari and entered up judgment for the Clark Milling Company. This ruling the railway company assigns as error in its bill of exceptions to this court.
The plaintiff introduced in evidence a bill of lading issued by the I. 0. Railway Co., at Decatur 111., showing a shipment of 88,-000 pounds of'corn from Harrison, Ward & Company to the Clark Milling Company, Augusta, Ga., and proved that after deducting natural shrinkage of one fourth of one per cent., the weight at destination was 520 pounds short, which, at $1 a bushel, amounted to $9.29, the amount of the verdict rendered in favor of the plaintiff. The plaintiff admitted that the shipment was received at Augusta under the original seals that sealed the car at Decatur, 111., and that upon examination.of the car there was no evidence of any leakage. The evidence further shows that while the car was being unloaded, and as soon as it was apparent that there
The question for our determination is not who caused the shortage, but whether the defendant is responsible to the plaintiff for the shortage. The railroad company introduced no evidence to show, and makes no contention, that the consignee had disposed of any of the corn before the representative of the defendant company was called to make an inspection. The outturn was actually weighed, as is shown by its being 520 pounds short.
The third paragraph of the plaintiff’s petition alleges that “Petitioner brings this action against the Central of Georgia Railway Company on its common-law liability for failing to perform its part of the contract of carriage.” There is no doubt about the plaintiff’s right to sue the terminal carrier in this case. The Car-mack amendment in reference to suits against the initial carrier in interstate shipments in no way precludes the plaintiff from proceeding against the terminal carrier in this case. Central of Georgia Railway Co. v. Yesbik, 146 Ga. 769 (92 S. E. 527). In its answer to plaintiff’s original petition, the defendant company admitted that the bill of lading called for 88,000 pounds of corn, and that the defendant company was the last carrier of the shipment; and it made no contention in the trial that the full amount called for in the bill of lading was not shipped.
Under the facts of this case and the authorities hereinafter cited, three propositions of law are clearly applicable: 1st. The plaintiff is not required to prove that the loss of the corn was actually occasioned by the fault of the defendant company. 2d. A presumption arises that a shipment of corn was delivered to the defendant company without any deficiency in quantity, and that the loss occurred while the corn was in its possession. 3d. The duty is on the defendant to show that it did not cause the loss.
When the defendant company showed that the car was received under the original seal, and that it found no evidence of any
If the loss herein sustained was occasioned by some connecting carrier other than the defendant company, the defendant is best able to ascertain that fact, and has its remedy in the usual settlement between railroads where such shipments are involved. The law does not put the burden upon the plaintiff to locate the fault. The plaintiff has alleged and proved enough to create a common - law presumption against the defendant company, and the defendant company lias failed to rebut that presumption to the satisfaction of the trial court, and so we conclude that:
1. Whore the consignee of a shipment of goods brings an action against a railway company on its common-law liability for
2. The court did not err in overruling the petition for certiorari and in entering up judgment for the plaintiff.
Judgment affirmed.