7 Ga. App. 165 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1909
The Consolidated Grocery Company delivered to the Atlantic Coast Line Railway Company, at Jacksonville, Ela., certain packages of goods to be shipped “to order notify Novelty Gum Co., Rome, Ga.” The Novelty Gum Company was the trading name of the defendant in error, John R. Jones. In the bill of
1. The summons originally described the articles as having been shipped from Jacksonville, Ha., by the Central of Georgia Eailway Company; while at the trial the bill of lading of the Atlantic Coast Line was tendered. Objection was made on the ground that this evidence did not support the allegation set out in the summons; and an amendment was offered and allowed, stating that the articles were shipped by the Atlantic Coast Line at Jacksonville, but that the Atlantic Coast Line ultimately connected with the Central of Georgia. The defendant objected to the allowance of this amendment, on the ground that it converted the action from a suit against the defendant on account of its common-law liability to an action on the statutory liability under the Civil Code, §2298, which makes the last connecting carrier, receipting for goods as in good order, liable for loss or damage, irrespective of whether it caused it or not. We do not think the amendment had any such effect. It did not contain the allegation most essential to a suit upon the statutory liabilit3r, namety, that the defendant received the goods in good order, or “as in good order.”
2. When the Central of Georgia Eailway Company notified the consignee that the goods had arrived, and delivered the shipment in bad order, but collected the'whole freight charge, this was sufficient evidence that it was in point of fact the last connecting carrier; and further (by reason of a well-known presumption, not at
3. Plaintiff in error makes the point that since the articles were described in the bill of lading as 23 cases of gum, when, as a matter of fact, the package contained cutlery, jewelry, and other articles of more value than chewing-gum, the carrier is released, on the theory that any fraud or concealment of the shipper by which the goods are misdescribed discharges the carrier’s liability. The validity of the abstract proposition is unquestioned, but we do not think it is applicable to the facts in the present case. The bill of lading was- not prepared by the shipper, nor does it appear that he was in any wise responsible for the descriptive terms used therein. It is not shown that he was-guilty of any concealment, either by statement or by silence, by which the carrier was misled. There is no proof that the carrier made any inquiry as to what was in the package, or that, as a matter of fact, the carrier was ignorant as to what it contained. • So far as the testimony in the record goes, the carrier merely adopted the description in the bill of lading for its own convenience. The case is therefore differentiated from the case of Southern Express Co. v. Pope, 5 Ga. App. 689 (63 S. E. 809). It may be stated here that no question of any collusion by the shipper and the carrier to misstate the nature of the shipment, so as to diminish the freight rate, in violation of the interstate-commerce act (24 Stat. 379, c. 104, U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3154) is involved. The full freight charge, which should have been rated against the shipment, even if its contents had been fully and specifically described, was paid.
We conclude that the judge of the superior court was justified in overruling the certiorari. Judgment affirmed.