121 Minn. 343 | Minn. | 1913
Plaintiff brought suit to recover its freight charges for transporting two carloads of hay for defendant in the year 1911. Defendant admitted plaintiff’s cause of action, and interposed a counterclaim for damages to a carload of hay shipped by him in the year 1910. The-trial court found that defendant was not entitled to recover upon his-counterclaim, and rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff for its. freight charges. Defendant appealed from the judgment, and contends that the trial court erred in not allowing the counterclaim.
The facts stated briefly are as follows: Plaintiff has a line of railway extending from Kansas City, Missouri, to Stillwater, Minnesota,, at which place it has a station, and industrial and other tracks. Defendant has a warehouse at Stillwater, located at some distance from plaintiff’s tracks, but adjacent to an industrial track of the Northern-Pacific Kailway. Defendant shipped four carloads of hay from Kansas City to Stillwater over plaintiff’s railway, and on the morning of July 5, 1910, plaintiff’s local station agent at Stillwater notified him that the hay had arrived, and asked him where he wanted the cars “spotted” for unloading. Defendant replied that he wanted, them placed upon the track adjacent to his warehouse, and directed the agent to deliver them to the Northern Pacific Railway for the purpose of having that company place them at the point designated.. Before noon on the fifth plaintiff delivered them to the Northern-Pacific Company as directed, and on the same day they were transported by that company to the place designated by defendant, and' there “spotted” ready for him to unload them. Defendant began unloading on the following day, the sixth, and unloaded three ears-safely, but between four and five o’clock in the afternoon of the sixth the fourth car caught fire, and the hay therein was damaged by fire- and water. It is not claimed that the fire or the damage resulted)
It is held by other courts that the liability of the carrier continues for such length of time after the cars are placed ready for unloading as is necessary to afford the consignee, proceeding with diligence, a reasonable opportunity to remove his goods. Whether the carrier’s-liability as to bulky freight, shipped in carload lots, and to be unloaded by the consignee, terminated when the carrier, with the knowledge of the consignee, “spotted” the cars at the point designated by the consignee as the place where he desired to unload them, did-not arise and was not considered in Derosia v. Winona & St. P. R. Co. 18 Minn. 119 (133), Pinney v. First Div. St. P. & P. R. Co. 19 Minn. 211 (251), or Kirk v. Chicago, St. P. M. & O. Ry. Co. 59
In referring to the stringent rule of liability imposed upon carriers, it is said in Arthur v. St. Paul & D. R. Co. 38 Minn. 95, 100, 35 N. W. 718: “The reason of the rule, in the language of Best, C. J., in Riley v. Horne, 5 Bing. 217, is that, ‘when goods are delivered to a carrier, they are usually no longer under the eye of the owner. He seldom follows or sends any servant with them to their destination. If they should be lost or injured by the grossest negligence of the carrier or his servants, or stolen by them, or by thieves in collusion with them, the owner would he unable to prove either of these causes of loss. His witnesses must be the carrier’s servants, and they, knowing that they could not be contradicted, would excuse their masters and themselves.’ ”
And it is further said in the same case that this liability terminates, “whenever the care and custody of the property has passed from the carrier to the owner, or some bailee of his own choosing, or whenever the owner has, after its arrival at its destination, had a reasonable opportunity of taking the property into his own charge. The crucial test is whether, having proper regard to the principles upon which the carrier’s liability rests, the property has so far passed out of the care and custody of the carrier or his servants, into that of the owner, that there is no longer any occasion, within the reason of the rule, for further holding the carrier to this strict liability. So long as the reasons continue, the liability should also continue; when they cease, it should cease.”
In Naas v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Ry. Co. 96 Minn. 84, 104 N. W. 717, the trial court charged the jury, in effect, that, from the time the consignee had notice that the car was placed upon a proper unloading track ready for him to unload, the company was relieved from liability. A verdict was returned for the company, and, on motion of the plaintiff, a new trial was granted by the trial court. On appeal this court reversed the order granting a new trial, and directed judgment for the company. This decision necessarily
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.