36 Fla. 121 | Fla. | 1895
There is very little disagreement about the facts of this case. That the steamship company is a common carrier, and received the fish in good condition, properly packed in ice, for transmission to New York, is not questioned on the record. It is conceded further that the shipment of the fish was without any bill of
It is insisted by counsel for appellant that the referee erred in holding, on the facts of the case, that the -company was not released from liability for the loss of the fish resulting from decay, and this contention is ■based upon two theories. The first is, that the fish perished, without fault on the part of defendant, from inherent natural causes, for which the company was not liable; and the second is, that plaintiffs knew when the fish were shipped that they were to go as released goods, and that the company did not take such goods under any other conditions than that they should be released. Passing for the present the contention stated, we will first refer to the issues upon which the case was tried.
The declaration alleges that the defendant company did not take care of and safely deliver the fish, though no dangers of navigation prevented, but took so little and such bad care of them that by its negligence in not keeping them properly iced, and other negligence, they became wholly lost to the plaintiffs. The plea, 'the substance of which we have set out in the statement, is voluminous for law pleading, but it sets up the defense that the fish perished from inherent defects in consequence of an unavoidable delay caused without fault on the part of defendant by the vessel encountering a heavy north-east gale with a high and dangerous sea that loosened her rudder post at the bottom, rendering her navigation impossible, and ■that the accident to the vessel was caused by a peril of the sea. It is also alleged that the ship was withont ice sufficient to preserve the fish until the end of the voyage, and that none could be procured
The authorities are not entirely harmonious as to ■what causes of a natural and unexpected character are to be embraced within the exemption of the liability •stated, and, on the issues in the present case, we do not deem it necessary to go into a general discussion of this subject. The plea alleges that the ship in question was disabled by a heavy northeast gale with a high and dangerous sea, which was a peril of the isea. Issue was joined on the plea, and the referee found distinctly that the accident to the vessel was not ■caused by a peril of the sea. If the testimony shows clearly without contradiction that the detention of the vessel was caused by a peril of the sea, and defendant was without fault in any respect, the finding should have been in its favor, without reference to whether or not the peril of the sea causing the accident was an act ■of God. The plea does not allege in terms that the .accident to the vessel was caused by an act of God, but it is alleged to be a peril of the sea. The terms are not, in our judgment, synonymous. Plaisted vs. Boston & Kennebec Steam Navigation Co., 27 Maine 132, S. C. 46 Am. Dec. 587; Central Line of Boats vs. Lowe, 50 Ga. 509. In referring to the expression “act of God,” Wheeler on Modern Carriers, page 296, says: “There are other terms, such as perils of the seas, lakes, rivers and navigation and inevitable accident, frequently found in bills of lading, and used to express various causes of loss and injury, from responsibility for which the carrier is exempted, either by the oper
The second ^plea sets up only that the fish were carried at owner’s risk of damage arising from natural causes, and that they perished from such causes. This is not alleging a special contract of release from common lawr liability, or duty arising under the contract of affreightment. At common law the carrier was not liable under the exceptions above mentioned when the loss arose from the nature and inherent character of the property carried, such as the natural decay of perishable articles, when handled with care and transported in proper time. Maslin vs. Baltimore & Ohio R. R. Co. supra. On the evidence before us, independent of any other ground of defense, or exemption of liability, we would not be disposed to disturb the finding on the ground that the loss of the fish was not caused by inherent natural causes. That fish are liable to natural decay by reason of' inherent causes is evident, but the undisputed evidence before us is that a/hen properly iced they will keep at least two weeks, and further, that the usual time for the defendant’s steamers to go from Jacksonville to New York was from four to five days. The vessel could not, of course, without legal excuse, delay the voyage until the fish
The judgment of the court below is reversed.