54 N.Y. 500 | NY | 1873
It is the duty of common carriers to transport property intrusted to them for carriage within a reasonable time, and they are responsible for damage caused by delays which are attributable to their fault or negligence. (Wibert v. The N Y Erie R.R. Co.,
The next question to be determined is whether the delay in forwarding the goods from Sarnia was occasioned by any fault or neglect of the defendant. The defendant was a railroad carrier, and we must infer from all the facts in the case that its ordinary and usual mode of transportation to Chicago was by railroad. It seems that it had made some arrangement as to freight and the division thereof with the other roads, and that this arrangement had become unsatisfactory to those roads, and that, about two weeks before these goods were delivered to the defendant, those roads had refused to take any more goods from the defendant without an increase of the freight. This the defendant refused to accede to, and hence no goods were taken by them from the defendant. This state of things was known to the defendant when it made the contract for the carriage of plaintiffs' goods. It knew that those roads would not take property from it for transportation at the old rates, and it also knew that it had inadequate facilities for transportation by water; and yet without giving the consignors notice of the difficulties, and knowing all the facts, it made the contract to carry to Chicago at sixty-four cents per 100 pounds. The goods reached the terminus of its road at Sarnia on the tenth day of November, and were consumed by fire in its depot on the sixteenth day of the same month. The goods were delayed from the tenth to the sixteenth because the defendant would not accede to the demand of the other roads as to the price to be charged for the carriage of freight. But there is no proof that the *504 demands made by those roads were unreasonable, or that they insisted upon charging more than a fair compensation. They refused to take the goods simply because the defendant refused to pay what they insisted upon as a proper charge. How can this circumstance discharge the defendant from its responsibility under its contract? Knowing the obstacles to be encountered, it had agreed to carry the goods. It was not impossible for it to do so. The burden of the increased charge fell upon it, and in the fulfillment of its contract with the plaintiffs it should have borne that burden. A carrier cannot excuse his delay in forwarding goods on account simply of an increased expense, which is not unforeseen nor entirely unreasonable. Neither has the defendant excused its delay by showing that it forwarded goods from Sarnia by water as fast as its facilities enabled it to. If, under its contract with the plaintiffs, it had the right to transport the goods by water rather than by rail, it was bound to have adequate facilities for doing so. Its facilities for water transportation were so inadequate that no goods which had arrived at any time during ten days before the fire were transported in that way. Under such circumstances the defendant, with a knowledge of all the facts, could not make a contract for the transportation with reasonable dispatch, and refuse the facilities for railroad transportation, rely upon the inadequate facilities for water transportation, and then claim immunity for the damage occasioned by the delay.
The defendant claims, however, that it is shielded from liability for the damage claimed by the fifth condition annexed to the contract, which provides that the responsibilities of the company will be considered to terminate when the goods have arrived at the place to be reached upon its railroad. This provision clearly had reference only to cases where the defendant had contracted to carry only to the terminus of its road, and could not apply where, as in this case, it had expressly contracted to carry beyond such terminus.
I, therefore, conclude that the defendant is responsible for the delay; and the only other question to be considered is, *505
whether the loss by fire was in such sense a consequence of the delay as to impose any liability upon the defendant. There was a clause in the conditions annexed to the contract, that the defendant should not be responsible for damage occasioned by fire. There was a similar clause in the contract in the case ofLamb v. Camden Amboy R.R. T. Co. (
The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed. *507