55 Mich. 218 | Mich. | 1884
The plaintiff shipped goods from New York by the New York Central & Hudson River Railroad Company, directed to himself at Hancock, Michigan, and they were carried in succession by connecting carriers until they were delivered by the Chicago & Northwestern Railway Company to defendant at Negaunee on March 12, 1883. The goods were carried by defendant over its road to L’Anse, where they arrived March 13, 1883, and were placed in defendant’s warehouse. There they remained until March 20, 1883, when they were destroyed by an accidental fire. L’Anse was the terminus of railroad transportation. From thence to Hancock goods were carried in boat during the season of navigation, and by teams for the remainder of the year, by a carrier known as the L’Anse & Houghton Overland Transportation Company, which occupied for its purposes at L’Anse the warehouse of the defendant. It seems to have been the customary mode of business for the receipts of goods to be entered at the warehouse upon books of the defendant which were open to inspection by the L’Anse & Houghton Overland Transportation Company, and which were regularly inspected by the agent of that company to ascertain what goods were to be taken by it. That company was then accustomed to take the goods for Hancock and other places on its line, load them in sleighs or other vehicles at the warehouse, and then receipt them to the defendant.
When the goods of the plaintiff were received by defendant no notice was given to him, nor was the attention of the agent of the Transportation Company called to them, or any request made that they should be removed. They simply remained in the warehouse, without action by any one in respect to them until the fire took place. The goods having been destroyed, plaintiff claimed from the defendant payment of the value, and that being declined, the present suit was instituted.
The first count of the declaration charged the defendant
Hnder this instruction the plaintiff had judgment, and the defendant brings error.
The question which the instruction presents is one upon which the authorities are somewhat divided. It received careful attention at the hands of the New York Court of Appeals in McDonald v. Western Railroad Corporation 34 N. Y. 497, where several opinions were delivered. The facts upon which the decision was to be made were in all respects similar to those now before us, and the judges were unanimous in holding that the railroad company was liable. Wright, J. said: “The goods had been received by the defendants at Chatham, to be transported to Binghamton by
This decision was approved as sound and followed as authority in Mills v. Michigan Cent. R. R. Co. 45 N. Y. 622, and it is undoubtedly the settled law of New York at this time. The same doctrine was laid down in Conkey v. Milwaukee &c. R. R. Co. 31 Wis. 619, in a forcible opinion by Chief Justice Dixon, and also in Irish v. Milwaukee &c. R. R. Co. 19 Minn. 376: s. c. 18 Am. Rep. 340, which cites with approval the case in 34 N. Y. Reports. The like doctrine also appears to be recognized in Erie Railroad Co. v. Lockwood 28 Ohio St. 358; Brintnall v. Saratoga &c. R. R. Co. 32 Vt. 665; Packard v. Taylor 35 Ark. 402; and Louisville &c. R. R. Co. v. Campbell 7 Heisk. 253. It was also affirmed in Michigan Cent. R. R Co. v. Manufacturing Co. 16 Wall. 318. This last case expresses view's not in harmony with the
We think these cases lay down a rule which is just to the shippers of goods, and not unreasonably burdensome to carriers. The shipper delivers his goods to a carrier, who becomes insurer for their safe transportation; and if the operations of one carrier cover a part only of the line of transit, and another is to receive the goods from him, the shipper has a right to understand that the liability of an insurer is upon some one during the whole period. The duty of the one is not discharged until it has been imposed upon the succeeding carrier; and this is not done until there is delivery of the goods, or at least such a notification to the succeeding carrier as, according to the course of the business, is equivalent to a tender of delivery. There is nothing in this which is burdensome to the carriers; for this is the customary method in which the business is done; and the rule only requires that the customary method shall be pursued without unreasonable delay or negligence.
The connecting carriers in this case appear to have established a custom of their own, under which actual delivery of the goods or notice to take them was disj)ensed with, and the one was to ascertain from the boobs of the other what goods were ready for reception and further carriage. This, as between themselves, was well enough while it worked well; but it was an arrangement to which the plaintiff was not a party, and the defendant could not by means of it relieve itself of any liability which duty to the plaintiff imposed. And it was clearly its duty to the plaintiff, as we think, to relieve itself of the responsibility of the goods remaining for an unreasonable time in its warehouse; and to do this, it was necessary that the responsibility be transferred to the carrier next in line. But the mere permission to
In this case there were no facts indicating a renunciation, as to these goods, of the liability of common carrier by the defendant, or that it was supposed by the agents of the defendant that that character had been exchanged for any ■other. If it ever was, it must have been at the moment the goods were received; for nothing took place afterwards to change the relation of the defendant to the goods until the fire took place. But we are not ready to assent to the doctrine that a railroad company, as to goods transported by it, ceases to be carrier the moment the goods are received at its warehouse. ¥e do not think that is the law, or that it ought to be.
The judgment should be affirmed.
Campbell, J. In this case it is admitted by the undisputed facts that the property in question had been in defendant’s warehouse for a longer time than was generally necessary for the removal of goods by the ultimate carrier, and that the failure was due to a lack of means of removal in the latter. It also appears that the property was in a. warehouse from which the last carrier always took it without any further ceremony, and that this carrier was always informed by inspection of the way-bills and knew of the goods being ready for removal. I think that under such circumstances defendant no longer remained responsible as carrier, but became subject to no more than a warehouseman’s responsibility, as soon as the last carrier had actual notice and could have removed them, and that respondent is not to be prejudiced by the lack of facilities in that carrier, who had the same means of access to and control over the goods. Such seems to me the purpose of our statute,, which does not declare or provide that the liability of warehouseman for goods await