13 Colo. 35 | Colo. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the court.
From the evidence introduced at the trial it is shown that in the year 1883 a car-load of grain was shipped
No attempt was made by appellant to disprove the evidence introduced by the appellee in the court below. It is, however, contended upon this appeal that the judgment is contrary to law.
It has been held that a carrier receiving goods to be transported beyond its line, in delivering them to a subsequent carrier acted as a special agent of the consignor, with limited powers; and if it disregarded its instructions and exceeded its authority, the subsequent carrier could not maintain a lien upon the goods for its transportation charges. Fitch v. Newberry, 1 Doug. (Mich.) 1. In later decisions in other states the doctrine of the Michigan court, however, has not been followed; the courts now generally holding that a carrier receiving goods to be transported over its own line to a point beyond has the apparent authority to select any of the ordinary routes leading thereto, and that the second carrier receiving the goods in good faith, in the ordinary
An examination of the opinion of Commissioner Stall-cup in the case just cited will show that, while the right of the consignors to select the routes over which the goods should be transported is fully recognized, it is held that in case his instructions in reference thereto are not' obeyed by the first carrier, the owner’s action was not against the innocent second carrier, but against his own wrong-doing agent. In support of this position the following cases were relied upon: Patten v. Railroad Co. 29 Fed. Rep. 590; Schneider v. Evans, 9 Amer. Law Reg. (N. S.) 536; Briggs v. Railway Co. 6 Allen, 246.
In the first two cases cited the ignorance of the second carrier of the terms of the contract is made an express condition of its exemption from liability in case of loss to the owner. And a reading of the opinion in the case of Briggs v. Railway Company, supra, will also show that in that case no wrong or negligence was attributable to the defendant company. In the case at bar, however, we have seen that the Union Pacific and the Denver & Rio Grande Companies had entered into an agreement to disregard all directions requiring goods to go over other lines, and that, in pursuance thereof, all routing directions to the contrary were being ignored by both companies^ that the general officers of the appellant company were zealously enforcing a compliance on the part of the Union Pacific Company with such agreement; that it was customary for the latter company to deliver goods routed over the Denver & New Orleans road to the Denver & Rio Grande road for transportation; and that goods were so received and forwarded by the latter company, with full knowledge that the same was in viola
This company having been a party to an illegal contract providing not only for a violation of the owner’s routing directions, but calculated also to prevent notice of such directions from reaching the second carrier, cannot be shielded in this instance because no witness was able to swear in direct terms that it had notice of the owner’s directions in reference to the shipment of these particular goods. Under these circumstances we are of the opinion that the court below was warranted in finding that the possession of the property was not obtained in good faith by the defendant in the ordinary or usual course of business between connecting carriers, but that such possession was wrongful and illegal, and that tho defendant was consequently not entitled to a carrier’s lien upon the same, either for its own charges or those advanced to the former carrier, and therefore there was no error in entering judgment for plaintiff. Redf. Carr. § 271 et seq.; Fitch v. Newberry, supra; Robinson v. Baker, 5 Cush. 137; Andrew v. Dieterich, 14 Wend. 31; Briggs v. Railroad Co., supra. The judgment is accordingly affirmed.
Affirmed.
Chief Justice Helm not sitting.