53 Tenn. 143 | Tenn. | 1871
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was brought before a justice of the peace to recover for the value of a lot of dressed poultry shipped by Rogers and Hartsell, via East Ten
In the agreed case in the record it is admitted by the plaintiffs that the defendant shipped the poultry at the proper time, and turned the same over in reasonable time, to the officers and agents of Western and Atlantic road, at Dalton, and that Dalton is the terminus of the East Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia Railroad, and that the Western and Atlantic road connects with it at Dalton, and extends to Atlanta, Georgia. It was further admitted that said box of poultry was detained by the agents of the Western and Atlantic road for thirteen days, and by this delay was spoiled and rendered valueless. It was further agreed, that when freight is shipped from the East Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia road to Atlanta, it is the usage and custom of the officers of the Western and Atlantic road to collect and settle the freight with the other road — that is, their pro rata. The property having been lost to the shipper by the neglect of duty on the part of the Western and Atlantic road, the question is as to the liability of the East Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia road for such loss, or how far one railroad can be held responsible for the negligence of another where the trans
This is a question upon which the English courts, and many of our American courts, have adopted rules and made a series of decisions, the one distinctly opposite to the other. The English courts, with great unanimity, holding that the carrier giving the receipt and undertaking the carriage of goods from one point to another, is responsible for all the intermediate routes, unless he shall by express contract limit his liability to the transportation of the goods only to the end of his own road.
There has been diversity of opinion in the courts of the various States of the Union on this question, but it must be conceded that probably the weight of American authority is against the English rule. We have no distinct decision of this direct question in our State, though we think the principle has been adjudged in one case that would be conclusive of the question. We allude to the case of Carter & Hough v. Peck, 4 Sneed, 205. In that case the suit was brought to recover for breach of an alleged undertaking on the part of Carter & Hough to convey plaintiff and his family from Nashville to the city of Memphis. The defendants were the proprietors of a line of stages from Nashville to Waynes-borough. Sims & Co. owned the line from that point to Lagrange, Tennessee, where it connected with the Memphis and Charleston Railroad to Memphis. By an arrangement between all the parties, it was agreed that passengers might pay the whole fare at
These cases follow the principle of the English decisions, and we think lay down the sounder doctrine on the subject.
The leading case in England on this question is that of Muschamp v. The Lancaster and Preston Junction Railroad Co., 8 Mees, and Welsby, 421, in which it was held by the Court of Exchequer, “that where a carrier receives goods directed to a place beyond the terminus of his own route, without limiting his responsibility by express agreement, such receipt of the goods so directed is prima facie evidence of an undertaking to carry the goods to the place where they are directed, and that the rule applies although the place be beyond the terminus of his own usual route, and a loss having occurred in that case beyond such terminus, the carrier was held liable for such loss.”
Much more ought the party to be held liable where, as in this case, he has received the goods with an express understanding, as we construe it, that they shall be forwarded to their destination. The word “ forwarded, ” used in this respect, means to be transported or carried, and such was no doubt the understanding of both parties. Such is the construction given to such a receipt in a late case by the Supreme Court of Vermont— Cults v. Brainerd, Am. Rep., vol. 1, 354 — where it was held, that the railroad company giving a receipt for goods at Burlington, marked
We feel no disposition to relax the rule of liability on the part of railroads, now having almost a monopoly of the transportation of all the products of the industry, as well as articles of merchandise, of this great and rapidly developing country. It would seriously incommode the business of the country if, when property is shipped by one road and must pass over more than this road in order to reach its destination, the shipper, in ease of injury to his goods, is to
"Without citing further authorities on the question, we hold the charge of his Honor in this case to be correct, who held in accordance with the vieivs of this opinion, and affirm the judgment of the Circuit Court.