Feige v. Michigan Central Railroad

62 Mich. 1 | Mich. | 1886

Champlin, J.

The plaintiff brought this action before a justice of the peace, to recover damages for goods consigned to him, which were burned in defendant’s freight-house on the night of October 39, 1883.

In the circuit court the case was tried without a jury, and resulted in- a judgment for defendant. The court made a written, finding of facts, and of his conclusions of law thereon, which are embodied in the record before us.

There are three assignments of error, all of which raise the same question, namely, the right of defendant to a judgment upon the record.

The goods in question were in the freight depot, at the place of their destination, ready for delivery, at and after noon of October 29, 1883. They consisted of six bundles of burlaps, weighing 640 pounds, so that neither their bulk nor weight prevented their being hauled away at one load. The fire which consumed the freight depot and its contents occurred between 9 o’clock p. u. of October 29, and 5 a. m. of October 30, without fault or negligence of the defendant. The goods were delivered to defendant at Ohicago, Illinois, on October 25, 1883, by Morrison, Anderson & Butchart, to be *3transported from Chicago to East Saginaw, and were consigned to plaintiff at the latter place.

At the time of such delivery in Chicago the consignors made out and delivered to defendant a request, signed by them, asking defendant to carry the goods to their destination, subject to “Rules Relating to Transportation,” as printed on the back of such request. The eighth rule printed on the back reads as follows :

“ The corporation will be liable as warehousemen only, for property when in their store-house.”

Thereupon the defendant made and delivered to Messrs. Morrison, Anderson & Butchart a receipt for the goods, upon the back of which was indorsed a like printed copy of the rules and regulations.

The goods were then delivered to the defendant for transportation, and the shippers took the receipt to the general freight agent of defendant, and received from him a bill of lading in the usual form. Upon the back thereof was indorsed' the following among other conditions :

Freight carried by the company must be removed from the station during business hours, on the day of its arrival, nr it will be stored at the owner’s risk and expense; and in the event of' its destruction or damage from any cause, while in the depots of the company, either in transit or at the terminal point, it is agreed that the company shall be liable only as warehousemen.”

This bill of lading was duly forwarded by the shippers to the plaintiff, and was by him produced upon the trial of this cause. The receipts and bill of lading were printed documents, except signatures, names of parties, dates, and description of goods.

During the day upon which the goods arrived at East Saginaw, defendant’s agent deposited in the post-office of East Saginaw a' notice of their arrival, upon a postal card, addressed to plaintiff at East Saginaw, and that they would remain there at his risk, subject to storage charges, after 2i hours, and be sold to pay charges if not delivered. This notice was received at the post-office at 2 o’clock p. m. of *4October 29, and was delivered by the carrier on the morning of October 30, after the fire. About 8 o’clock a. m. of October 29, plaintiff telephoned to the Michigan Central Railroad depot, at East Saginaw, to know whether there was any freight there for him, and was informed that there was not. As above stated, it did not arrive until noon.

The counsel for the defendant contend that there is no liability on the part of the defendant, for the reason that when a railroad company has transported property over its line, and stored it in its warehouse, awaiting delivery to the consignee, it is not liable as common carrier thereafter, but only as warehouseman, even though the consignee has not been notified of its reception. The question was exhaustively discussed in the case of McMillan v. Michigan South. & N. 1. R. R. Go., 16 Mich. 79, and no result was reached, as the Court was equally divided in opinion.

Two years later the precise point came before the Court again in Buckley v. Great Western Ry. Co., 18 Mich. 121, and it was held that, in the absence of an express contract, or a contract fairly inferable from the nature of the business, the known necessities under which it was carried on, the established usage upon the subject, and the like, the carrier could not excuse itself from responsibility as such carrier by depositing the goods in its warehouse at the end of its route.

The question as to the common-law liability of a carrier by railroad, in the absence of any contract restricting such liability, cannot be deemed an open question in this State. It is true that the Court was not unanimous in the conclusion reached, but a decision concurred in by a majority of the Court is as conclusive upon the point decided as any decision of the Court can be, and therefore the question raised by the counsel for defendant is not open to controversy.

The opinion of the Court in the case last cited maintained that it was competent for the carrier and shipper to limit or modify the ‘liability at common law of the carrier, by contract, with respect to the character in which the carrier should hold goods placed in its '‘warehouse awaiting delivery. In *5the case#now under consideration there was such contract entered into between the parties, which states that the corporation will be liable as warehousemen only, for the property when in their store-house.” This must be an end of the case, unless there is some statute of this State which renders such contract invalid.

In 1855 the Legislature passed an act to provide for the incorporation of railroad companies. Section 48 of that act provided:

“ Any railroad company receiving freight for transportation shall be entitled to the same rights, and subject to the same liabilities, as common carriers, except as herein otherwise provided. * * * No railroad corporation created in this State shall be suffered tp lessen, or directly or indirectly abridge, their common-law liability as such common carriers.”

The inhibition contained in this section was intended to prevent the corporations, by their own ex ¶arte act, by way of notice or otherwise, to limit or abridge their common-law liability, but it did not prevent the corporation and shippers from entering into contracts with each other abridging such liability.

In 1867 an act was passed entitled, “ An act to fix the liability of railroad companies, as common carriers, in certain cases.” (Laws of Michigan, 1867, p. 165.) Section 1 of that act reads as follows:

That no railroad company shall be permitted to change or limit its common-law liability as a common carrier, by any contract, or in any other manner, except by a written contract, none of which shall be planted, which shall be signed by the owner or shipper of' the goods or property to be carried.”

• It would be inferred from this legislation that railroad companies had been in the habit of entering into contracts with the owner or shipper of goods, limiting their common-law liability in some respect, and that some general form of printed contract had been adopted, similar, perhaps, to the contract entered into in this case. The Legislature, while not prohibiting the railroad companies from limiting their *6common-law liability by contract, required that such contract should be wholly in writing, and signed by the shipper.

The contention' of the plaintiff is that this law is still in force, while that of the defendant is that it has been repealed. The whole case turns upon this question. ■

In 1871 an act was passed “to revise the laws providing for the incorporation of railroad companies,” which, among other things, provided it should apply to all companies organized under the act of 1855, and contained this provision :

“ No company shall be suffered to lessen or abridge its common-law liability as a common carrier, unless by agreement,, to be signed by both parties thereto.”

The act contained a. clause repealing all acts and parts of acts contravening any of its provisions, without in terms mentioning the acts repealed. Upon the subject of restricting the common-law liability of railroad companies as common carriers these two acts covered the same subject. The-words “ to change or limit ” and to “ lessen or abridge ” are expressions of similar import, and the only substantial change between the two acts is that the act of 1867 required' the contract to be wholly written, and signed by the shipper, and that of 1871 required the agreement to be signed by both parties. Both acts permitted the common-law liability to be changed or abridged by a contract signed by the partiés. The change dispensing with the contract being wholly written was very material.

The rights of individuals are'as fully protected by a contract which is printed as by one which is wholly written, and. one is as binding as the other; and the only difference between the two statutes is that the latter is less onerous upon the railroad company than the other ; and, since no substantial rights of the parties are affected by the change, it appears evident, from the difference of phraseology, that the Legislature intended to relieve the carrier by railroad of the burden of reducing such contra cts to writing, requiring merely that the contract should be signed by both parties thereto.'

This intention is still more plainly manifested in the sub*7sequent legislation of 1873. At this session the Legislature' passed an act entitled—

“ An act to revise the laws providing for the incorporation of railroad companies, and to regulate the running and management, and to fix the duties and liabilities, of all railroad and other corporations owning or operating any railroad in this State.”

It will be noticed that the title of this act, by express mention, covers the subject of fixing the duties and liabilities of railroads. This act provides that—

“ Any railroad company organized under this act, receiving freight for transportation, shall be entitled to the rights, and be subject to the liabilities, of common carriers, except as herein otherwise provided; but no such company shall be suffered to lessen or abridge its common-law liability as a common carrier, unless by an agreement, to be signed by both parties thereto.”

The repealing clause of this statute repeals the general act of 185o; the act supplementary thereto of 1863; the act supplementary to the act of 1855, approved March 27,1867; another act, to compel railroad companies to provide aprons, passed in 1867 ; another act, for the relief of railroad companies in the Upper peninsula, passed in 1867; the act revising the laws for the incorporation of railroads, of 1871;

Also, all laws amendatory thereto, or in any of the parts thereof in conflict with the provisions of this act; but the organization of all corporations, under the provisions of either of said acts, shall be deemed and taken to be organizations under this act, and all rights, obligations, and liabilities contracted or incurred by any of such corporations thereunder, or under the provisions of any law now in force, not inconsistent with the provisions of this act, shall continue of the same force and effect as though such acts or laws had not been repealed; and all such companies, from and after the taking effect of this act, shall be subject to all the provisions hereof as fully as though such organization had been perfected hereunder.”

The defendant’s counsel claim that even if the act of 1867 was not repealed by that of 1871, it was by this act of 1873, *8not only by express terms, as being in conflict with its provisions, but by implication; since if the two acts are not repugnant, yet if the latter covers the whole subject of the first, and contains new provisions, showing that it was intended as a substitute, it will operate as a repeal: Shannon v. People, 5 Mich. 85; Breitung v. Lindauer, 37 Id. 217; Dewey v. Central Car & Manuf'g Co., 42 Id. 399; U. S. v. Tynen, 11 Wall. 88; Murdock v. Memphis, 20 Id. 590; U. S. v. Claflin, 97 U. S. 546; Bartlet v. King, 12 Mass. 537; Potter’s Dwar. Stat. 155, note 5.

On, the other hand, counsel for plaintiff as strenuously contends that the Legislature of 1873 did not intend to repeal the act of 1867, and he finds evidence of that fact in the repealing clause, which takes pains to specify these acts of the Legislature of 1867 which it repeals by name, all of which were approved the same day as that of 1867. This omission, he claims, shows clearly that the Legislature did not intend to repeal the act in question.

If we pause to inquire what, in all probability, caused the Legislature to specify in the repealing clause the titles of acts which unquestionably had been repealed by former legislation and revision, we will be answered, by the well-known facts, that the legislation upon the subject' of railroads had become cumbersome and uncertain by amendments, supplementary acts, and revision. An instance appears in the compilation of the laws of 1871, where the compiler included both the general railroad law of 1855 and the revision thereof of 1871, for the reason that he was uncertain whether the revision repealed the act revised.

It was for the purpose of removing any doubts respecting the acts named as being repealed that they were particularly specified in the repealing clause of 1873; and the argument and inference of plaintiff’s counsel would be quite conclusive had the Legislature been content to have stopped with naming the acts repealed. But it did not do so. It went on, and included all laws amendatory of the acts repealed, and also all laws in any parts thereof in conflict with the provisions of the law then enacted.

*9In a measure, these two laws do conflict with each other. There is no conflict as to requiring a contract or agreement in order to change or limit the common-law liability. As to this, both enactments have the same purpose, and are entirely harmonious. But the conflict or want of harmony lies in the manner in which such contract or agreement shall be evidenced. The former act required it to be wholly in writing, and signed by the shipper. The latter says nothing about the contract being in writing. It, however, contemplates that it shall not be verbal, merely requiring it shall be an agreement signed by both parties. Both cannot stand together without importing terms into the later statute not called for by any apparent reason or necessity, which would impose an onerous burden upon the contracting parties.

Bailroad companies have the right to adjust their charges for carrying, having in view the risks assumed by them or imposed by law. If such risk is to continue after the freight is transported to its destination, and while awaiting delivery from their warehouses, it may, with reason, be presumed that the rate would be higher than it wonld under an agreement that their responsibility for such goods should be only that of warehousemen. It is also of great importance to the public that the business between carriers and shippers shall be accompanied with as little delay as possible, and the Court . should be disinclined to give to the statute a construction which would operate as an obstruction to business.

To require contracts such as this to be wholly reduced to writing would unnecessarily hinder the business facilities for shipping, without accomplishing any good purpose, since the same contract printed, and signed by the parties, is of the same legal validity to secure the rights of the parties. If the contract must still be in writing, the subsequent statute is deprived of all force whatever, and is a waste of words. On the contrary, if we give it effect, the former statute is superseded.

I think it was the intention of the Legislature to repeal the statute of 1867, so far, at least, as it is covered by the act of *101873. It follows that the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed.

Campbell, C. J., and Sherwood, J., concurred. Morse,. J., concurred in the result.
midpage