200 S.E. 403 | N.C. | 1939
This is a civil action to recover damages for the death of ten mules, and disease to others, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the carrier. The action was brought under the Carmack Act (U.S.C.A., Tit. 49, sec. 20, par. 11), making the delivering carrier answerable for damages to property in transit. It was admitted that the mules were shipped from National Stockyards, Illinois, to Atlanta for feeding and watering, then were reloaded and shipped to Lumberton, North Carolina. There were two carloads of twenty-four mules each.
Plaintiff's evidence tended to show that all the mules were free from disease and in good condition when delivered to the railroad at National Stockyards, Illinois. It was testified as to the condition of the mules *649 in both shipments: "Those 48 mules . . . were all in sound and good health and in fine shape. You would not see any two carloads of mules that would leave St. Louis in better condition when they left. . . . Health and soundness was absolutely good without any defects or anything in them." The barns and pens, from which they were shipped about the middle of August, 1936, were in good sanitary condition and there was no sickness among the animals there at the time or immediately preceding the time of shipment. "There was no disease of any kind prevalent at the horse and mule barns at that time, our barns were in fine shape. The health condition at that time was good. We had no sick mules of any kind at that time. . . ." The assistant state verterinarian [veterinarian] for Illinois testified: "During the period from the first of July, 1936, to the first of October, 1936, including the month of August, we had no contagious or infectious diseases at the barns at the stockyards. I saw these 48 mules in the barns of Mr. Sparks there before they were shipped, I just saw them in the pens and as far as I could tell, they all looked in good physical condition." The mules were bought individually at National Stockyards, but were shipped in the two cars over the same route, were unloaded for food and water at the same point, and had the same disease at the end of the journey. Plaintiff's barns, where the mules were finally unloaded, were in excellent sanitary condition, and the evidence tended to show that no disease was contracted there. Plaintiff testified: "Before these mules arrived we scrubbed out the troughs, swept down the walls, disinfected with cresodip. We did that before we got in either carload. We scrubbed the troughs out and turned them over and left them for a few days to dry, and before I put water in them we disinfected them and washed them out with clear water after they dried. We did that before we give them water out of the trough." There was much evidence of a similar character as to the care given these mules upon arrival. The mules were sick when they arrived and the condition grew worse. The mules in the first carload appeared "droopy and tired," "jaded," and "didn't eat" when they arrived. Next morning they were in "bad condition," "looked sick," and the following morning two died. They were very sick when the veterinarian arrived that day. On the same day the second car arrived; in that car one was already sick and another nervous and wild. The sick one died that night and the nervous one two days later. Ten mules died within two days after the arrival of the second car, three from the first carload and seven from the second. Although a waiver of feeding and watering for 36 hours, as permitted by law, was signed by plaintiff, the first carload had no food or water for 431/2 hours before reaching Atlanta; also, carriers disregarded the agreement to allow the mules an extra 24 hours for rest, feed, and watering at Atlanta. The *650 disease affecting the mules was hemorrhagic septicaemia, or generalized blood poisoning, with secondary enteritis, or inflammation of the small intestines. Septicaemia, it appears, may be contracted from infected quarters, feed racks and watering troughs, and long periods without food and water may cause an active case to develop. A qualified expert testified: "If the germ of septicaemia is in the animal and that animal is transported from St. Louis to Lumberton, say twelve to fifteen hundred miles in crowded cars, twenty-four to the car, and necessarily requiring that they remain on the cars for a considerable distance, and if this lowers the resistance of the animal and the germ is in him, that would cause the germ to become active. In this particular type we were dealing with a very virulent type, like a mass infection." Among the causes of enteritis given were "changes of feed, lowered resistance and changes of feed, improper feeding, that is, omissions of feed and water. . . ."
At the close of plaintiff's evidence motion for judgment of nonsuit was made and allowed. From judgment dismissing the action, plaintiff appealed. A single determinative question is presented: Was the evidence offered sufficient to take the case to the jury as to the negligence of the railroad in the transportation of the mules in question? This question must be answered in the affirmative.
The pertinent evidence is summarized briefly above. Evidence that the mules were delivered to the carrier in sound, healthy condition from sanitary pens and from lots which were free from disease, that there was undue delay in feeding and watering the animals in transit, that the carrier did not give the animals the period of rest which it contracted to allow them, and that the animals arrived in a diseased condition, such a disease being one which may be caused, or cause to develop actively, by treatment similar to that given the animals in question, is sufficient to shift — not the burden of proof — but the burden of going forward (the risk of nonpersuasion) to the defendant. In Edgerton v. R. R.,
The general rule as to goods damaged in transit is that such damage is presumed to have resulted from the carrier's negligence. Holmes v. R. R.,
Reversed.