37 S.E. 328 | N.C. | 1900
This is an action for the value of a carload of stone destroyed through the negligence of the defendant. The following, taken from the case on appeal, includes all the *201
evidence offered by either side: "It was admitted by (294) defendant that it was negligent, and liable for the value of the stone lost and destroyed; but defendant contended that the value was the amount agreed on in the bill of lading. Plaintiff testified that two years ago defendant placed a car on a siding about four miles from Salisbury to enable him to load the same with stone for shipment to Danville, consigned to a purchaser there, whose name appears in the bill of lading. After the car was loaded, it was moved by the company to another place, and afterwards got loose, and became a wreck, by reason of defective brakes. There was no depot at the siding, nor was there an agent at that point. Plaintiff obtained from the agent at Salisbury a blank bill of lading, and filled it up in his handwriting, and signed the same. He was instructed how to do this by the agent, and also instructed to value the load of stone at the rate of 20 cents a cubic foot, which, as plaintiff further testified, amounted to the sum of $46.60. Plaintiff testified that the stone was worth $218. This was a release shipment. Defendant objected to plaintiff's testifying that the stone was worth a greater sum than the amount specified in the contract, or bill of lading. Objection was overruled, and there was an exception to this ruling by defendant. Defendant introduced the bill of lading, which was admitted to be in the handwriting of, and signed by, plaintiff." It is unnecessary to set out the bill of lading in full, as the greater part of it has no relation whatever to the question at issue, and apparently was never intended to have. It seems to be a general form used indiscriminately for all kinds of business, and merely filled in with a few names and figures to fit in some degree the particular shipment. That it is not a special contract for this particular carload of stone shipped from a siding near Salisbury to Danville is apparent from the following express stipulations. Among other things, the bill of lading, which is of considerable length, provides (295) that: "As the packages aforesaid must pass through the custody of several carriers, it is understood, as a part of the consideration on which said packages are received, that the exemptions from liability made by such carriers, respectively, shall operate in the carriage by them, respectively, of said packages as though herein inserted at length, and especially that neither said carriers, nor either of them, shall be liable for leakage of any kind of liquids, nor for the losses by the bursting of casks or barrels of liquids, arising from expansion and unavoidable causes, breakage of any kind of glass, carboys of acid, or articles packed in glass, stoves, or stove furniture, castings, machinery, carriages, furniture, musical instruments of any kind, packages *202
of eggs, or for loss or damage on hay, hemp, cotton, or the evaporation or breakage of alcohol, or leakage of oil of any description, or for damage to perishable property of any kind, occasioned by delays of any kind or change of weather, or for the loss or damage on the sea or rivers. * * * It is further understood and agreed between the parties hereto, that the railway company above mentioned, or any connecting railroad company, shall not be liable for any damages by fire, or collisions on the rivers and sea, or for loss or damage by storm or accident on water, as the Southern Railway Company and connecting railroads assume no marine risks whatever." On its face appear the following words and figures: "Val. 20 cts. cubic foot." This is the only allusion it contains as to the value of the stone; nor is there the slightest intimation that this valuation in any way affected the rate of freight, or was based upon any consideration inuring to the plaintiff. It is not even stipulated that this valuation shall be binding upon either party, unless it is found by implication in the following clause: "In consideration (296) of the facilities afforded by this through bill of lading, and the through rates of transportation agreed upon, ____________ hereby consent to all of its provisions, and expressly agree to release the transportation companies and lines concerned in this bill of lading from any and all marine risks." It is somewhat difficult to see the direct application of this clause to the case at bar. The entire distance from the quarry to Danville is over the defendant's own line, and hence there is nothing in the nature of a through shipment, and certainly nothing that can properly be called marine risks. Nor does it appear that the plaintiff was afforded any unusual facilities. It is the duty of a common carrier to furnish all reasonable facilities, and the mere furnishing of such facilities affords no basis for any demand for additional compensation, or for the waiver of legal rights. The defendant admits that the loss occurred through its own negligence. It is a well-settled rule of law, practically of universal acceptance, that for reasons of public policy a common carrier is not permitted, even by express stipulation, to exempt itself from loss occasioned by its own negligence.Mitchell v. R. R.,
Cited: Parker v. R. R.,
(299)