10 Ind. App. 206 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1894
Lead Opinion
This was an action broug'ht by appellees to recover the possession of a car load of lumber alleged to have been wrongfully detained by appellant.
The only questions presented arise upon the motion for a new trial.
On July 10th, 1891, a car load of lumber was shipped from Eagle Mills, Ark., directed to appellees, at Fort Wayne, Ind., Ft. W., C. & L. delivery. A bill of lading was issued to the shippers, and a waybill was forwarded with the car showing the destination to be Fort Wayne, Ind., Ft. W., 0. & L. delivery, by which was meant the station of the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Company at Fort Wayne, which was used by the Fort Wayne, Chicago and Louisville Railway Company. After passing through the hands of several carriers, the car was delivered to appellant, at Winchester, together with the waybill, and was hauled by it to its yards in Fort Wayne, where it arrived July 21st, 1891. The terminus of appellant’s road was at a Y, about one and one-half miles from its station and about one mile from the L. S. &M. S. depot, the destination of the car named in the waybill.
According to the usual mode of doing business the appellant would put the car upon this Y, whence it would be taken by the connecting line. On July 22d the appellant notified appellees of the arrival of the lumber, with the amount of charges, $69.48, and that the goods would remain at the station at appellees’ risk, subject to charges for storage after twenty-four hours. Three or four days after giving this notice appellant called up the L. S. & M. S. agent by telephone and asked him if he would accept the car. He refused to accept the car and pay or assume the freight charges already incurred. Appellant made no further or other effort to deliver the car to the connecting carrier, nor was there any further communi
Question (to Mr. Diether). Did you ever talk over the telephone with Mr. Clisbee (appellant’s agent) about this car? Ans. Yes.
Q. Did you ask about the car, or say anything to him about the car, or say anything to him except about putting the car over on the other road? Ans. He telephoned me and asked if we would pay the freight and take the car. I told him that if he would put the car over there, I said we would take care of it and pay the freight.
Q. What did he say in answer? Ans. He said he had instructions from the general freight agent not to deliver the car until the freight was paid. This was about two weeks after the arrival of the car.
Of this conversation, Mr. Clisbee had no recollection. About August 26th appellees tendered to appellant the freight charges and demanded the lumber, but their demand was refused, appellant claiming an additional $1 per day for,use of car, or demurrage.
A number of questions arise in different ways, but the vital question is whether or not appellant had performed its duty in full prior to the tender and demand. If it had not, or fails to show a good excuse for its nonperformance, then it was in the wrong in claiming storage, even if under proper circumstances such a charge may be made and sustained by a lien on the goods.
Without stopping to determine whether or not a lien is allowed for storage charges, in the absence of a contract, and without stopping to inquire whether the goods were received under the bill of lading, we assume the duty of the appellant to have been simply to safely carry
The appellant, as a common carrier, was entitled to demand payment of its charges in advance, but by accepting the goods for carriage without requiring prepayment, this right was waived. Hutch. Carriers, section 469.
A common carrier, which has received goods for carriage without requiring prepayment, does not then become entitled to demand its freight charges until its duty has been performed, either by delivery or an offer to deliver at the place of destination. Hutch. Carriers, section 469; Holliday v. Coe, 3 Ind. 26; Rogers v. West, 9 Ind. 400; 2 Redf. Rys., section 188, pars. 1 and 33.
The utmost, then, that could have been rightfully claimed by appellant was that its charges should be paid when it had carried the goods to the end of its line and was ready to deliver them to the succeeding carrier. Until this was done, or at least a good excuse shown for its not being done, appellant was not entitled to demand payment of its charges from any one.
Whether or not, having received these goods as a connecting carrier for shipment to a point beyond its line, without demanding payment in advance, it thereby waived any right to demand its charges until the final point of destination was reached, and should have asked of the succeeding carrier that it should collect its charges
The notice given to appellees on July 22 was given before appellant had made any attempt to deliver the goods to the succeeding carrier, and without having carried them to the end of appellant’s line. Appellant was, therefore, not entitled to charge storage by reason of the failure of appellees to peiy the charges at that time or to receive the goods at the place where they then were, and there was no default upon the part of appellees by reason of their failure to comply with the requirements of that notice. When then, if ever, did the appellees become in fault?
According to the evidence of appellant this notice was the only communication between the parties until the tender and demand were made. Counsel for the appellant, in his argument, assumes that appellees had wrongfully refused to pay. For this we are unable to find any •support in the evidence.
That appellant never did place the ear upon the Y at the end of its line where it could have been received and carried forward by the connecting carrier is undisputed. For its nonperformance of that which was essential to justify a demand for the payment of their charges, no excuse is offered by the evidence save the fact that the connecting line, when asked about receiving this car, refused to receive it and assume charges. This refusal alone was not sufficient to excuse the appellant from any further attempt at performance, and to authorize it to treat the contract as fully performed upon its part and its duty as carrier terminated.
No notice of this refusal was given to appellees. There was not even an offer by appellant to put the car upon the Y if appellees would pay their charges.
The evidence of Diether that the agent asked him by
We are called upon to deal simply with the case brought before us by the record, and as to that it is sufficient to say that the facts show neither performance nor excuse for nonperformance of its duty by appellant. Its duty as a carrier had not been fulfilled when the demand and tender were made; until its liability as a carrier terminated, its rights as a warehouseman would not begin. Pittsburgh, etc., R. W. Co. v. Nash, 43 Ind. 423.
Appellees were entitled to notice of the succeeding carrier’s refusal to accept the goods. Hutch. Carriers, section 103a.
These views of the law applicable to the facts in this case render it unnecessary for us to take up in detail the consideration of the various propositions advanced by appellant’s learned and ingenious counsel. Neither is it necessary to consider each instruction given or refused, for with the law and the facts as we have found them to be, any errors in the instructions complained of could not but be harmless, and therefore no cause for reversal. R. S. 1894, section 670; City of Lafayette v. Ashby, 8 Ind. App. 214.
As a general rule, the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain answers to interrogatories which could in no event control the general verdict, will not justify the court in granting a new trial for want of evidence. Staser v. Hogan, 120 Ind. 207 (228); Chicago, etc., R. R. Co. v. Kennington, 123 Ind. 409.
It is further contended that the court erred in permitting the money to be paid into court as a tender, for the reason that the money paid in was not the identical money tendered. In this there was no error. Colby v. Stevens, 38 N. H. 191; Michigan, etc., R. R. Co. v. Dunham, 30 Mich. 128; Curtiss v. Greenbanks, 24 Vt. 536.
In Evansville, etc., R. R. Co. v. Marsh, 57 Ind. 505, it is held that in an action such as this it is necessary to plaintiff’s recovery that he should follow up his tender by paying the “amount of the lien tendered into court.”
This was done in this case.
Judgment affirmed.
Rehearing
On Petition for, a Rehearing.
After a reexamination of the original opinion in this case, there would not seem to be a very wide difference between the theory of the law upon which the case is there decided and the views expressed by counsel in their petition for rehearing, although we did not then, and do not now, deem it necessary to decide some of the questions so ably presented by appellant.
The learned counsel says: “I concede that the appellees were entitled to notice that their lumber had arrived, and that it was not forwarded, and the reason why such was not the case, if they did not know it already. The reason of this is that the owner may be enabled to protect himself from loss.”
The only source from which counsel claim this information to have been shown to be possessed by Diether is from his conversation with Clisbee, set out in the original opinion. We are unable to construe this conversation to convey to appellees knowledge of the connecting carrier’s refusal to receive the car and pay the freight, which fact alone could have justified their demand for the payment of their freight at that time.
Attention is called to one or two slight inaccuracies in the statement of facts. Granting them to exist, they are such as could not in the slightest degree affect the result in the cause.
As to the damages recovered in the court below, since the appellees offered to remit $10 thereof, but the court seems to have overlooked it, we have concluded to order a credit upon the judgment for that amount as of the date thereof.
Upon this condition, the petition for rehearing is overruled, at the costs of appellant.