130 Iowa 123 | Iowa | 1906
In the agreed statement on which the case was tried without other evidence being introduced it is stipulated that the defendant was guilty of negligent delay in the forwarding of the goods of plaintiff from Pt. Dodge to Kansas City, where they were lost or injured on May 30, 1903, by a flood which was so unusual and extraordinary as to constitute an act of God, and that if there had been no such negligent delay the goods would not have been caught in the flood referred to or damaged thereby.
We have presented for our consideration, therefore, the simple question whether a carrier who by a negligent delay in transporting goods has subjected them, in the course of transportation, to a peril which has caused their damage or destruction, and for the consequence of which the carrier would not have been liable had there been no negligent delay intervening, is liable for the loss.
On this question there is a well-recognized conflict in the authorities. In several well-considered cases decided by courts of high authority it was decided, while the question was still new, that the negligent delay of the carrier in transportation could not be regarded as the proximate cause of an ultimate loss by a casualty which in itself constituted an act of God, as that term is used in defining the carrier’s" exemption from liability, although had the goods been transported with reasonable diligence they would not have been subjected to such casualty, and these cases are very similar to the one before us inasmuch as the loss in each instance was due to the goods being overtaken by an unprecedented flood for the consequence of which the carrier would not be responsible. Morrison v. Davis, 20 Pa. 171 (57 Am. Dec. 695) ; Denny v. New York Cent. R. Co., 13 Gray (Mass.) 481 (74 Am. Dec. 645) ; Railroad Co. v. Reeves, 10 Wall. 176 (19 L. Ed. 909); Daniels v. Ballantine, 23 Ohio St. 532 (13 Am. Rep. 264) ; Hunt v. Missouri, K. & T. R. Co. (Tex. Civ. App.), 74 S. W. 69; Gleeson v. Virginia Mid
On the other hand, it was held by the Court of Appeals of New York in a case arising out of the same flood which caused the destruction of the goods involved in Denny v. New York Cent. R. Co., 13 Gray (Mass.) 481 (74 Am. Dec. 645), supra, that the preceding negligent delay on the part of the carrier, in consequence of which the goods were overtaken by the flood, was sufficient ground for holding the carrier to be liable for the loss. Michaels v. New York Cent. R. Co., 30 N. Y. 564 (86 Am. Dec. 415) ; Read v. Spaulding, 30 N. Y. 630 (86 Am. Dec. 426). And the same court has adhered to this view in case of a loss by fire
The irreconcilable conflict in the authorities is recog-' nized by text-writers, and while the Weight of general authority has in many cases been said to support the rule announced in the Massachusetts and Pennsylvania cases (1 Thompson, Negligence, section 74; Schouler, Bailments [Ed. 1905] section 348; Hale, Bailments and Carriers, 361; 6 Cyc. 382; notes 36 Am. St. Rep. 838), other authors prefer the New York rule (Hutchinson, Carriers [2nd Ed.] section 200; Ray. Negligence of Imposed Duties, 177). In the absence of any express declaration of this court on the very point, and in view of the fact that in recent cases the conflict of authority is still recognized (see 5 'Cur. Law, 517) it seems necessary that the reasons on which the two lines of cases are supported shall be considered in order that we may now reach a conclusion which shall be satisfactory to us.
Mere negligence will not render one person liable to another for a loss which the latter would not have sustained had there been no such negligence, unless the negligence consists in some violation of a duty which the one person owes to the other. Dubuque Wood & Coal Ass’n v. City and County of Dubuque, 30 Iowa, 176; St. Louis, I. M. & S. R. Co. v. Commercial Ins. Co., 139 U. S. 223 (11 Sup. Ct. 554, 35 L. Ed. 154). And, on the other hand, it is well settled that if the negligence of one person with reference to the duty owed to another concurs with an accidental cause resulting in injury to another to whom such duty is owed the negligent person must answer for the consequences as though his negligence were the sole cause of the loss. Savannah, F.
The real difficulty seems to be in determining to what extent, if at all, it is necessary that the negligent party must have been able to- foresee and anticipate the result of his negligent act in order to render him liable for the consequences thereof resulting from a concurrence of his negligence and another cause for which he is not responsible. In an action on contract the party who is at fault is only liable for such consequences as arise according to the usual course of things from his breach, or such as may reasonably be supposed to have been in the contemplation of both parties at the time the contract was made as the probable result of the breach. Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch. 341; Sedgwick, Elements of Damage, 17. But in an action for tort, and the present action is of that character, recovery is not limited to the consequences within the contemplation of the parties or either of them, but includes all the consequences “ resulting by ordinary natural sequence, whether foreseen by the wrongdoer or not, provided that the operation of the' cause of action is not interrupted by the intervention of an independent agent or overpowering force, and that but for the operation of the cause of action the consequence would not have ensued.” Sedgwick, Elements-of Damage, section 54. It is true that for the purpose of determining whether the injury suffered by the party complaining was the natural and probáble result of the wrong complained of a convenient test is to consider whether in general such a result might have been foreseen as the consequence of the wrong, but it is not necessary “ that the injury in the precise form in which it in fact resulted should have been foreseen. It is enough
Now, while it is true that defendant could not have anticipated this particular flood and could not have foreseen that its négligent delay in transportation would subject.the' goods to such a danger, yet it is now apparent that such delay did subject the goods to the danger, and that but for the delay they would not have been destroyed; and defendant should have foreseen, as any reasonable person could foresee, that the negligent delay would extenVthe time during which the goods would be liable in the hands of the carrier to be overtaken by some such casualty, and would therefore increase the peril that the goods should be thus lost to the shipper. This consideration that the peril of accidental destruction is enhanced by the negligent extension of time during which the goods must remain in the carrier’s control and out of the control of the owner, and during which some casualty may overtake them, has not, we think, been given sufficient consideration in the cases in which the carrier has been held not responsible for a loss for which he is not primarily liable, but which has overtaken the goods as a consequence of the preceding delay in their transportation.
It is not sufficient for the carrier to say by way of excuse that while a proper and diligent transportation of the goods would have kept them, free from the peril by which they were in fact lost it might have subjected them to some
This court has expressed itself in favor of the liability of the carrier in classes of cases very analogous to that of deviation. Where goods were shipped with the agreement that they should be carried to their destination without change of cars, and in violation of this contract the goods were unloaded at' Chicago which was not their destination,
We are satisfied that the sounder reasons, supported by good authority, require us to hold that in this case the carrier is liable for the loss of and damage to plaintiff’s goods, and the judgment of the trial court is therefore reversed.