70 Fla. 544 | Fla. | 1915
C. A. Howell and C. C. Howell, partners as Howell & Son, brought suit against the Gulf Coast Transportation Company, a corporation, common carT riers of freight for hire upon the Suwannee River, for the alleged negligent failure of the common carrier to- accept and transport one hundred and one barrels of rosin belonging to the plaintiffs and which had been, delivered
The declaration alleged in substance that the defendant corporation was engaged in the business of a common carrier of freight for hire upon the Suwannee River and for such purpose used a certain steamboat which ran between Cedar Keys and Branford, touching at other landings on the river, among which were Old Town. Wannee and Rocky Bluff, which latter landing is in Lafayette county. That the defendant kept no agent, station master nor other servant or agent at Rocky Bluff, but for years previous to the 24th day of April, 19x2, it was the constant and habitual custom1 and usage for persons who desired to ship freight by the defendant’s boat to' place the freight at the landing at Rocky Bluff and it was the constant and habitual custom1 and usage of the defendant to accept and transport all freight placed there for transportation. That prior to said date the plaintiffs and their predecessors in business for years had been engaged in the manufacture of rosin and spirits of turpentine and had been for years habitually and constantly accustomed to place rosin at that landing for transportation by the defendant without designating the consignee, place of destination, or givng to the defendant any instructions as to the same, but merely marked on the barrels a symbol, initials or name denoting the consignors, and that the defendant continuously and habitually accepted and carried the rosin so placed for transportation. That when rosin was placed by the plaintiffs at the landing for transporta
A demurrer to the declaration was interposed by the defendant, the first, second, third, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth and ninth ground's of which are argued. These grounds present the following points : 1st. The defendant had no notice from the plaintiffs or “otherwise” that the goods had been placed at the landing for shipment. 2nd. That the declaration did not allege that the barrels of rosin were properly marked with the name of the consignee and destination and it was not alleged that the rosin was ready for delivery when the defendant’s steamer passed the landing. 3rd. The name of the consignee and destination of the rosin was not alleged. 5th. That the declaration showed that the alleged negligence of the defendant was^not the proximate cause of the loss to the plaintiff. 6th. That the declaration showed the damage resulted from the Act of God. 7th. The declaration showed that the loss resulted from plaintiff’s negligence. 8th. That the declaration showed contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiffs, and 9th, That no contract was shown on the defendant’s part to carry the goods. That the barrels of rosin were not marked so as to indicate the name of the consignee and destination. That it did not appear that the landing was the “premises of the defendant,” nor did the declaration show on the part of the defendant any breach of contract or duty in not carrying the rosin.
The theory upon which the declaration is framed is that the defendant as a common carrier of freight by habitual custom and usage agreed with its patrons particularly the plaintiffs that the deposit of goods by the shipper for transportation at Rocky Bluff landing would constitute a delivery to the defendant at that point upon the passage of its first steamer. That such custom constituted an offer by the defendant to receive goods in that way for transportation. That by habitual custom and usage as practiced between the plaintiffs and the defendant, rosin in barrels shipped by the plaintiffs bore no other mark or symbol of ownership than the name or initials of the plaintiffs, and no other shipping directions or instructions were required to be given, and that the defendant should upon the passage of its first steamer take the freight and carry it to Wannee and deliver it to the Seaboard Air Line Railway or to Old Town and deliver it to the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, if .the defendant’s first passing steamer was going down the river, or in case the steamer should be going up the river, to carry the rosin to Branford and deliver it to the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad. That pursuant to this custom the plaintiffs placed at Rocky Bluff landing one hundred and 'one barrels of rosin, for transportation by the defendant, marked with the plaintiffs’ trading name “Howell and Son” and that on the, 24th day of April, 1912, the rosin so placed by the plaintiffs at the landing was ready for shipment. That the defendant’s steamer on its way down the river passed the landing on the afternoon of that date, after the rosin was ready for shipment, but negligently failed to carry it,-which act of negligence in view of the
It is distinctly alleged in the declaration that.when the defendant’s boat passed the Rocky Bluff landing on the afternoon of April 24th, 1912, the rosin was “ready and waiting” to be carried by the defendant.
That a carrier may by habitual cüstom and usage agree to accept and receive freight for transportation under the circumstances alleged in the declaration, we think is undoubtedly true. See 4 Elliott on Railroads, §§1411-1413; 5 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2nd ed.) 184; 1 Hutchinson on Carriers, §§115-116; Zan Vile on Bailments & Carriers, §440; Ethridge v. Central of Georgia R. Co., 136 Ga. 677, 71 S. E. Rep. 1063; Montgomery & Eufaula R. R. Co. v. Kolb, 73 Ala. 396; Merriam v. Hartford & New Haven R. R. Co., 20 Conn. 354; Pittsburg, C. C. & St. L. R. Co. v. American Tobacco Co., 126 Ky. 582, 104 S. W. Rep. 377; 4 R. C. L. “Carriers”, §170; Pratt v. Railway Co., 95 U. S. 43.
If the act of the defendant in passing the landing with its boat after the rosin had been placed and was ready for transportation, was a negligent breach of its duty under the circumstances, then such breach of duty concurring with the rise of water in the river caused the loss, and the defendant could not claim that the Act of God was the sole proximate cause so as to relieve the defendant from liability. In such case the rise of water in the river was not the immediate, direct and efficient cause of the loss, but only a secondary cause which without the defendant’s negligencewouldnothave resulted in a loss to the plaintiffs. See Clyde Steamship Co. v. Burrows, 36 Fla. 121, 18
The liability of a common carrier is that of an insurer of goods entrusted to it for transportation and it is held to a strict accountability for injury to or loss of such goods. While an Act of God, as that term is defined in law, may relieve the carrier from liability for the loss of goods in its custody occasioned thereby when the carrier itself is not at fault, it may happen that by the exercise of reasonable diligence and prudence a carrier may foresee the results likely to follow an impending storm or approaching flood, and make such effort and exercise such care and skill as the circumstances seem reasonably to require to protect the g-oods in its custody for transportation from injury or loss. In the case of Seaboard Air Line Ry. v. Mullin, supra, this court rejected the doctrine announced in Green Wheeler Shoe Co. v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co., 130 Iowa 123, 106 N. W. Rep. 498, 5 L. R. A. (N. S.) 882, to the effect that a negligent delay by a common carrier in transporting goods, which are injured by an Act of God before they reach their destination renders the carrier liable, notwithstanding the destructive Act of God could not reasonably have been foreseen at the time of the negligent delay, but adopted what we consider the more reasonable rale which exempts the carrier from liability under such circumstances. The declaration in this case, however, presents a situation different from that in which a delay in trans
The seventh and eighth grounds of the demurrer raise the point that the plaintiffs’ negligence contributed to the loss. Since a common carrier is liable for loss or injury to goods in its custody for transportation, although such loss resulted from an Act of God aided by the carrier's own negligence, he must negative all contributing fault of his own when he relies upon the fault or negligence of the shipper as concurring with the Act of God in producing the loss. A" case like this is differentiated from those cases resting primarily upon the defendant’s negligence in carrying persons. As stated by Judge McClellan in the case of McCarthy v. Louisville & N. R. Co., 102 Ala. 193, 14 South. Rep. 370, “The unaided, uncontributed to, negligence of the plaintiff producing the injury is a defense; but where there is negligence also on the part of the defendant, without which, notwithstanding plaintiff’s fault, the injury would not have happened, this fault of the defendant neutralizes and eviscerates the negligence of the plaintiff as a ground of defense. In the one case, plaintiff’s contributory negligence destroys the cause of action; in the other, defendant’s concurring- neg
The declaration does not show that the act of the plaintiffs in placing the rosin at the landing was such a negligent act on their part as concurring with the Act of God, without any aiding negligence of the defendant, re sutled in the loss. While it is true that the rosin would have been carried away in the flood, if the defendant had not passed the landing with its boat, or if its failure t.' take it was not a negligent act on its part under the circumstances, the declaration expressly alleges that the defendant’s failure to carry the rosin was negligence on its part. The demurrer was properly overruled.
The defendant filed six pleas as follows: First, the general issue; second, that Rocky Bluff landing was not a regular landing for defendant’s boat; that it received freight from that landing- only on notice, and that it had no notice that the rosin mentioned in the declaration had been placed at the landing for transportation by defendant, and the rosin was never delivered to defendant for transportation; third, that the defendant did not receive the goods for transportation; that they were not marked in the name of the consignee or point of destination, nor was defendant requested to receive and transport the goods and was not advised by plaintiff that the goods were marked and placed at the landing for transportation by defendant. The fourth plea in full is as follows: “4. And for a fourth plea this defendant says that on the occasion of the alleged negligence, the recent heavy rainr had swollen the Suwannee River to such a great extent as to render transportation thereon extremely difficult and perilous, both to defendant and shippers; that at that date
The plaintiffs demurred to the second, third, and fifth pleas, replied to the fourth and joined issue upon the first and sixth pleas, and the defendant joined issue upon the plaintiffs’ replication to the fourth plea. The demurrer was sustained and the defendant assigns as the second error that “The court erred in sustaining plaintiffs’ demurrer to defendant’s third, fourth and fifth pleas.” There was no demurrer to the fourth plea. The counsel for plaintiff in error probably intended to assign as error the order sustaining the demurirer to the defendant’s second, third and fifth pleas. There was no error in sustaining the demurrer. The matters of defense set up< in the second and third pleas were admissible under the general issue, while the fifth plea, stripped of its surplusage, and regarded as one setting up the Act of God as a defense was fully covered by the fourth plea.
The fourth, fifth and sixth assignments question the sufficiency of the evidence. The case presents questions of constructive delivery by custom and usage of the plain
Where the claim is made, as in this case, that notwithstanding the intervention of an Act of God, the loss would not have happened but for the negligence of the carrier in unreasonably delaying the transportation of the goods and thus negligently exposing them to the destructive Act of God, the burden of proof is upon him who affirms it. While it is true that the liability of a common carrier for injury or loss of goods intrusted to him for transportation is that of an insurer, he is relieved of such liability where the destruction of or injur);- to the goods results solely from an Act of God. The carrier’s liability in cases where goods are injured or destroyed in his custody by Act of God rests upon his negligence which mingling or concurring- with the Act of God resulted in producing the loss. The carrier’s liability in such cases is that of a common carrier, and not that of a.n insurer. The carrier’s position is the same as that where he contracts with the shipper against liability for loss or damag-e to goods from certain causes or accidents. In one case the carrier is relieved from liability by the Act of God, in the other
A careful examination of the evidence in the case as exhibited by the bill of exceptions fails to show that the second trial of the case developed any clearer proof of the alleged usage and custom of the defendant to stop its boat at Rocky Bluff landing upon its first passage after goods had been placed there by the plaintiff for transportation, than was exhibited upon the record when the case was here before. In some particulars the evidence for the plaintiffs may be more certain, but that for the defendant is equally so. Upon the entire record, however, there is in our opinion a lack of that degree of clearness and definiteness as to the existence of the custom which in the former opinion this court said was necessary. C. A. Howell for. the plaintiffs testified that it was the “custom1 for the boat people to take this rosin on the boat and carry to the railroad company at one of the three points mentioned on their first trip after the rosin was placed there unless there was just a few barrels.” On cross-examination he said: “I did not know this of my own personal knowledge, I was not always present.” That he knew nothing more about the custom
John H. Peck for the defendant said he was in the employment of the defendant during the year 1912. He was Master of the steamer and agent of the company. He said the custom was to take rosin from the landing when there was a sufficient amount gathered on the bank for shipment; that he did not always stop and take on rosin at Rocky Bluff landing when there was a carload on the bank, he used his own discretion' about it, “all the landings the same way.” “I did not always stop at the first passing and take on rosin deposited at Rocky Bluff; we generally took it off if there was an occasion, but sometimes passed by and got it going back.”
The evidence does not, as we stated, clearly and definitefy show such a usage or custom as to the carrying of freight by the defendant from Rocky Bluff landing as is alleged in the declaration. The plaintiffs therefore failed to show any contract with the defendant relative to the shipment of the rosin and showed no actual or constructive delivery of it to the defendant for transportation.
As to proof of defendant’s negligence in failing to remove the rosin under the circumstances, even if it had been its duty by reason of any contract of shipment to do so, there is no evidence whatsoever. On the other hand there was evidence that the flood was an unusual one, and no evidence that the defendant had any reason to believe or anticipate the rising of the waters to the great height which they reached.
The judgment of the court below is reversed.
Taylor, C. J., and Shackleford, Cockrell and Whitfield, JJ., concur.