Hearn v. Louisville & Nashville R. R.

60 So. 600 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1912

PER CURIAM.

This suit was brought by the appellant against the appellee to recover the damages which the appellant claims he sustained because of the failure of the' appellee to deliver to him at Altoona, Ala., certain freight. The freight was received by the appellee as a common carrier and was, by appellee as such common carrier, for a reward, to be transported to Altoona and there delivered to the appellant. The freight reached Altoona on one of appellant’s trains on October 26, 1910, and was on that day placed by it in its depot Avarehouse at that point It remained in the depot warehouse until 2 o’clock on the morning of November 2, 1910, when said warehouse and the freight, the subject of this litigation, were destroyed by fire. The only question is: Was the appellee, at the time of said fire,"still liable to appellant as a common carrier, or was it only liable to him as a Avarehouseman?

*4851. If, at the time the freight was destroyed by fire, the appellee then held said freight as a common carrier, the appellant was entitled to recover. If, on the other hand, the appellee then occupied only the position of a warehouseman as to such freight, the appellee was entitled to recover. The case was tried by a judge without the intervention of a jury, there was a special finding of the facts by the trial judge, and a judgment for the appellee, and the plaintiff in the court below appeals.

2. It appears from the evidence that appellant, at the time of the loss complained of, was moving with his family to Altoona, and that the freight referred to consisted of his household effects. On or about the 24th of October, the appellant Avas in Altoona. The freight Avas then on its way to Altoona, but had not reached there. As the appellant desired to spend a few days in Birmingham and to leave Altoona on the above day, he made arrangements Avith B. H. Ellison and John Reese to receive said freight upon its arrival at Altoona and to remove it to the house which appellant intended to occupy as a home in Altoona. Reese lived about two miles from Altoona, and Ellison lived about three-quarters of a mile from the appellee’s depot and freight warehouse at that point. The appellant had a brother-in-law, Rhodes, Avho resided in Altoona, and this brother-in-law met four of appellee’s passenger trains each day at its depot in Altoona. Before leaving Altoona, the appellant saw appellee’s agent at Altoona, told him that he was leaving for Birmingham; that the freight would probably reach Altoona before his return; that Ellison and Reese Avere his agents to receive and remove the freight; and that, if the freight came before appellant’s return, the agent might notify Rhodes of its arrival, and that Rhodes Avould notify Ellison. The *486freight came during appellant’s absence; the agent saw Rhodes, and notified him of its arrival. According to the special finding of the facts by the trial judge, when this occurred the agent asked Rhodes if he was to remove the freight, to which Rhodes replied that “B. H. Ellison was to remove them, and he would notify Ellison, to which the agent replied, ‘He has a phone, and I will call him up.’ ” The agent’s testimony tended to show that he called for Ellison, but did not reach’him over the telephone, and all the evidence shows that neither Rhodes nor the agent ever said anything to Ellison about the freight. On November 1, 1910, the appellant returned to Altoona from Birmingham, and, finding his freight still in the depot, undertook to remove it. He was. unable to do so, however, and that night it was destroyed by fire.

3. Section 5604 of the Code of 1907 makes it the duty of a common carrier of freight, within 24 hours after the arrival of freight at its destination, to give notice by mail or otherwise to the consignee of the arrival of such freight. The consignee is, by the terms of section 5613 of the Code of 1907, given “forty-eight hours, computing from seven o’clock a. m. of the day following legal notice of arrival,” within which to remove such freight. After that time, if the freight has not been removed, the relations between the common carrier and the consignee become by virtue of said statute, those which a warehouseman owes to its customers, and only those. Of course as the appellant — the consignee of the freight referred to — was out of Altoona when the freight arrived, if the agent of appellee gave the notice to that party to whom the appellant directed it to be given when the freight arrived, then the agent performed his duty under the statute above referred to, and the time within which the freight under the above *487statutes should have been removd began to run. Undoubtedly if the agent had given notice to Ellison and Reese, instead of to Rhodes, the law would have been complied with. The appellant told appellee’s agent that he might discharge that duty by giving notice to Rhodes. While the agent, when he performed that duty, told Rhodes that he would call Ellison up over the telephone, his failure to do so did not, in any sense, destroy the agency of Rhodes to receive the notice, and we cannot hold that the special finding of the facts by the trial judge did not authorize the trial judge to conclude as a part of such special finding, to use his language, that “Rhodes was the agent of plaintiff to receive notice of the arrival of the goods, which notice was given within 24 hours of the arrival of the goods, and in giving the notice the defendant discharged its duty to the plaintiff in that respect.” While the trial judge, in the special finding of facts, states that the appellee, after the expiration of 48 hours after such notice to Rhodes, held the goods as a warehouseman for hire, when, under the law, appellee did not become a warehouseman until the expiration of 48 hours after 7 o’clock of the morning succeeding the notice to Rhodes, that error amounts to nothing. The goods were in the depot, as shown by the special finding of facts, more than 48 hours after 7 a. m. of the day succeeding the day on Avhich Rhodes received the notice, and, under the special finding of the facts, the appellee was a warehouseman, under the law, for hire of such goods at the time they Avere destroyed by fire, and we cannot hold that the special finding of the facts does not support the judgment Avhich was rendered by the trial court.

“Where a case is tried by the court without a jury, and a special finding of the facts is requested and had, on appeal from the judgment thus rendered the appel*488late court cannot review the facts as found, but will only examine it to see if the facts as found will support the judgment rendered.” — Kitchen Bros. v. Robinson Bros., 138 Ala. 419, 35 South. 461; 5 Mayfield’s, Dig. p. 44, §§ 271, 272, and authorities cited.

The judgment of the court below is affirmed.

Affirmed.

Note. — The foregoing opinion was prepared by Judge de Grapfenrieo, while he was a judge of this court, and is adopted by the court.

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