40 Ga. App. 297 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1929
1. By the Cummins amendment to the interstate-commerce act, March 4, 1915 (38 Stat. 1196, 1197-7), a carrier is prohibited from providing “by rule, contract, regulation, or otherwise a shorter period of giving notice of claims than ninety days, and for the filing of claims for a shorter period than four months, and for the institution of suits than two years.” It is further provided by this amendment that “if the loss, damage or injury complained of was due to delay or damage while being loaded or unloaded, or damaged in transit by carelessness or negligence, then no notice of claim nor filing of claim shall be required as a condition precedent to recovery.” Accordingly, in a suit for loss of live stock in an interstate shipment, alleged to have been occasioned by the • negligence of the carrier, where notice of the loss was given within ten days, failure to comply with a provision of the contract, that “before the live stock is removed from the possession of the carrier or mingled with other live stock the shipper, owner, consignee, or agent thereof shall inform in writing the delivering carrier of any visible or manifest injury to the live stock,” did not deprive the plaintiff of the right to institute the action or recover thereon, and the grant of a nonsuit on account of such failure on the part of the shipper was error. Southern Ry. Co. v. Atlantic Ice & Coal Co., 40 Ga. App. 103 (149 S. E. 71).
2. Counsel for the defendant take the position that, the plaintiff having grounded his case on negligence, rather than upon the absolute liability of the carrier as an insurer, it was incumbent upon him to prove his case as laid. Assuming, without deciding, that this is the rule, the evidence submitted was such as to authorize a finding of negligence on the defendant’s part, there being proof that the hogs were properly loaded, and were sound and in good condition at the time they were loaded, and that fourteen of them were found dead within the car at an intermediate station about fifty miles from the point of shipment. Under such a proved state of facts, the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur could be taken to have application.
Judgment reversed.
Since the foregoing decision was handed down, this court has become cognizant of the fact that the statement contained in the second division of the decision, with reference to the position taken by counsel for the defendant, is inaccurate, in that, counsel for the defendant did not contend in their brief that the