85 S.E. 1060 | S.C. | 1915
August 12, 1915. The opinion of the Court was delivered by Plaintiff recovered judgment in the Civil and Criminal Court of Charleston for $194.21 damages done to a shipment from Jacksonville, Fla., to Charleston, S.C. and $50, the penalty prescribed by statute for failure to pay the claim within the time therein specified. This judgment was affirmed on appeal to the Circuit Court and defendant appealed to this Court.
The shipment consisted of a soda fountain and its parts, among which were several crates of marble.
The jury in the trial Court found that the damage occurred while the goods were in defendant's possession. It is needless to say that we have no jurisdiction to review the findings of fact, unless they are wholly unsustained by evidence.
It would serve no useful purpose to state the testimony in detail or to discuss the tendencies of the evidence. It is sufficient to say that there was evidence tending to prove that the goods were delivered to defendant at Jacksonville in good order, except that a piece was broken out of the back of the fountain which was noted on the bill of lading, and that, when they were delivered to plaintiff, at Charleston, four pieces of marble, besides the one noted on the bill of lading, were broken, and that the damage amounted to $194.21.
The contention that the drayman, who received the goods from the defendant and hauled them to plaintiff's place of business was a common carrier, and, therefore, under our decisions, the presumption arose, which, according to the contention, was not rebutted, that the damage was done by him — the last carrier — cannot help the defendant; because, *431 in that view, defendant was the initial carrier, and, this being an interstate shipment, defendant would be liable to plaintiff under the Carmack amendment of the act to regulate interstate commerce. But we do not concede that either branch of the contention is correct. However, the fact that the goods were not damaged before they were received by defendant, or after they were delivered to the drayman, was found against defendant, and, as we have said, there is evidence to sustain the finding.
In disposing of one of the issues of fact, the Circuit Court said: "Now, whether these pieces were broken while in the hands of the defendant or by the careless handling in removal from the wharf to plaintiff's place of business does not clearly appear. However, as these matters were left for the jury to determine, and as both they and the Judge of the said Court are much better acquainted with the conditions existing and surrounding the transaction than I am, I cannot hold that there is any reversible error in the verdict."
We do not agree with appellant that the Court erred in giving due consideration to the findings of the trial Court, and in not deciding the questions of fact anew from the evidence, as if there had been no findings thereon in the trial Court. Appeals from the Civil and Criminal Court of Charleston to the Circuit Court are heard upon the record sent up, just as appeals from magistrate's Court are heard by the Circuit Court. The trial on appeal is not de novo. The Circuit Judge does not see and hear the witnesses, and, as a rule, he does not know them, or their relative credibility, or the circumstances which might affect it, as well as the trial Court and jury. Therefore, where the evidence is conflicting, or susceptible of more than one inference, the appellate Court should give due weight to the findings of the triers of facts who had the advantages mentioned. The general rule in appellate Courts is that the findings of the Court below are prima facie correct, *432 and the burden is upon the appellant to show that those excepted to are against the weight of the evidence.
The bill of lading provides that no carrier thereunder shall be liable for loss or damage resulting from a number of causes; among them is "breakage;" and it appeared that the damage complained of was caused by "breakage." Appellant contends, therefore, that, as there was no evidence of negligence, there was no liability.
When plaintiff proved that the goods were delivered to defendant in good order and that they were damaged when delivered to the drayman by defendant, a prima facie case was made out against defendant. The burden was then cast upon defendant to prove that it exercised due care and diligence, in other words, that the damage was not caused by its negligence. Johnstone v.R. Co.,
Since the decision of this case on Circuit, the decision of this Court in Varnville Furniture Co. v. C. W.C. Ry.,
If the plaintiff shall remit the penalty within twenty days after notice of the filing of the remittitur herein in the Circuit Court, the judgment below will stand affirmed; otherwise a new trial is ordered.
Reversed nisi.