18 Ga. App. 539 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1916
Lead Opinion
1. The dismissal of an action on demurrer to the petition' is a final judgment, and will support a writ of error.
2. Where a bill of exceptions recites the dismissal of an action on demurrer, and assigns error on the sustaining of the demurrer, and states that the plaintiff in error “presents this his bill of exceptions in order that the error complained of may be considered,” a motion to dismiss the writ of error, on the ground that there is no exception to the final judgment, is not well taken.
3. Prior to May 1, 1916, it was not unlawful in Georgia for common carriers to transport and deliver intoxicating liquors, even in large quantities. It is the duty of a common carrier to accept and carry all lawful freight, — a duty which, even as to intoxicating liquors, as the law stood in 1914, could be enforced by mandamus or other appropriate proceedings. L. & N. R. Co. v. F. W. Cook Brewing Co., 223 U. S. 70 (32 Sup. Ct. 189, 56 L. ed. 355); Adams Express Company v. Kentucky, 238 U. S. 190 (35 Sup. Ct. 824, 59 L. ed. 1267). Hence, in 1914, for a railroad company to, receive and transport intoxicating liquors, duly delivered to it and consigned to a person whose name appeared on the labels on the packages, did not entitle the consignee to maintain an action for libel against the railroad company, even though he had notified an agent of the company that his name was being improperly used in the shipments of liquor, and that the shipment of liquor in his name was against his express orders.
4. Though it is alleged that the railroad company knew that the whisky was not really consigned to the plaintiff, it is also alleged that the whisky was received by the railroad company as a freight shipment
5. Libel can not be predicated of a true statement. Hence, where liquor has been received at a railroad depot, consigned to a named person, a simple statement of this fact is not actionable as libel, even though the liquor was wrongfully shipped to the named person. Whether a person
6. Notwithstanding it may be a violation of law for a common carrier to deliver intoxicating liquors to a person using an assumed or fictitious name, even if it be the true name of another person, and though the receipt for the shipment be signed in the assumed or fictitious name, it does not give a right of action for libel against the carrier to the person whose name is thus assumed.
7. Where one person, in order to obtain liquor consigned in the name of another, forges the name of the consignee to an order for the liquor, it is not actionable for the carrier to retain in its files the forged order, even though' its files may be subject to the inspection of the company’s employees, and even though the carrier knows the document is a forgery. The carrier would have the right to keep the forged order as evidence, or for any other lawful purpose. And to allow its employees to inspect the paper when necessary in the transaction of the company’s business would not be a publication in such a sense as to render the company liable in an action for libel. There is no allegation in this case that the forged order was published otherwise; and there is no presumption that others saw it, in view of the statutory prohibition against such information being given out. See § 15 of the Interstate Commerce Act; Ezell v. Atlanta, 140 Ga. 197; s. c. 13 Ga. App. 95.
S. The court did not err in dismissing the action on demurrer.
Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. The petition of the' plaintiff, J. H. Knight, contained among others, the following allegations: “That defendant, by its custom of delivering whisky in the name of J. H. Knight, for the purpose of concealing the identity of the. persons receiving it, and who were not receiving it in their own names, procured the shipment of two barrels of whisky through the public freight facilities, which whisky was delivered to the real consignee on a certain date, to wit, June 7, 1914. Said barrels were marked as containing whisky, and labelled to J. H. Knight, Albany, Ga.” “Defendant knew, by reason of the knowledge of its authorized
The above allegations of the petition show that the action declared upon in one count was for procuring whisky to be shipped in the name of the plaintiff, with full knowledge that other persons with other names were fraudulently ordering it in the name of the plaintiff. It alleged in substance a conspiracy upon the part of the defendant carrier and third persons, by which the defendant was to deliver the whisky to a third person in the name of the plaintiff, the defendant to be rewarded by its freight charges, and the third person to receive the whisky; it being alleged that he (the third person) dared not take the risk of receiving it in his own name. It is alleged in the petition, again and again, that the whisky was intended for another person — of another name than the plaintiff, and that the defendant knew of this fact, and knew that the name of the plaintiff was'being used to conceal the identity of the real consignee of the whisky. It is a crime for a common carrier to knowingly deliver whisky to a fictitious person or to any person under a fictitious name. Under the allegations of the petition, the commission of this crime was clearly shown, and therefore, in my opinion, the acts of the defendant should not be considered as privileged, and the defendant exempt for that reason from liability for libel or defamation of character; and while the defendant could be prosecuted criminally' for a violation of’ the penal laws of the United States, in my opinion it is also liable to the plaintiff for damages in a civil suit. I think that the petition set forth a cause of action, and that the court erred in dismissing it on demurrer.
Rehearing
OR REHEARING.
After a careful consideration of the record in this case, the court adheres to its former judgment.