1 Ohio Ch. 193 | Ohio | 1833
ruled out the evidence. It was not competent to introduce parol evidence to vary the terms of a written contract. The testimony is not offered to establish a general usage, but to vary this particular agreement.
WRIGHT, J. charged the jury. The bill of lading is the contract between the parties, and is to be construed according to the terms expressed in it; though if there is a common usage of the trade affecting the question, that usage will be regarded as within the contemplation of the contracting parties, and a compliance with the contract as modified by such usage will satisfy the stipulations of the contract. But a usage to affect the contract, must be common, and general; not fluctuating, or dependent upon price, or other such circumstance. If a carrier would reserve to himself the right to vary from a contract of lading drawn in the usual form, or avail himself of the privilege of change, he must stipulate for the leave, and vary the bill of lading so as to meet the stipulation. This bill of lading must be taken altogether, including the memorandum as to the steamboat Tecumseh. So taken, its legal effect is an undertaking by the defendant, to carry the plaintiff’s freight from Cincinnati, in the Tecumseh, to the Amazon below the falls; but as the
196] *You will then inquire what was the state of the water when the Tecumseh arrived at Louisville, and if you are satisfied there was sufficient water for her to have passed safely over the falls, it was the duty of the defendants, under their contract, to carry the goods over in that way; and if with sufficient water for the Tecumseh to pass the falls, the defendants chose to tranship the goods in fiats for their own convenience, and while they were so exposed, they were lost by inevitable accident, the carriers are accountable, because they have unnecessarily exposed them to extraordinary risk. If you find this to be the case, the plaintiff’s right to recover is established, and you will not be under the necessity of looking any further.
If you shall be satisfied that the stage of water in the river was such when the Tecumseh arrived at Louisville, as to render it unsafe for her to pass over the falls, then her cargo was subject to be transported over, or around the falls, in the mode adopted by the common usage of the trade in such case. If it was the common custom to light the boat over by transhipping a part of the cargo, or to keep her above the falls, and send the whole cargo over in flats, or around in drays, that common custom must be followed by the carrier. If two methods are in common use to overcome suoh difficulty, the one more hazardous than the other, the carrier adopts the most hazardous method at 'his own risk and responsibility, and if loss intervene, it is his loss. This results from the nature of the employment. The carrier is the agent of the shipper and owner, and is the servant also of the latter; and he is not permitted, for his own
If they had a right to load the cargo into flats to overcome the falls, according to the custom of the river, then you will inquire whether the defendants used due diligence for the preservation of the cargo, while exposed in flats; and whether it was destroyed by inevitable accident. If the loss resulted from the negligence or wanton act of the navigators of the Lady Franklin, it did not result from an inevitable accident, which alone will excuse the defendants from liability. In such case, we think the defendants are responsible to the plaintiffs, and have their remedy over against the Lady Franklin.
Verdict for the pflaintiffs. The case was afterwards settled, and judgment taken only for the costs.
[This ease had been in the Supreme Court; Lawrence v. Mc Gregor, 5 O. 309.]