47 W. Va. 656 | W. Va. | 1900
On the 1st day of March, 1897, and on the 11th day of the same month, C. C. Lewis shipped over the Kanawha and
It is contended by appellant in its brief that stipulation No. 12 in the through bill of lading “expressly provides that the contract of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company is executed and accomplished when the lumber-should be placed on the pier of the steamship company at Newport News, which was done.” The pier upon which the lumber was placed was not the pier of the steamship company, but the pier of the defendant, entirely and wholly under its control and in its custody, and over which the steamship company had no control. The shipper, by this contract, was to understand that the steamship company had a pier at Newport News, under its control and custody, and that, when his lumber should be placed on such pier, it would be in the care of a reliable and responsible company. But it was not placed on the pier of-the steamship company, but on the pier of defendant, and remained in its care and custody; and,, as held in Michigan Cent. R. Co. v. Mineral Springs Mfg. Co., 16 Wall. 318, 21 L. Ed. 297: “Public policy willnotallow the carrier to escape responsibility on storing the goods at the end of his route, without delivering, or an attempt to deliver, to the connecting carrier. If there be a necessity for storage, it will be considered a mere accessory to the transportation,, and as not changing the nature of the bailment.” In. Mc
While appellant does not contend for it in its brief, in its petition for writ of error it seems to rely upon the eleventh clause of the bill of lading to give it the character of warehouseman after the lumber was placed on its pier at Newport News, which provision is that “no carrier shall be liable for delay, nor in any other respects than as warehouseman, while the said property awaits further conveyance; and in case the whole or any part of the property specified herein be prevented, by any cause, from going from said port in the first steamer of the ocean line, as above stated, leaving after the arrival of such property at said port, the carrier hereunder then in possession is at liberty to forward said property by succeeding steamers of said line, or, if deemed necessary, by any other steamer.” It appears, however, that two steamers of the line which was to carry the lumber left the port after the last car of the lumber should have arrived at the port. It was received by appellant on the 12th of March, and should have been at the port some days before the sailing of the Kanawha, on the 24tfi of March, and was there some.days, before the departure of the Rappahannock, on the 3d of April. Whether the lumber was forwarded “with reasonable dispatch” to Newport News (the last car being received on the 12th, and reaching port on the 30th, of March) was a fact for the jury to decide.
It is contended by appellee that the carrier, being bound at common law to forward the property intrusted to it,
Affirmed.