9 Ga. App. 241 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1911
When this ease was 'previously before this court (Burns v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co., 6 Ga. App. 614, 65 S. E. 582) only one question was considered. This court held that the failure to deliver the shipment at destination in good order was not only a breach of the contract of carriage, but also a breach of the carrier’s public duty, each and both theoretically located at the place of performance, and that therefore the court erred in holding that it had no jurisdiction of the complaint. It appears, from the evidence in the present record, that Burns delivered to the Wabash Railroad Company, at Marysville, Mo., a car-load of stock, to be transported to Washington, 6a. When the shipment arrived in Washington, and after delivery to the consignee, it was discovered that one of the horses shipped had been taken and an inferior ho.rse substituted therefor. The defendants introduced evidence showing that they had received the car-load of stock from the Western & Atlantic Railroad Company, at Atlanta, loaded and sealed, and accounted for the safety of the stock all the time it was in their possession, and proved by direct evidence that the substitution did not occur on their lines.
The court, sitting without a jury, found in favor of the railroad companies, but upon motion for a new trial set aside this judgment and granted a new trial, upon the grounds that the defendants failed to rebut the presumption that they gave a receipt for the car of live stock as received in good order from the connecting carrier. It is assigned as error that the judge erred in granting a new trial, because, it is insisted, the burden of proof was upon the plaintiff to show that the defendants in fact received the goods as in good order, and that the plaintiff, not having introduced any evidence upon this subject, failed to. make out his ease. The real question, then, which arises in the case, is whether or not the railroad companies could defend against the present action without showing by affirmative proof that they had not received these goods from the prior carrier, and had not receipted for them as in good order, within the terms of the Civil Code (1910), § 2725.
The reason why the presumption adverse to the carrier is to be indulged as to all of the incidents imposing liability, when it is proved that the shipment was delivered in bad order by the last of a series of connecting carriers, is referred to by Judge Lumpkin in the Forrester case, and this reason would seem to impose upon the carrier-the burden of disproving a presumption that the damaged shipment was actually received from the connecting carrier as in good order, rather than to impose upon the plaintiff the burden of proving as a part of his case the fact that the shipment was actually so received as in good order by the last connecting carrier. Judge Lumpkin says: 1 “We understand section 2084 of the Code of 1882 [now section 2752 of the Civil Code of 1910] to mean that ordinarily each of the several connecting railroads shall be responsible only to its own terminus and until delivery to the next connecting carrier; but if any company, either actually or constructively, receive a consignment of freight as in good order, it will become responsible, even though the goods, before delivery to it, were damaged through the negligence of some other carrier, and it must look to the company actually at fault fox reimbursement. The policy of the law is to relieve the patrons of railroad companies from the burden and difficulty of ascertaining and fixing liability on that one of the several connecting carriers handling
In the Susong case, supra, the ruling in Forrester v. Georgia Railroad Co. was cited and the court held that, “if a railroad company received from another railroad company goods to be transported and receipts for them as in good order, the company so receiving and receipting is, under the terms of this section, concluded by the receipt from setting up, as against the consignee, that the goods were in fact not in good order when received. If such company receives the goods without receipting for the same as in good order, there is still the presumption that the goods were so received; but this presumption may be rebutted, by showing that no receipt was given, and that the goods were in fact not in good order when received. ”
We conclude, therefore, that the trial judge did not err in.