93 P. 465 | Or. | 1908
Opinion by
This is an appeal by defendant from a judgment in favor of plaintiff for $900 damages for the loss, by fire, of certain household goods and bar supplies, used by him in the hotel business. The goods were left by plaintiff for shipment with defendant’s agent at North Powder, Or., on February 9, 1906, and directed to be shipped to him at Elgin, in the county named, with the view pf having them transported from there by wagon a distance of 60 miles into Wallowa County, to which place he was removing. The goods reached Elgin about noon on February 12th following, and were left in the ear in which they were shipped in front of the Elgin Forwarding Company’s warehouse, which, from causes unknown, took fire during the night and spread to the car near by containing plaintiff’s freight, destroying the goods. It is alleged that no receipt, bill of lading or other instrument in writing was issued to the shipper thereof at the time the goods were shipped, but conceded that a few days after the fire he received a bill of lading with plaintiff’s name thereon, which had been signed by the defendant’s agent, who claims he was authorized to do so by plaintiff.
1. After the argument, and after notice thereof having been given in this court, counsel for defendant applied to the court below for permission to have the bill of exceptions amended
' 3. In this connection counsel for plaintiff urge that the bill of exceptions, on account of containing more than sufficient testimony to explain the errors assigned, and not having stated separately and distinctly the evidence intended to show the application of the rulings of the court, etc., does not come within the rule of this court, as required in Hedin v. Suburban Ry. Co. 26 Or. 155 (37 Pac. 540), and subsequent decisions on the subject. Owing to the conclusion we have reached on the merits of the controvers3r, a consideration of this point becomes unnecessary: Steiger v. Fronhofer, 43 Or. 178 (72 Pac. 693). This action is based upon the common-law liability of the defendant, which, after denying any negligence on its part, sets up four defenses: (1) Exemption from liability, in ease of fire, by special contract with plaintiff; (2) that, if liable at all, it is responsible as a warehouseman only; (3) that by a contract with plaintiff its liability is limited to $5 per hundred weight for the household goods, and 50 cents per gallon for the liquors
4. There is also testimony tending to show that plaintiff received no receipt, bill of lading or other instrument from defendant until after the fire; that the shipment was made with no understanding between them in reference thereto or as to the contents thereof, all of which was submitted to and passed upon by the jury, as to which facts their verdict is conclusive. And there is testimony from which it could reasonably be inferred that the bill of lading was first wanted by the plaintiff and his agent in order that, by furnishing a means of identification thereof, they could more conveniently procure the goods from the agent at Elgin, and that it was not forwarded to that point until after the loss occurred. McGregor denies ever signing the instrument, and his testimony is broad enough to indicate that no authority was given to any one else to affix his name thereto. When he presented to the company his claim for the loss, he sent no bill of lading, nor did he state upon
5.-Many authorities hold that the acceptance of such receipt after the loss cannot be taken advantage of by the carrier, and that the shipper under such circumstances is not estopped from asserting his claim against the carrier under its common-law liability, among which are: 6 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2 ed.), 642; Baltimore & O. R. Co. v. Doyle, 142 Fed. 669 (74 C. C. A.
6. Under the verdict of the jury we must presume that plaintiff neither consented nor authorizéd his name to be signed1 to this receipt, and under the rule as substantially stated and recognized in this State in Seller v. Steamship Pacific, 1 Or. 409 (Fed. Cas. No. 12,644), nothing short of an express stipulation will constitute such an agreement. It cannot depend upon implication or inference, nor conflicting and doubtful evidence, and mere notice to the shipper must be held insufficient. In that ease the shipper, at the time of the delivery of the goods for transportation, and before they were transported, was handed a shipping receipt for the goods, which consisted of looking glasses, valued at $450, and the receipt received by the owner thereof contained the words “not accountable for contents.” This receipt the owner of the goods accepted without signing, and without being requested to do so, which fact was relied upon by the company as a defense in a suit brought by the owner for the recovery of the value of the goods which were‘injured in transportation, it being claimed as such defense that, under the law, it was the custom for the company to ship goods in this manner without the signatures of both parties thereto, and that this released the company from liability thereon; but in discussing this feature Mr. Justice Deady says:
“The law, and not such a custom, ascertains and determines the rights and liabilities of shippers and common carriers. Such pretenses of custom as this appears to be, if allowed to modify the law of the land, would place it in the power of common carriers to make and unmake the law as they choose. I conclude, therefore, that these words, 'not responsible for contents,’ amount to nothing, and in no way affect the rights of the shipper or the liability of the carrier. This being the case, and it appearing that the goods were 'received in good order,’ the burden of proof lies on the carrier to show that the injury to the goods arose from the only exceptions to his liability. * * ”
8. But it is insisted by counsel for defendant that the question as to whether a reasonable time had elapsed after the arrival of the goods in which to permit plaintiff or his agent to remove them is, under the undisputed facts presented, one for the court and not for the jury to determine, and that the court erred in submitting the question to the jury. The rule on this point is clearly, concisely, and, we think, correctly, stated in Lemke v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co. 39 Wis. 449, 455, in which the court say:
“The rule doubtless is that, whenever there is a conflict of testimony in respect to material facts bearing upon the question, or when the facts are doubtful or complicated and the court cannot satisfactorily determine their weight or importance, the question as to whether a reasonable time has or has not elapsed should be submitted to the jury, under proper instructions. But when, as in this case, the facts relating to the question are few and simple, and are conclusively established by a special finding, or by the undisputed evidence, it is for the court to say whether a reasonable time has or has not elapsed for the performance of a given act.”
In the case before us it is disclosed by the evidence that the plaintiff’s agent learned of the arrival of the goods between the
9. It becomes unnecessary, -therefore, to- determine here whether the question of the.reasonableness of the.time in this instance should have been submitted to the jury, for, if,the question was properly submitted to the jury,-they have found adversely to- defendant, and their decision’thereon is not,-under the testimony, subject to review; but if, on the other hand, it is a question for the court’s determination, • it appears from the evidence that, after the arrival* of the ear, the time was so short in which the goods could have been delivered, together,with the lateness of the hour when-plaintiff’s agent was informed of-,the arrival thereof, that the court, under such circumstances, would have been impelled to hold tha-t the loss occurred before the expiration of the reasonable time to which plaintiff was entitled in which to remove the property, and it would have been imperative upon the court so to instruct the- jurj"-, leaving no change in the result. It is clear, ■ therefore, that defendant is ■ in no position to complain in this respect.
10. It is next insisted that the court erred in sustaining the objection's to the interrogatories tending to show that a,part of the goods lost were not the property of - plaintiff. Defendant makes no attempt to plead that plaintiff is not the-, real party in interest. Such defense must be specially pleaded, in the absence of’ which/ testimony of the character offered on this* point is inadmissible; and no error-was committed in sustaining the objection thereto. Overholt v. Dietz, 43 Or. 194 (72 Pac. 695).
11. It is maintained, that the court erred in -not-permitting the defendant ■ to introduce the bill of lading in evidence on cross-examination of plaintiff, and -in not permitting him to ask the plaintiff on cross-examination whether at any time prior to the shipment his attention was directed by the agent of -the Oregon Railroad & Navigation- Company, or by any one, to any of the printed contents on the back of the receipt, which was
12. This being an affirmative defense, and ■ the burden of proof in this respect being upon the defendant, it follows that to have permitted him to go fully into this question on cross-examination would thereby have enabled him to have procured the advantage by prematurely making the witness his own, and at the same time, under the pretense of cross-examination, of depriving plaintiff of any cross-examination on the points thereby elicited. The court properly sustained the objection to this method of. procedure: Hildebrand v. United Artisans, 50 Or. 159 (91 Pac. 542).
13. A number of errors are assigned on account of instructions requested by defendant and refused by the court; but on examination we find the substance of the instructions requested, except to direct a verdict, were included in those given. Defendant was accordingly not prejudiced by the refusal to give the instructions in the form asked.
We find no error in the record detrimental to defendant, from which it follows that the judgment of the circuit court should be affirmed. • Affirmed.