There cannot well he a controversy over the- abstract proposition that the plaintiff may not recover unless he shows affirmatively that the property was in good order when received by the carrier, and that there is no presump-' tion the goods were in good order when received by it. See 1 Moore on Carriers (2d Ed.) 568, 573; Winne v. Illinois Cent. R. Co.,
The motion to direct was grounded, among other things, upon the claim that failure to prove the condition of .the hogs when shipped defeated the right of plaintiff to recover at all. The motion was sustained upon that ground. If there was any right to recover at all, the trial court erred in directing a verdict against the plaintiff. For whatever may have been the state of the hogs when received by the initial carrier, the jury could find that thereafter the defendant was negligent in its caring for them, and that this caused damages in some amount. It follows it was not error to grant plaintiff a new trial;, wherefore, the judgment below must be — Affirmed.
