1 Colo. App. 307 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1892
The liability of a common carrier for the safe and reasonably expeditious transportation of goods entrusted to his care has been established by a continuous and practically unbroken series of authorities. The reduction in the charges for the carriage of freight, which has resulted from the enormous competition between carriers and the unprecedented extension of the railroad system throughout the western country, has led to repeated assaults upon the principle, and many attempts to escape from its force by the preparation of long and elaborate contracts as between the carrier and the consignor and the consignee. A contract was executed in this case between the consignor and the receiving railroad company, which by its terms, if it were an independent obligation, would have absolved all lines upon which the freight might go for damages sustained from any other cause than derailment and collision. We are relieved, however, from any consideration of this contract or any speculation as to what the liability is or ought to be, since this matter has been set at rest by antecedent adjudications in this state. Whatever the contract may be, it is impossible for the carrier, by his agreement, to escape responsibility for any loss which may result from his negligence, or the malfeasance of his employees. Merchants' Dispatch & Trans. Co. v. Cornforth, 3 Colo. 280; Carr v. Schafer, et al., 15 Colo. 48.
This element of difficulty is therefore eliminated from the case. It appears from the record that early in November, 1886, Elwanger & Barry shipped a lot of nursery stock to Milton, the plaintiff in error, over the New York Central and Hudson River road. Over that and connecting lines the stock reached Denver on the 12th of that month, and according to the system prevailing between the connecting
Upon the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case a motion was made for a nonsuit, which was sustained and judgment was entered for the defendant. Error is predicated upon this action, and substantially this is the only question entitled to be considered. The objection that the motion was made ore terms is groundless. Under the well recognized rules covering the trial of cases, motions of this description are always properly made in that manner and rest on a simple suggestion of the objection that under the proof or under the law the plaintiff has no right to recover. The right and the power of the court to grant a motion of this description is conceded by all the cases. When error is committed in this regard it arises from the erroneous exercise of the power. The question of error in the present case is not free from doubt and obscurity. It has been resolved with less hesitation than would otherwise embarrass the court, since the dispute will be left to the ultimate consideration of a jury, with the aid, probably, of more accurate and satisfactory proof on both sides as to the proximate cause of the loss. The record may be fairly said to present proof tending to show that the loss happened between the 23d and 26th of November, while the freight was withheld from the consignee upon a claim Which the company had no right to assert. The plaintiff was entitled to a finding as to the right of the New York Central Railroad Company to make a through contract rate. There was such proof of an acceptance of the contract made by the original carrier, that the jury would, in the absence of countervailing testimony, be warranted in finding the original carrier had authority to bind the connecting line. The bill of lading was presented to the agent of the company at Durango. This showed the freight to be guaranteed and to be $496. Evidently these facts were disclosed to the authorities in Denver. Since the agent subsequently said that the company would recognize this bill and rate, the jury without other showing would probably have been entitled to
_ It is likewise insisted that the pourt committed error in refusing to quash certain depositions taken on behalf of defendant in eiTor. Cross-errors seem to have been assigned by defendant in error, because of the action of the court with reference to sundry depositions taken by the plaintiff and read upon trial. As the questions are presented by the arguments of counsel, and by the abstract, the action of the court in the premises seems to have been in accordance with the law, and there was no error committed in this regard.
For the reasons stated, the judgment will be reversed and the cause sent back for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
Reversed.