delivered the opinion of the court.
Thе defendants in error, Jurey and Gillis, brought this action for the use of the Factors’ & Traders’ Insurance Company against the plaintiff in error, the Mobile & Montgomery Railway Company,' to recover $12,000 for the failure of the latter to deliver certain cotton which had been placed in its possession as a common carrier. The complaint, which was drawn according to the form prescribed by the Code of Alabama, was as follows:
“ The plaintiffs claim of the defendant the sum of twelve thousand dollars as damages for the failure to deliver certain goods, viz., one hundred and ninety-seven bales of cotton, weighing ninety-six thousand nine hundred and thirty-six *587 pounds, received by the defendant, as a common carrier, to be delivered to the plaintiffs at New Orleans, La., for a reward, which it failed to do.”
The railroad company pleaded the following pleas:
“ 1. The defendant for answer to the complaint says it is not guilty of the matters alleged therein.
“ 2. For further answer *to the complaint die defendant says that the plaintiffs, the said Jurey and Gillis, were paid the damages for the recovery of which this suit is brought, before the action was commenced.”
The plaintiffs demurred to the second plea. The demurrer was sustained. The cause was then tried on an issue joined on the firs.t'plea, and resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiffs for $10,344.25. The defendants have by this writ of error brought the judgment under review.
All the evidence in the case is set out in the bill of exceptions taken at the trial. It tended to show the following facts: The cotton mentioned in the complaint was delivered at Montgomery, Alabama, by the defendants in error, Jurey and Gillis, to the plaintiff in error, the railroad company, to be transported to New Orleans, and there delivered to the shippers! The cotton consisted of two hundred and sixty-four bales. The train upon which it was shipped ivas made up as follows: There Avеre eight ’ or ten box cars next to the engine; behind these Avere four flats loaded Avith the cotton, not covered by tarpaulins, and next to them, and last of the train, Avas a cab car in Avhicli the conductor rode; there Avere two men with buckets of Avater, besides the conductor and brakemen, to watch the cotton. While running do wn grade at about twenty miles an hour, and Avhen the engine A\ras not emitting any sparks, the signal to halt Avas given by the bell, and the cottоn Avas discovered to be on fire. Every effort Avas made to stop the train as soon as possible, and Avhen this Avas done, the hands on the train did Avhat they could to save the cotton; but the fire Avas too hot, and the burning cars and cotton Avere consumed. The Avoods through Avhich the train was running Avhen the fire occurred, Avere on fire, and the Avoods Avere frequently burning along the defendant’s road at that time of the year.
*588 It further appeared that all the cotton loaded on the platform cars, consisting of one hundred and ninety-seven bales, was consumed, and of course never delivered to Jurey and Gillis.
The contract for the transportation of the cotton was made by Jurey with T. K. Scott, the agent of the railroad company in Montgomery.- Jurey testified : “ I arranged with Scott to take the two hundred and sixty bales to New Orleans for two dollars per bale. "When the cotton was ready for shipment and hauling tо the railroad depot, I again visited Mr. Scott, at the. company’s office in Montgomery, in order to ascertain when my risk ceased and that of the company began, and Scott answered that soon .as the cotton was delivered on the railroad platform the cotton would be at the risk of the company.” Jurey further stated: “I contracted with the railroad company, through its agent, Mr. Scott, to deliver the cotton in New Orleans for two dollars per bale, with the distinct understanding that it was at the railway company’s risk as soon as delivered on its platform at Montgomery. After the cotton had been destroyed by fire I saw the bill of lading for. the first time, and noticed that risk by fire was excepted. I immediately went to Mr. Scott and called his attention to it, and that such was not our agreement. The bill of lading was obtained by Mr. O. Hall, the broker in the premises. I paid an outside rate of freight in consideration of having the cotton transported without any exceptions or conditions.” He further stated as follows: “We have been paid by the Factors’ and Traders’ Insurance Company of this city (New Orleans), by reason’ of its having been covered under our open policy, and this suit is for the use and benefit of that company as subrogee of our rights, because we reinsured the cotton in that company notwithstanding that defendant had guaranteed its delivery.”
Scott testified that, while the cotton was being delivered on the railroad platform at Montgomery, and before the signing of the bill of lading, Jurey asked him if the railroad company would be responsible in the event the cotton was burned on the platform or in the cars, and he replied it would be in either event.
Crenshaw Hall testified that he was a cotton broker in *589 Montgomery, and acted for Jurey in delivering the cotton at the railroad company’s depot; that he made no agreement and had no understanding with thе railroad company in regard to the rate of freight, but simply sent the cotton to the depot by order of Jurey; Jurey told him that he himself «would make the contract with the railroad company, as he thought he could get better rates. When the cotton was all delivered at the depot, witness received a bill of lading therefor. When the bill was delivered to him, Jurey, according to his recollection, was in the country, ten miles from Montgomery, and did not return until nеws had been received of the burning of the cotton. The bill of lading was signed in the handwriting, of M. H. Sayer, a freight clerk at the depot of the railroad company in Montgomery. It was as follows:
“Mobile and Montgomery Railway Company.
“Received from C. Hall two hundred and sixty-four (264) bales cotton - of which are in bad order, marked as stated, below, and consigned to Jurey and Gillis, to be transported and delivered to same, New Orleans, at the rate of-. And, in consideration of above rate, it is agreed upon and distinctly understood that the shipper releases the Mobile & Montgomery Railway Co. and connections from all liabilities for any loss or dam'age that may occur from the bursting of ropes and bagging, old damage, wet, or from fire while upon their roads.”
Then followed a statement of the number of bales of cotton, and the marks. At the foot of the bill were the words and figures : “Frt. $2.00 bale.”
The court, of its own motion, among other instructions, gave the jury the follоwing:
“ That the ground taken in argument by counsel for the railroad company was not the law, to wit: If Jurey & Gillis, before the commencement of the suit, had been paid by the Factors’ & Traders’ Insurance Company, as insurers, paying the loss it had insured against, and if Jurey & Gillis had no interest in the recovery, then the insurance company was the real plaintiff, and the burden of proof was on it to show the jury, by satisfactory *590 evidence, how much it had so paid; and that if it failed tо do so or to give the jury evidence to enable them to determine satisfactorily what its loss or damage was, then nothing more than nominal damages could be recovered.”
The court further charged the jury of its own motion, that if the plaintiffs were entitled to recover, the measure of the damages would be the value of the cotton at New Orleans, where it was to have been delivered, together with interest on said sum so ascertained, аt the rate of eight per cent, per annum, from the time when the cotton ought to have been delivered.
The court, at the instance of the plaintiff’s counsel, gave the following instruction: “ That the paper read in ■ evidence by the defendant as a bill of lading contains no restriction upon the liability of the defendant as a common carrier.”
The defendant asked the court to give the jury the following instructions:
“ 2. If the jury find from the evidence that Jurey & Gillis insured said cotton in and by the Factors’ and Traders’ Insurance Company, for whose use this suit is brought, then, upon the loss of the cotton by fire, and payment of the insurance money by the insurance company to Jurey & Gillis, the insurance company was subrogated to the rights of Jurey & Gillis, and can maintain a suit in the name of Jurey & Gillis for their use to recover the amount paid by them to Jurey & Gillis ; but upon these facts the plaintiffs cannot recover under .the complaint in this case, and if the jury find such to be the facts, they must find for the defendant.
“ 4. If the jury find from the evidence that Jurey & Gillis were рaid by the Factors’ and Traders’ Insurance Company (for whose use this suit is brought) before this suit was brought, for the damages sustained by Jurey & Gillis by the burning of the cotton, then the plaintiffs cannot recover in this action and under the complaint in this case.”
The court refused to give either of these instructions.
The first assignment of error argued by the counsel fór plaintiffs in error relates to the admission in evidence of the testimony of Jurey and Scott, in respect to the terms of the
*591
contract by which the railroad company undertook to transport the cotton of the defendants in error to New Orleans. The contention is, that the bill of lading was the contract, and being in writing, no parol evidence could be received to vary its stipulations. Before this rule can be applied, the contract in writing must be shown to be the contract of the parties. One of the vital questions in the case was, what was the contract between the parties ? No particular form or sоlemnity of execution is required for a contract of a common carrier to transport goods. It may be by parol, or it may be in writing, in either case it is equally binding.
American Transportation Company
v. Moore,
The next contention of the plaintiffs in error is that the cоurt erred in instructing the jury “ that the paper read in evidence by the defendant as a bill of lading* contains no restriction upon the liability of the defendant as a common carrier.” It is insisted that the purport of the charge is that, independent and irrespective of the parol evidence and upon its face, the
*592
contract contains no restriction. But such is evidently not the meaning of the instruction, because the words of the bill of Jading clearly import an exception to the liability of a common carrier. What the court must have meant -was that, in view of the circumstances under which the bill of lading was executed, as detailed by the uncontradicted evidence of the witnesses, taken in connection with the fact that the rate of freight which is stated to be the consideration for the exception, is left blank in the body of the bill of lading, it was not the intention of the parties to the cоntract that the railroad company should be exempted from any of the liabilities of a common carrier. The court was called upon to construe a paper writing. It must be conceded that the writing was open to construction. It was the right and duty of the court, in order to decide upon its meaning, to look not or’y-, to the language employed, but to the subject matter and surrounding circumstances.
Barreda v.
Silsbee,
The next grоund upon which the plaintiffs in error ask a reversal of the judgment is the refusal of the court to give the charges numbered 2 and 1 as requested by the plaintiff in elror. The argument in support of this assignment is as follows :• Sectiop 2891 of the Code of Alabama provides;- “In all cases Avh,ere suits are brought in the name of the person having the legal right, for the use of another, the beneficiary must be considered as the sole party in the record.” In no part of the bocjy óf the complaint is there any averment showing in -what way and by -what means the Factors’ and Traders’ Insurance Cqnlpany acquired an interest in this suit or a right to bring *593 this action in the name of the owners of the cotton for their use, or that they have any interest in the suit, and as the evidence shows that the Factors’ and Traders’ Insurance Company acquired their right to bring a suit against a carrier by having paid their insurance liability to Jurey and Gillis, which was a secondary liability, the carrier being primarily liable, the form of complaint adopted in this case was not sufficient; that the complaint should state with certainty the fácts showing the right of the insurance company to bring the action and the amount of the recovery to which they are entitled. The ground of their contention is that the recovery must be limited to the amount paid by the insurance company to the defendants in error, and that the burden is on the insurance c °mpany to prove Avhat sum was so paid.
This is an attempt to reverse the r-jgment of the Circuit Court on a question of pleading. Tli? record in the case, in our opinion, shows that the plaintiff in error made a contract for the transportation of the cotton of the plaintiffs, Avith no, exception of the carriers’ common-law liability; that it did not deliver the cotton, for the value of Avhich this suit was brought; that the cotton Avas destroyed while in possession of the plaintiff in error, and Avas'a total loss; and that the loss has been paid to the defendants in error by the insurance company. Under these circumstances, as it plainly appears on the face of the record that the judgment of the Circuit Court was right, it Avould not be reversed for an error Avhich could not possibly have Avorlced any injury to the plaintiff in error.
Brobst
v. Brock,
But Ave are of opinion that the ground upon Avhich. this assignment of error is based is not tenable, Avhich is that the recovery must be limited to the amount paid by the insurance company to the defendants in error, and that the burden is on the insurance company to shoAV hoAV much it paid. Although the suit is brought for the use of the insurer, and it is the sole party beneficially interested, yet its rights are to be Avorked' out through the cause of action AAThich the insured has against the common carrier. The legal title is in the insured, and the . *594 carrier is bound to respond for all the dаmages sustained by the breach of his contract. If only part of the loss has been paid by the insurer, the insured is entitled to the residue. How the money recovered is to be divided between the insured and the insurer is a question which interests them alone, and in which the common carrier is not concerned.
The payment of a total loss by the insurer works an equitable assignment to him of the property and all the remedies which the insured had against the carrier fоr the recovery of its value.
Mason
v. Sainsbury,
This rule is so strictly applied, that when two ships, belonging to the same owner,.came into collision with each other, and one of them sank and became a total loss, it was held that the insurers of the lost ship did not, upon their payment of a total loss, become entitled to make any claim for the loss against the insured as the owner of the ship in fault in the collision, for their right existed only through the owner of the ship insured, and nоt independently of him, and as he could not have sued himself, they could have no remedy against him.
Simpson
v.
Thompson,
3 App. Cases, 279; see also
Globe Ins. Co.
v.
Sherlock,
In Gails v. Hailman, 11 Penn. St. 515, it was held that “ a shipper who has received from the insurer the part of the loss insured against, may sue the carrier on the contract of bailment, not only in his own right for the unpaid balance due to himself, but as trustee for -what has been paid by the insurer in ease of the carrier; ” and upon the trial of such a case, the court will restrain the carrier from setting up the insurer’s payment of his part of the loss as partial satisfaction.
Insurers of a ship which has been run down and sunk by the iault of another ship, are, upon their payment of a total loss, subrogated to the right of the insured to recover therefor against the owners of the latter vessel, and if their policy was a valued one, their payment of this value will give them the whole
spes recupercmdi,
and the right to the whole damages, though the
*595
insured vessel was, in fact, worth a larger sum than the valuation named in the policy.
North of England, Ins. Association
v. Armstrong, L. R. 5 Q. B. 244. See, also,
Clark
v.
Wilson,
The authorities above cited tvhich relate to marine policies apply, as well as the other cases cited, to the question in hand, for in
Hall & Long
v.
Railroad Companies,
We are of opinion, therefore, that the recovery in this case might properly have been, as it was, for the entire loss sustained by the nominal plaintiffs’ with regard to the amount of insurance paid. The only effect of the provision .of section 2S91, Code of Alabama, is to make the party for "whose use the suit is brought dornimts litis, and to give it the same rights as if' it were the assignee of the cause of action. Its recovery is on the nominal plaintiff’s cause of action. But as there is no formal assignment, and the suit is in the name of the nоminal plaintiff, the party beneficially interested is only bound to establish the cause of action, "without proof of his equitable right to the recovery.
It follows from these views that the complaint was sufficient for the case as presented by the evidence, and that the evidence tended to sustain the case stated in the complaint.
The next ground for reversal argued by the plaintiff in error is, that the Circuit Court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the secоnd plea. Is .has already been stated that, under the Code of Alabama, where a suit is brought in the name of the person having the legal right for the use of another, the beneficiary must be considered as the sole party to the record. In view of this provision of the statute, in a suit brought by one person for the use of another, a plea of payment, which does not allege a payment to the beneficial plaintiff or a payment to thе person holding the legal title, before the person holding the beneficial interest acquired his right, is clearly bad. The plea which was adjudged insufficient makes neither of these *596 averments, and was therefore bad. The object of- the plea seems to have been to raise the question whether the payment by the insurer to the insured, for property los’t -while in the possession of a common carrier, discharged the liability of the common carrier. If the plea was based on any such theory, the views we have expressed show that it did not present a bar to the present action.
The last assignment of error which we shall notice, is based on the charge of the court, to the effect, that “ the measure of damages would be the value of the cotton in New Orleans, ■where it was to have been delivered, together -with interest on said sum at eight per cent, per annum from the time whеn the cotton ought to have been delivered.” The error alleged is, that the rate of interest should have been placed at five per ' cent., which is the legal rate in Louisiana, where the contract was to be performed, and not at eight per cent., which was the legal rate in Alabama, where the contract was made.
Conceding that the charge in respect to the rate of interest was erroneous, the judgment should not be reversed on account of the error. The charge contained at least two propositions, first, that the measure of damages was the value of the cotton in New Orleans, with interest from the time when the cotton should have been delivered; second, that the rate of interest should be eight per cent. It is not disputed that the first proposition was correct. But the exception to the charge was general. It was, therefore, inеffectual. It should have pointed out to the ■ court the precise part of the charge that was objected to. “ The rule is, that the matter of exception- shall be so brought to the attention of the court, before the retirement of the jury to make up their verdict, as to enable the judge to correct any error if there be any in his instructions to them.”
Jacobson
v.
The
State,
“ When an exception is reserved to a charge which contains two or more distinсt or separable propositions, it is the duty of counsel to direct the attention of the court to the precise point of objection.”
South
&
North Alabama Railroad Company
v. Jones,
So in
Lincoln
v.
Claflin,
Many other grounds of error have been assigned though not argued by counsel for the plaintiff in error. But what we have said covers most of them. The others are not well taken. "We find no error in the record.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
