51 Tenn. 661 | Tenn. | 1871
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action is to recover damages for the loss and injury to, two boat loads of lumber which the defendant’s intestate, Joel Peel, in his lifetime, in the summer of 1860, undertook for hire, to carry from Chestnut Bluff on the Forked Deer river, in the county of Dyer, to the city of Memphis. After the boats had proceeded down the river some fourteen miles from the point of departure, they struck some obstruction in the stream, and were ^sunk, which occasioned the loss of some of the lumber and the injury of much of that which .was recovered: the greater part of the lumber was, however, after some weeks’ delay, delivered to the owner and consignee at the city of Memphis. The judgment and verdict below were for the defendant’s intestate.
The defendant’s intestate is sought to be charged as a common carrier, and the main question controverted in the case is, whether in this undertaking he is to be held to the responsibility of a common carrier, or that of a private carrier. There was much testimony submitted to the jury tending to show the alleged negligence of the defendant’s intestate, and his want of skill and prudence in overloading the boats, and in the management
The principles announced in the charge of the court defining the distinction between common carriers and private carriers, and the character and de
We think this portion of the charge, as a whole, is erroneous; and it was, doubtless, such an error under the peculiar facts of this case as most injuriously affected the plaintiff'. It excludes the idea that even in an isolated act, or in occasional acts of carrying, a party may assume all the burdens and responsibilities of a common carrier. It has long been a settled doctrine of the law, that a party may, by express contract, assume, in any act of carrying goods for another, and by any
The judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.