3 Tenn. App. 148 | Tenn. Ct. App. | 1926
In March, 1920, the shipper, Southern Nursery Company, sold to A. Hamilton Sons of Bangor, Michigan, two boxes of trees, delivering the same to the Nashville, Chattanooga St. Louis Railway to be shipped by its line, the Chicago, Burlington Quincy Railroad and the Pere Marquette Railway, to the consignee at Bangor, Michigan. The bill of lading was a standard form of straight bill of lading without reservation of title in the shipper. The invoice of the Nursery Company, dated March 10, 1920, was for $132.90 to be paid by A. Hamilton Sons on June 1, 1920. On account of a strike the trees were so long delayed while in possession of the Pere Marquette Railway Company that they became worthless. The bill of lading contained a clause limiting the *150 value to $3 per hundred weight, or $40.35. This was admittedly invalid under the Cummins Amendment, which places upon the carriers liability for the full actual loss, damage or injury to the property transported, which is caused by them, and makes unlawful any limitation of that liability. (Act of March 4, 1915, 38 Stat. at L., 1197; Act of August 9, 1916, 39 Stat. at L., 441.)
Although the consignee refused the goods and therefore declined to pay for them, it made demand upon the Pere Marquette Railway Company for settlement of the loss. Relying upon the valuation clause, the Pere Marquette Company paid to the consignee, on May 16, 1921, the sum of $40.35 in full settlement. In the meantime, the shipper had made demand upon the complainant, the initial carrier, for settlement under the Cummins Amendment, and on October 7, 1921, complainant paid to the shipper $132.90, the full value of the shipment, in total ignorance of the previous transaction of settlement between the consignee and the terminal carrier. The bill in this cause was filed to recover back the amount of this payment made by mistake, on the ground that defendant, Nursery Company, the shipper, was concluded by the settlement made by the consignee with the terminal carrier. The Chancellor, as aforesaid, limited the recovery to the amount paid under the previous settlement. The complainant the initial carrier, insists that it should recover the full sum of $132.90.
It clearly appearing that the loss or damage occurred on the line of the terminal carrier, that carrier would be liable to the lawful holder of the bill of lading; in other words, the lawful holder could maintain an action for any loss, damage or injury to the property transported, caused either by the initial carrier or any connecting carrier to whom the goods were delivered. This is plainly provided by the aforesaid acts of Congress. The remedy provided in the statute against the initial carrier is not exclusive, for an action may be prosecuted against the connecting or the terminal carrier when the loss or damage is shown to have occurred on its line. Georgia F. A.R. Co. v. Blish Milling Co.,
It appears that the Nursery Company has never sought to recover from the consignee the purchase price of the goods. It simply charged it off to profit and loss. If the consignee is liable to the shipper for the purchase price, he is liable for the full amount notwithstanding his settlement for a lesser amount with the terminal carrier. The illegality of said settlement cannot affect the immunity of the initial carrier from liability for another payment. Anderson v. American Railway Express Co. (N.C., 1924),
Faw, P.J., and Crownover, J., concur. *152