108 F. 482 | 8th Cir. | 1901
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
The goods were lost on the line of the last carrier, and the only material contested question of fact in the case was whether the defendant was the last carrier, or was liable as such. The plaintiff maintained that it was. The defendant maintained that it was not, hut that the Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad Company was the last carrier, and carried the goods from Baltimore to Frederick Road, where they were lost. Upon this disputed question of fact then; was a. large volume of testitnony introduced by the plaintiff, some of which is adverted to in the charge of the lower court. It would serve no useful purpose to set out this testimony. It is sufficient to say that it tended strongly to show that the stock of the Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad Company was owned in whole or in part, at least, by the defendant company, and that it was in fact operated and controlled by the defendant. In folders, in advertisements, and in various other ways the defendant represented to the public that the Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad was a part of its “system,” and in some instances a “division.” One item of the mass of testimony in the case is the waybill made out by the defendant for the shipment of the goods from Baltimore to Frederick Road, which shows their shipment between these points over the defendant’s road. The officers of the two companies were mainly the same persons. While
The court rightfully refused to give a peremptory instruction to the jury to return a verdict for the defendant, and its charge in chief was a correct statement of- the law applicable to the testimony in the case. The law deals with things, not names; wdth the substance, not with the shadow; with realities, and not forms. Conceding that the Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad Company is a legal entity and maintains a complete corporate organization, it by no means follows that that company alone is liable for the íoss of the goods. Whether that company and the defendant company were partners, and as such jointly and severally liable for the loss of the goods, or whether that company’s road is a part of the defend
•'The leiwe might exist, and the Virginia company might still manage the Kentucky company, or some particular through train over that road.”
And it was further said that whether it did so or not: was a question of fact for Hie jury, whose verdict ought not to be disturbed upon the evidence, which is set out in the opinion and is much less cogent: in support of the verdict in that case than is the evidence in support of • the verdict in the case at bar.
An exception was taken to'the ruling of the court excluding certain evidence offered by the plaintiff in error; but, as the exception is not argued in the brief of counsel for the plaintiff in error, we infer it is not regarded as tenable, in which view we concur. Finding no error in the record, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.