158 So. 547 | Miss. | 1935
Appellant brought this action against the Turner-Farber Lumber Company and appellee, Yazoo Mississippi Valley Railroad Company, in the circuit court of Washington county to recover damages for an injury received by him while loading freight, as a servant of the lumber company, on one of appellee's flat cars, such injury alleged to have been caused by the defective condition of the car. Before the trial, the case was dismissed as to the lumber company; there followed a trial as to appellee, resulting in a directed verdict for it; *804 judgment was accordingly entered, from which judgment appellant prosecutes this appeal.
The Turner-Farber Lumber Company was located at Leland in this state. On November 15, 1933, it was dismantling a stave mill; the machinery connected with the mill was being loaded on one of appellee's flat cars for shipment to a point in Louisiana. Mr. Woody, a servant of the lumber company, was in charge of the loading and was directing the work; appellant was employed by him for the lumber company. A heavy piece of machinery referred to as a Dutch oven had been loaded on the flat car the previous day. Appellant had nothing to do with that loading, it was done by the servants of the lumber company — his fellow servants. The car was an ordinary flat car with sockets or pockets on each side for stakes or standards for the purpose of holding the load on the car. The car came without standards; these were furnished and put in place by other servants of the lumber company under direction of the lumber company. Appellant and others, under the direction of Woody, were loading a boiler which weighed about seven tons on the same car. From some cause the Dutch oven fell and seriously injured the appellant. The evidence tended to show that the fall, and subsequent injury, was caused by a defective standard on the car to which the oven was tied, and that the standard was defective, in that it was rotten or pithy.
The ground of the alleged negligence is that the car was improperly equipped, in that it was without secure standards. Appellee seeks to justify the directed verdict in its favor upon two grounds, namely, that the evidence failed to show any causal connection between the defective standard and the injury; and that under the consolidated freight classification No. 7 (southern classification No. 50), rule 30, adopted by the Interstate Commerce Commission, the lumber company — the shipper — *805 was required to furnish the standards. The second ground is well-founded; therefore the first disappears.
A certified copy of the commission's freight classification in question was introduced in evidence, being certified to by the Secretary of the Interstate Commerce Commission as being in force on November 13 and 14, 1933, on appellee's lines of railroad. This classification is a part of the tariffs of the appellee on file with the Interstate Commerce Commission. Rule No. 30 of the classification follows:
"(b) Shippers must observe carrier's rules regulating safe loading of freight and protection of equipment. Freight in closed cars must be so loaded as to prevent any contact with car doors during transit, and weight of lading must be approximately the same on each of cars.
"(c) Bulkheads, partitions, temporary doors or door protection when required to protect or make bulk freight secure for shipment, must be furnished or installed by the shipper at his expense.
"(d) No allowance will be made for the weight of the material specified in section 1 (a), (b) (c) and the transportation charge therefor shall be at the rate applicable on the freight which it accompanies.
It is not necessary to resort to construction to ascertain the meaning of this rule. Section 1 (a) in plain and unmistakable terms provides that all temporary blocking, flooring, lining, racks, standards, stakes, or similar bracing, dunnage, or supports, not constituting a part of the car when required to protect and make carload freight secure for shipment, must be furnished and installed by the shipper at his expense. The rule is a reasonable one; we do not mean to intimate, however, that that is a question for the courts. In Anderson v. Southern Ry. Co. (C.C.A.),
The carrier is under no duty, but, on the contrary, is prohibited from rendering any service to the shipper, except in strict accord with its tariffs on file with the commission. Otherwise there would be a discrimination in favor of a particular shipper. The tariffs, rules, and regulations adopted by the commission are controlling in interstate shipments; they have the effect of law, and cannot be amended by oral agreement or otherwise. The contract of shipment between the shipper and carrier consists of the bill of lading, tariffs, schedules, and regulations of the commission. Rebates and favoritism to one class of shippers over another, or to one shipper over another of the same class, is prohibited; uniformity and equality is the principal groundwork of the commission. Mobile Ohio R.R. Co. v. Jensen,
Appellant relies on the following cases to establish liability: Bushby v. N.Y., etc., R.R. Co.,
The Bushby case, was an action by the servant against his master, based on the failure of the latter to furnish him a safe place to work. A car of lumber was in the course of transportation; when the train rounded a curve at a rapid rate of speed, one of the standards broke, causing the lumber to slide off, carrying with it the plaintiff, who was riding thereon in the discharge of his duties. The court held that the standards were part of the car, and the railroad was due its employee the duty to furnish him a safe place to work, and to that end to inspect and see that the standards were fit for the purpose for which they were intended.
The duty of the carrier with reference to the shipper and his servants is one thing, and its duty with reference to its own servants and others is another and a very different thing. To the shipper and his servants, whose duty it is to furnish and place the standards, the carrier owes no duty to see that the standards are fit for their purposes; while as to the carrier's servants and others it is the duty of the carrier to exercise a reasonable inspection of the standards and replace any that are unfit. *809 In other words, as to the carrier's servants and others than the shipper and his servants, the carrier adopts the standards furnished by the shipper as its own.
The Port Blakely Mill Company case involved the death of a brakeman on the mill company's line of railroad. He was on a train which was hauling lumber cars; the lumber was kept in place by standards on the sides of the cars; as the train was rounding a left-hand curve, some of the standards on the right-hand side broke, and the lumber was thrown from the car to the ground and under the wheels of the train, causing the cars to be derailed, as a result of which the brakeman was thrown from the car on which he was working and was killed. The standards had been set by a servant of the carrier. The court held that it was no defense to the action for the brakeman's death that the defective standards had been supplied by a fellow servant; the master had simply failed to furnish his servant a safe place to work. In the Lane Brothers case, which was a contracting corporation engaged in building a railroad, Couch was in its employ as a fireman on a construction train. The train was hauling ties to a bridge site; these ties were eleven feet long, eleven inches wide, and eight inches thick, and were piled five tiers high on a forty-foot flat car. On each side of the car there were nine sockets for standards, but only five standards were placed on each side. The opposite standards were not tied or stayed to each other across the top, as they should have been. Around a curve two standards broke, causing the ties to fall; one of them caught Couch as he was standing in the gangway and killed him. Here again was a case of the failure of the master to furnish his servant a safe place to work. The McCaskell case is of the same character. A section hand, while standing near the railroad track, was injured by a cross-tie falling from a running train caused by a broken standard. The court held *810 it was a question for the jury whether the railroad company was negligent.
Appellant contends, however, that rule thirty of the freight classification has no application, because at the time of his injury he was engaged alone in a domestic transaction and not in interstate commerce. The evidence showed that no bill of lading had been issued for the shipment. The car was not moving, but standing still, being loaded. The argument is that interstate commerce did not begin until the freight started on its journey. The issuance of a bill of lading is not determinative of the question, nor is the character of the bill of lading issued. The courts look to practical considerations in determining the question and not to mere billing or the form of the contract. Foster-Fountain Packing Co. v. Haydel,
The doing of work which has for its immediate purpose the furthering of the conduct of interstate commerce constitutes employment in such commerce within the meaning of the Interstate Commerce Act (49 U.S.C.A., sec. 1 et seq.). Kinzell v. Chicago, Milwaukee St. Paul Ry. Co.,
It is true that the car on which the freight was being loaded had not started on its journey, but a necessary thing was being done in order to start it — the loading of freight. The freight was on its journey from the ground to the car. We think that the loading as well as the unloading of the freight was just as much a movement in interstate commerce as its actual hauling by the carrier across state lines. Chassaniol v. City of Greenwood,
We think it clear that the freight here involved, in the sense of the Interstate Commerce Act (49 U.S.C.A., sec. 1 et seq.), had started on its journey when it was being loaded on the car.
Affirmed.