140 Ga. 804 | Ga. | 1913
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
1. If the plaintiff had cause for injunction against the defendant railroad company, it was because of some impending wrong which the latter was about to commit on the former. The alleged wrong was a violation of the duty of the railroad company as a common carrier. If there was any such duty, it must have been imposed by legislative enactment, by valid rule of the railroad commission, by contract, or by custom. Was such a duty, arising from any of these sources, shown ?
In Coles v. Central Railroad &c. Co., 86 Ga. 251 (12 S. E. 749), State v. Wrightsville &c. R. Co., 104 Ga. 437 (30 S. E. 891), and Central Ry. Co. v. Murphey, 116 Ga. 866 (43 S. E. 265, 60 L. R. A. 817), it was held that there was no law which required a railroad company to make a contract to forward goods beyond its own
2. In so far as a custom or usage is relied oh by the. plaintiff to impose a duty on the Seaboard Air-Line Railway, he must rely -on the custom as proved. This was, that, upon application by the Central of Georgia Railway Company, the Seaboard Air-Line Railway would deliver ears of lumber to the former to be transported to the steamship company’s wharf. The Seaboard Air-Line Railway collected a charge for this service and paid it to the Central of Georgia Railway Company, receiving no compensation for itself. It did not appear that either the steamship company or the Central ,of Georgia Railway Company had at the wharf any yards or provisions for receiving and holding quantities of lumber until they could be loaded on a ship. It has been held that a steamship company is not compelled to receive more freight than it has means of carrying. Ocean Steamship Co. v. Savannah Locomotive Works &c, Co., 131 Ga. 831 (63 S. E. 577, 20 L. R. A. (N. S.) 867, 127 Am. St. R. 265, 15 Ann. Cas. 1044). It can not be that the lumber dealer would have the right to compel the Seaboard Air-Line Railway, after carrying the freight to its destination, to send it forward to the steamship wharf, regardless of the ability of the latter to receive it. If this dealer had that right, so had every other dealer in the city of Savannah. As there was no through shipment or contract to transport the lumber to the steamship wharf, but only to the city of Savannah, and as the Seaboard AirLine Railway completed its contract of transportation, and as the plaintiff must rely, not upon any contract or legislative act or rule ' of the railroad commission, but upon custom, as raising a duty on the part of that company to deliver the cars to another carrier for more convenient delivery to him in another part of the city, he must rely on the custom as proved. And as proved, the duty on the part of the Seaboard Air-Line Railway to deliver ears of lumber to the Central of Georgia Railway Company did not. arise until notice from the latter, upon application of the lumber dealer
It is argued that this works a great hardship on the plaintiff, as he is compelled to pay demurrage, in order to have the cars, which arrive at Savannah loaded with lumber, remain on the tracks of the Seaboard Air-Line Eailway until called for. But the plaintiff is not compelled to do this. He ships the lumber to Savannah. When it arrives at its destination he can receive it, and reship it when he desires to do so. If, instead of unloading the lumber and keeping it in his yard, he prefers to let it remain upon the cars, it is at his desire.
It follows from what has been said, that the grant of an interlocutory injunction restraining the Seaboard Air-Line Eailway from collecting and enforcing demurrage upon car-loads of lumber which, had been .transported to the destination thereof, and which the consignees desired that company to have carried to the steamship wharves, and from collecting or attempting to collect such demur-rage as might accrue before notice from the Central of Georgia Eailway Company, was erroneous. The ruling here made renders it unnecessary to consider whether or not the injunction granted was mandatory in character.
cJudgment reversed.