J. H. O. Briggs brought suit against the Southern Express Company in the justice’s court of the 600th district, G. M., by summons with sworn account attached, dated May 15, 1905, for “seventy pounds of fancy, select, Augusta rattlesnake watermelon seed, at eighty cents per pound, $56.00.” The defendant filed a general and special demurrer to the plaintiff’s summons and bill of particulars, upon the following grounds: (1) Because the court is without jurisdiction in the premises, in this, that it is a suit for a tort, with a waiver of the tort, and a claim asserted for damages in an increased valuation of the property shipped. (2) Because the bill of particulars fails to set out with a sufficient degree of .certainty the plaintiff’s cause of action against the defendant, particularly in this: (a) Where the liability occurred. (6) What was the name of the agent of the defendant with whom the plaintiff dealt in delivering or selling to the defendant seventy pounds of watermelon seed. (c) It does not state the place of shipment or delivery of the goods, by whom or to whom, and the value fixed thereon at the time of the shipment, (d) It does not set out any contract of shipment, or agreement under and by virtue of which the property described in the bill of particulars came into defendant’s possession.” The defendant also filed a plea covering the points made by the above demurrer, and setting up other defenses which will appear further on in this opinion, in the decision of the questions made. By consent, an appeal was entered to the superior court of Richmond county, and in that court it was agreed that the judge thereof, without a jury, should pass upon and decide all questions raised by the pleadings, under an agreed statement of the facts.
The material facts as stipulated are as follows: The defendant is a corporation of this State, having many .offices in the State
Before the letter of instruction from the agent at Blackville was received by the agent at Kingstree, the plaintiff left instructions orally with the agent at Kingstree to forward the package of seed to him at Augusta, Ga. The plaintiff reached Augusta on May 14, 1905, and called at the defendant’s office several times during May for said shipment. The shipment did not reach Augusta until June 1, 1905, when the same was tendered to the plaintiff, who declined to receive it, on the ground that said shipment had been delayed so long that he could not use the seed for the purpose he had intended, to wit, for the purpose of planting the same that season. The watermelon seed were the property of the plaintiff, and the value thereof in Augusta at retail was 80 cents' per pound, and 50 cents per pound at Blackville and Kingstree. The shipment in this case was made pursuant to written instructions of E. S. Hammond as follows: “Express melon seed C. O. D., $25.00.” This written memorandum was left by Wallace Brooks, colored servant, who brought the seed to the -express office for shipment. The original receipt given by the company on the delivery of the package was never returned or tendered to the company for cancellation or alteration, nor was the same requested. When the plaintiff at Kingstree ordered the seed shipped to Augusta, the express agent states that the plaintiff told him that he would keep them over until next season, as they would keep two years and be all Tight. Plaintiff’s statement is, that “having decided not to plant the seed at Kingstree, on account of the land not being just what I expected, I told the agent to ship the seed to Augusta as soon as he could hear from the agent at Blackville.” He probably thinking that he, plaintiff, had decided not to plant them because he had been waiting five days for the seed and could not get them, “the agent asked me if the seed would be good for planting for another year. I suppose I told him that they could be used for next year. On leaving Kingstree, after giving the agent orders
On the trial of the case, the plaintiff moved 'to dismiss the demurrer upon the ground that it was a speaking demurrer. The motion was sustained and the demurrer was dismissed on said ground. After hearing argument on the merits of the case, the court entered judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $56, to which decision the defendant excepted, and assigns the same as error. The plaintiff’s exceptions are specifically set forth in the bill of ■exceptions, and may be summarized as follows: (1) The court-erred in dismissing the demurrer on the ground that the same wag a speaking demurrer; (2) in holding that the justice’s court had jurisdiction of the cause of action; (3) in overruling the terms of the written contract for shipment of a “C. O. D.” package, and the limitation of liability therein to' $25, and in not holding that the liability both on the original shipment and the reshipment was as specified in the receipt, $25; (4) in holding that the tender back to plaintiff of the article shipped was not a compliance with the contract of original shipment and reshipment by the express company; (5) in holding that the measure of damages placed upon the seed was the highest price in the Augusta market, instead of at the points of shipment and arrival, to wit, Blackville and Kingstree, S. C. (6) .Because it appears as a matter of fact that the mistake in the shipment was made by the shipper, and that the delay incident to correcting this mistake was the cause of the non-delivery of the seed to the plaintiff in time for the market of 1905; and the shipper was responsible for this delay, and not the company. (7) Because the court found generally against the defendant, when it appeared as a matter of fact, and not disputed, that on May 5, a shipment was made of a package of watermelon seed “C. O. D.,” valued $25, and that the plaintiff refused to receive it when it arrived at Kingstree, claimed that there was a mistake, and, because the shipper’s mistake was not corrected by
The defendant made a contract to forward the seed and to deliver it at Kingstree, S. C. No specific time was stated for .the execution of the contract, but the law implied that the contract would be performed within a reasonable time. The seed reached Kingstree within such reasonable time, and it was there found that a mistake had been made in sending the shipment “C. O. D.” The agent of the defendant undertook to correct this mistake, and it appears that the plaintiff also undertook to correct it. Before the correction had been made, the plaintiff notified the defendant’s agent at Kingstree that he was going to Augusta, Ga., and directed the agent to reship the seed to him to Augusta when the correction in the shipment was made; and this the agent agreed to do. Therefore it became the duty of the defendant to forward the seed to Augusta, and there deliver it to the consignee within a reasonable time. The cause of action, therefore, arose from the defendant’s failure to perform its contract duty to deliver the seed within a reasonable time to the consignee at Augusta. ' Such cause of action arose ex contractu, and the justice’s court had jurisdiction thereof.
We think it immaterial who was responsible for the error in the shipment. When the company’s attention was called to the error at Kingstree, by the owner of the seed, it undertook to have the mistake corrected. In thus undertaking, there was an implied obligation to have the error corrected within a reasonable time, in order that the company might fully perform its obligation and deliver the freight to the owner within a reasonable time. It can make no sort of difference that- the delay in having the correction made caused the delay in forwarding and delivering the seed to the consignee in Augusta. The carrier recognized the right of the consignee to have the error in the shipment corrected, and it also recognized his right as the owner to have its destination changed from Kingstree to Augusta.
We therefore think that the learned judge who acted both as court and jury committed no error of law, and that his finding was fully warranted by the facts. Judgment affirmed.