190 Ky. 63 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1920
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
On June 27, 1917, Barbee & Company shipped a consignment of thirty-nine packages of whiskey from Milner, Kentucky, near Louisville, to a point in Texas, and op the next clay shipped two barrels' of whiskey to another point in the state of Texas, in each case taking a bill of lading. Neither of the consignments was delivered by the railway company, and this action was
• The rejoinder merely traversed the affirmative allegations of the reply. A trial before a jury resulted in a verdict for Barbee & Company for the full amount claimed, and the railway company appeals.
The parties filed a stipulation of facts which was read as evidence to the jury, and is as follows:
“(1) On June 27', 1917, the plaintiff John T. Bar-bee & Company delivered to the plaintiff, Southern Railway Company in Kentucky, at Milner, Kentucky, thirty-eight cases and one box of whiskey, for shipment to San Benito, Texas, consigned to the order of the
“(2) The said thirty-eight cases and one box of whiskey were of the value of $424.25.
“(3) On June 28, 1917, the plaintiff delivered to the defendant, at Milner, Kentucky, two barrels of whiskey, for shipment to Cameron, Texas, consigned to the order of the plaintiff, with instructions to notify W. J. Hair, at destination; and a bill o'f lading therefor was issued, executed and delivered by and between the plaintiff and the defendant, and accepted by the plaintiff, as the contract of shipment between the parties, a copy of which is hereto attached as exhibit ,‘B.’
“(4) The value of said two barrels of whiskey was $210.43.
“(5) The shipment of thirty-eight cases and one box left Milner, Kentucky, on the line of the defendant, on June 27, 1917, and arrived in Louisville the next day (June ,28, 1917). ;
“The shipment of two barrels left Milner, Kentucky, on June 28, 1917, on the line of the defendant and arrived in Louisville the same day.
“(6) These two shipments were at Louisville, Kentucky, placed in one car (S. F. R. D. 11250), and left Louisville at 4:30 a. m., on July 1, 1917, and arrived at the Coapman yards of the Southern Railway Company, in East'St. Louis at 10:45 a. m., on July 2, 1917.
“At 4:30 p. m., on July 2, the said car containing the said two shipments was placed on track number 4 in the Sixth street yards, at East St. Louis.
“ (7) About 8:00 p-. m., on July 2,1917,.some houses, to-wit: private residences in-the vicinity of the Sixth street yards and near the track, and place on said track, where said car was located, were set on fire by the rioters in East St. Louis, and the said car and the two shipments of whiskey therein contained were consumed by the said fire about 8:30 p. m., on July 2, 1917, which fire was communicated to said car from said residences, the conflagration having spread from the said residences to the said car.
■“(8) The shipments of whiskey, above referred to are those referred to in the petition.”
The railroad employes in charge of the yards were charged with the duty of protecting the freight consigned therein. In fact, the railway company was an insurer and it could not and can not relieve itself of liability merely by pleading and showing that a mob was in progress in the city and that a conflagration started by the mob spread to and consumed the freight in question, unless it further shows that such destruction did not result through its negligence. In other words, if the railway company, by the exercise of ordinary care, could have saved the freight consignment from the fire after its danger from the fire was discovered but failed to do so, it can not be relieved of responsibility by showing that a mob started the fire. It was charged with the duty of exercising ordinary care to save the freight consignment after the fire which threatened its destruction was discovered. If it failed in its duty in this regard it is liable. The accepted rule is that a railroad company may contract against liability for loss of goods while in transit through mobs or riots but it can not contract against its own negligence, and although a fire may be started by a mob the railroad company is not relieved of liability by merely showing that the fire was started by a mob, if the' facts are sufficient to show, as in this case, that there was ample time between the starting of the fire and the destruction of the property in which the freight might, by the exercise of ordinary care on the part of the railroad company, have been removed from the danger zone to a safe place. For the purposes of this case, we might wholly disregard the fact that the mob started the fire. It is conceded that the fury of the mob was not in any degree directed toward the destruc
It is also agreed that the fires in the vicinity of the yards in which the consignment of freight was, started ahont 5 or 5:30 o’clock in the evening. According to some of the evidence these fires increased very rapidly, starting in different houses in the same district. One witness testifies that as many as ten or twelve fires were going at the same time in the same vicinity. Accompanying all this was a great uproar and much shooting, all of which was calculated to attract attention. There was much flame and smoke which could be seen for a long distance. Notwithstanding this the railway company did not provide any engine in the Sixth street yards that evening with which to handle the freight cars, and in case of emergency to remove them or shift them to avoid the several fires which were in progress nearby, and this though some of the houses in which colored people resided and which were that evening destroyed by fire stood within a few feet of the tracks of the railroad on which loaded freight cars were stored. Stranger still is the fact that no sufficient guard was placed in these yards on that wild night to assist in protecting the property of the railway company and freight in its charge, and no arrangements even were made by the railway officials to keep informed of the progress of the fires towards the freight yards. In fact, the master of the yards did not call up the conductor in charge of a yard engine to ask that he go to the rescue of the burning freight property until about eight o’clock, or perhaps a little later. In other words the fire had been in progress in the district of the freight yards for three hours or more before the railroad company even took the precaution to ask one of its yard crews to take an engine to the Sixth street freight yard and to try to save the burning freight. After this request Was made, it took some twenty or thirty minutes for the engine to go from the place it was suituated to the place of the fire. There is much evidence, in fact it is practically conceded, that if an engine had been placed by the railroad company in the Sixth street yards when the fires first originated in that district the consignment of freight, which was lost and of which complaint is now made, would have been saved. This was the plain duty of the railroad company. Common prudence, it seems, would have suggested the propriety of keeping a lookout where a mob
Judgment affirmed.