1 Ga. App. 649 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1907
It is unnecessary to state the facts; for the plaintiff in error plants his case squarely and solely upon the contention that if a carrier accepts a shipment for delivery beyond its terminus, on an express contract that the responsibility of each carrier shall terminate upon delivery of the goods to the next connecting carrier, the shipper can not make a prima facie case of liability against the initial carrier by showing delivery of the goods to it and non-delivery at destination, though a reasonable time for delivery has elapsed. Though the point is not free from doubt, we are constrained to take the opposite view. Under the Civil Code, §2264 (which, however, is merely declaratory of the common law), in case of loss the presumption is against the carrier. The burden, however, is on the plaintiff to show the loss; but for the purposes of a prima facie case this may be done by showing such circumstances as would create the inference against the defendant that the goods are lost; as, for instance, they were bailed to the carrier a sufficient length of time to be transported to destination and have not arrived there. 3 Hutch. Carr. (3d ed.), §1352; Ga. Pacific Ry. Co. v. Hughart, 90 Ala. 39. Under the common law as declared in the Muschamp case, 8 Meeson & Welsby, 421, and as fully recognized in this State (Falvey v. Georgia R. Co., 76 Ga. 599), when a common carrier, in the absence of express contract to the contrary, receives goods to be transported beyond the terminus of its own line, it undertakes tó transport them to destination, either by itself or competent agents; and if the goods are lost beyond the terminus of its own line, it will be liable therefor. If the carrier and the shipper desire to vary this rule so that the initial carrier will not be responsible for loss beyond its terminus, by express agreement they may do so. Kavanaugh v. Southern Ry. Co., 120 Ga. 66; Central R. Co. v. Avant, 80 Ga. 195; R. & D. R. Co. v. Shomo, 90 Ga. 500. It is the rule of the law, nevertheless, that if the carrier relies upon an exception contained in a special contract to vary its common-law liability, the burden is on it to show that the loss came within the exception, and also that its own negligence did not contribute