80 So. 101 | Ala. | 1918
The appellees instituted this action of trover for the conversion by the appellant carrier of 25 bales of cotton consigned by Jordan and Moss, at Guntersville, Ala., to themselves at Decatur, Ala., "order notify" the appellees, who were dealers in cotton at Decatur. The bill of lading was issued by the N.C. St. L. R. R. Co. The route contemplated, and that used to transport the cotton, was over the N.C. St. L. Ry. to Huntsville, Ala., and thence to Decatur over the appellant's line. The shipment was intrastate, not interstate; hence the laws applicable to define the rights and liabilities of the parties are the state, not the federal, laws.
The consignors, who were also the consignees, indorsed the bill of lading, and attached it to a draft on the appellees for the then market value of the cotton. The draft was paid by the appellees in due course; and the thus indorsed bill of lading was delivered to them, and thereupon the appellees became invested with the title to the bill of lading representative of the cotton. Instead of delivering the cotton to the appellees, the appellant delivered it, through the Gulf Compress Company, to the Jones Cotton Company, another concern dealing in cotton at Decatur. It was the absolute duty of the appellant to deliver the cotton according to the order of Jordan and Moss, and the delivery thereof to the wrong person was a conversion for which this action of trover lies. Mobile, etc., R. R. Co. v. Bay Shore Co.,
The carrier offered as an excuse for its tortious fault in effecting delivery to the wrong parties, who had no right to the bill of lading or the cotton, the fact that an agent of the initial carrier erroneously substituted on the "waybill," a paper distinct from the bill of lading and that was only intended to serve the private purposes of the carriers, the Jones Cotton Company as the parties to be notified. The carrier's absolute duty in the premises resulted from the bill of lading, and was not at all qualified by the directions in the "waybill." Indeed, the error therein was merely with respect to the party to be notified, and this direction did not even purport to alter the absolute obligation of the carrier to deliver the cotton to the consignees or according to their order. Only the fault of the shipper can exonerate the carrier from the consequences of a delivery to the wrong person. Furmen v. Union Pac. R. R. Co.,
Delivery of a shipment to the wrong person, by a common carrier, is inexcusable for any cause of fraud, imposition, or mistake, however occasioned, that would not also release the carrier from the duty of safe carriage. South. Ry. Co. v. Webb,
Aside from the legal results consequent upon the absolute duty stated, it may be added that the evidence is conclusive to these effects: That the carrier did not at the time undertake or intend the delivery of this cotton to the Compress Company as the agent of Jordan and Moss or of the appellees; and that at the time the carrier, acting on the mentioned error in the "waybill" and not observing its duty under the bill of lading, only contemplated a delivery to the Jones Cotton Company, who had no right to the bill of lading or to the cotton. Since the act of delivering the cotton to the wrong parties completed the conversion, an act in unpalliated breach of the carrier's precedent, primary, absolute duty, no demand on the carrier for the cotton was necessary to characterize as tortious such act of delivery, and hence not requisite to perfect in the appellees the cause of action declared on in this complaint. Glaze v. McMillion, 7 Port. 279, 281; Strauss v. Schwab,
Restrictive stipulations in a bill of lading, with reference to notice of claim of loss or damage, or to the period within which a claim should be made, have no effect where the carrier's absolute duty has been breached by delivery to the wrong party, constituting, by the act itself, a conversion. 4 Elliott on Railroads (2d Ed.) § 1512; 10 Cyc. pp. 184, 335, 400, with notes; South. Ry. Co. v. Webb,
The application of the stated settled principles to the undisputed determinative facts disclosed by the record confirmed the right of the plaintiffs to recover for the conversion of the cotton. Under such circumstances, reversible error cannot be predicated of errors (if any) in special rulings that, in this character of action, do not involve considerations referable alone to the measure of the recovery to which the plaintiffs are entitled. Bienville Water Co. v. Mobile,
Some months after the wrongful delivery of the cotton to the Jones Company, the carrier collected from that company an amount based upon the calculated market value of the cotton, with interest, at the time it was so delivered to the Jones Cotton Company, and subsequently tendered this sum to the appellees in asserted discharge of the damages resulting. The appellees refused to accept the sum then tendered. For the conversion consummated by the delivery of the cotton to the wrong parties the appellees were entitled to recover in trover the value thereof with interest. Loeb v. Flash,
In the posture of the case after the court had overruled the demurrer to plea 6, there was no prejudicial error in overruling the demurrer to replication numbered 4. If it should be assumed that the plaintiffs were not entitled to have the jury consider the question of exemplary damages as an element of the recoverable damages, there is nothing in the record wherefrom it could be concluded that exemplary damages constituted any part of the sum awarded by the jury. There was abundant evidence of the market value of the cotton between the date of conversion and the day of the trial on which to found an award in the sum set down in the verdict — an amount that was, doubtless, compensatory only.
In addition to the conclusively established fact that the cotton was converted by a delivery to the wrong parties, wherefrom, as before stated, the right of the plaintiffs to recover inevitably resulted, it may be further observed that no prejudicial error attended any of the rulings of the court on the admission or rejection of testimony.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
MAYFIELD, SAYRE, and GARDNER, JJ., concur.