135 P. 406 | Okla. | 1913
Plaintiff's action is to recover damages sustained to three shipments of hogs and one shipment of cattle transported by defendant company over its line of railroad from Keystone, Okla., to Kansas City, Mo. At the trial it developed that the damages sustained under the first cause of action had been settled by defendant company. In its amended answer the defendant set up the live-stock contracts under which said shipments were made, and among other paragraphs thereof, relied upon as a defense, were the following:
"(4) For the consideration aforesaid, it is expressly agreed that the live stock covered by this contract is not to be transported within any specific time nor delivered at any particular hour nor in season for any particular market; that neither the company nor any connecting carrier shall be responsible for any delay caused by storm, failure of machinery or cars, or from obstructions of track from any cause, or any injury caused by fire from any cause whatever."
"(11) That, as a condition precedent to a recovery for any damages for delay, loss, or injury to live stock covered by this contract, the second party will give notice in writing of the claim therefor to some general officer or the nearest station agent of the first party, or to the agent at destination, or some general officer of the delivering line, before such stock is removed from the point of shipment or from the place of destination, and before such stock is mingled with other stock, such written notification to be served within one day after the delivery of such stock at destination, to the end that such claim shall be fully and fairly investigated; and that a failure to fully comply with the provisions of this clause shall be a bar to the recovery of any and all such claims."
To the paragraphs of the answer, based upon the foregoing provisions of the stock contracts, plaintiff demurred, and the demurrer *305 was by the court sustained, and its ruling is here challenged as error. Before passing upon the court's action in sustaining the demurrer to said two paragraphs of the defendant's amended answer, we will note briefly the claim in the brief of defendant in error that the several shipments were made under oral contracts. The record discloses the fact that, at the time the court sustained the above-mentioned demurrer, plaintiff asked and was given leave of court to amend his petition by adding to each cause of action the following: "That the defendant executed and issued a bill of lading to the plaintiff for such shipment, and plaintiff is the lawful holder thereof."
The act of June 29, 1906 (34 St. at L. 593, c. 351, sec. 7), known as the Carmack Amendment to the original interstate commerce act of February 4, 1887 (24 St. at L. 386, c. 104, sec. 20 [U.S. Comp. St. Supp. 1911, p. 1307]), requires any common carrier, railroad, or transportation company, receiving property for transportation from a point in one state to a point in another state, to issue a receipt or bill of lading therefor. The transactions in question, each being interstate shipments, in which the common carrier issued, and the shipper accepted, bills of lading, covering the shipments, and leave being granted plaintiff to amend his petition by declaring upon said written bills of lading or shipping contracts, it sufficiently appears from the petition as amended that the shipments were made pursuant to the terms of the several bills of lading, regardless of the equivocal allegations of plaintiff's reply.
On the part of plaintiff in error it is urged that paragraph 3 of the defendant's amended answer, to which demurrer was sustained, was objectionable for the following reasons: (1) That said provisions were violative of the federal acts regulating interstate commerce; (2) that said provisions undertook to relieve the defendant company of its own acts of negligence; and that paragraph 4 of said answer was objectionable on the ground that it was in violation of article 23, sec. 9, of the Constitution of this state.
We shall first consider the demurrer to the third paragraph of the answer. The twentieth section of the Act of February *306 4, 1887 (chapter 104, 24 St. at L. 379), as amended by Act of June 29, 1906 (34 St. at L. 584, 595, c. 3591), provides that:
"Any common carrier, railroad, or transportation company receiving property for transportation from a point in one state to a point in another state, shall issue a receipt or bill of lading therefor and shall be liable to the lawful holder thereof for any loss, damage, or injury to such property caused by it or by the common carrier, railroad, or transportation company to which such property may be delivered or over whose line or lines such property may pass, and no contract, receipt, rule, or regulation shall exempt such common carrier, railroad, or transportation company from the liability hereby imposed: Provided, that nothing in this section shall deprive any holder of such receipt or bill of lading of any remedy or right of action which he has under existing law."
The inhibition imposed by the latter provision of the act has reference to an attempt to relieve the initial carrier of liability for loss, damage, or injury caused by it or by any connecting carrier to whom the freight is delivered for transportation. By the terms of the act, the liability of the initial carrier is extended so as to include acts occurring on those connecting or forwarding lines over which the property may be transported. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. RiversideMills,
It was not the purpose of the act to thereby make the initial carrier an outright insurer of the safe delivery of the freight delivered to it for transportation. There must have been some failure to discharge its common-law duty before liability attached. It was not by the terms of the act intended that the initial carrier, or as here the sole carrier, should be liable for unavoidable loss or damage due to forces beyond its control. As was said by Judge Lurton, in speaking for the Supreme Court, in Adams Express Co. v. Croninger,
"What is the liability imposed upon the carrier? It is a liability to any holder of the bill of lading which the primary carrier is required to issue 'for any loss, damage or injury to such property caused by it' or by any connecting carrier to whom the goods are delivered. The suggestion that an absolute liability exists for every loss, damage, or injury, from any and *307 every cause, would be to make such a carrier an absolute insurer and liable for unavoidable loss or damage though due to uncontrollable forces. That this was the intent of Congress is not conceivable. To give such emphasis to the words 'any loss or damage' would be to ignore the qualifying words 'caused by it.' The liability thus imposed is limited to 'any loss, injury, or damage caused by it or a succeeding carrier to whom the property may be delivered' and plainly implies a liability for some default in its common-law duty as a common carrier."
In Missouri, K. T. Ry. Co. v. Harriman Bros.,
"The liability imposed by the statute is the liability imposed by the common law upon a common carrier and may be limited or qualified by special contract with the shipper, provided the limitation or qualification be just and reasonable and does not exempt from loss or responsibility due to negligence."
Upon another branch of the same case it was held that the shipper and carrier of an interstate shipment were not forbidden to stipulate that an action against a carrier in case of damage to the shipment must be brought within 90 days after the damage was sustained, by the provisions of paragraph 20 of the said amendment, prohibiting exemptions from the liability imposed by that act. It has also been held that the shipper and carrier of an interstate shipment are not forbidden to contract to limit the carrier's liability to an agreed value, made to adjust the rate, by the provisions of the Carmack Amendment, prohibiting exemptions from the liability imposed by that act.Adams Express Co. v. Croninger, supra; Missouri, K. T. Ry.Co. v. Harriman Bros., supra; Kansas City, S. R. Ry. Co. v.Carl,
The shipment in question being over the fine of the defendant company alone, the act does not change the common-law rule making the carrier liable only in the cases where it has failed in the discharge of some duty. That part of the fourth paragraph of the bill of lading particularly relied upon, and *308 which provides that the live stock shall not be transported within any particular market, does not therefore offend against the amended section of the interstate commerce act, and for that reason the demurrer was improperly sustained.
Does paragraph 3 of the answer attempt to relieve the defendant from liability on account of its own negligent act? It provides: (1) That it does not undertake to transport the live stock to market within any specified time nor to deliver it at any particular hour nor in season for any particular market; (2) that neither it nor any connecting carrier shall be responsible for any delay caused by storm, failure of machinery or cars, or from obstruction of track from any cause, or any injury caused by fire from any cause whatever. It has repeatedly been held by this court that it is not within the power of a common carrier to relieve itself of liability on account of its own negligence. Chicago, R.I. P. Ry. Co. v.Wehrman,
"If," as was said by this court in St. Louis S. F. R. Co.v. Bilby,
By this contract, however, it was not bound to transport the shipment within any specified time or to deliver at any particular hour or in season for any particular market. If, in the discharge of its duty to plaintiff, defendant was negligent, it must follow that it would be liable for all damages approximately flowing from such negligent acts. But it cannot be said, because defendant has fairly sought to limit its common-law liability, without attempting to relieve itself of any acts of negligence or misconduct, that therefore the objectionable stipulation is void as a matter of law. If, as has already been observed, upon a trial it should be made to appear that plaintiff sustained injury and loss on account of defendant's negligence, the latter could not defend on the ground that the shipping contract contained a provision relieving it of liability.
It was the duty of the carrier, after the live stock was received and loaded according to agreement, to transport them with all convenient dispatch with such suitable and sufficient means as it was required to provide in its business; that is to say, in a reasonable time. Hutchinson on Carriers, sec. 651; Elliott on Railroads, sec. 1555; Thompson on Negligence, sec. 6601; St. Louis, I. M. S. Ry. Co. v. Jones,
Passing to the question of the action of the court in sustaining the demurrer to the fourth paragraph of defendant's answer, we find authority, both of this court and of the Supreme Court of the United States, construing and sustaining like and similar contracts. St. Louis S. F. R. Co. v.Phillips,
It was held in the Bilby case, supra, that as to cases arising in Oklahoma since the erection of the state, where the contracts relate to interstate shipments, the same authority governs. That on account of the passage of the Act of Congress of June 29, 1906 (chapter 3591, 34 St. at L. 584), and of the acts amendatory thereof, the state, under its police power, has ceased to have the authority to pass acts relative to contracts made by carriers, pertaining to interstate shipments, and section 9 of article 23 (section 358, Williams' Ann. Ed.) of the Constitution of this state applies only to intrastate shipments.
The provision of the shipping contract made it a condition precedent to a recovery for any damages for delay, loss, or injury to live stock covered by the contract that the notice therein mentioned should be given. This differs from provisions in many of the contracts requiring that notice be given before any recovery can be had for "loss or injury to the shipment."Missouri, K. T. Ry. Co. v. Fry,
The provision requiring notice in the present case is not confined to loss or injury to live stock covered by the contract, but as well for any damages for delay, and therefore includes a loss sustained by a decline in the market.
If for any reason the provision of the contract should not be enforced by appropriate pleadings, that issue should have been tendered. If deceit or fraud was practiced upon the shipper by the agent of the railroad company in obtaining his assent to the agreement, or if notice was given by the shipper, or if waived by the railroad company, or if by the act of the latter such notice could not reasonably have been given, or if other valid excuse there be why the provision of the contract should not be enforced, in either event such fact should have been pleaded and proved. The due execution of the shipping contracts was admitted by the demurrer to the amended answer. The demurrer being sustained, these defenses were withdrawn from further consideration at the trial.
In the event of another trial in this case, attention is called to section 5907, Comp. Laws 1909 (section 5114, Rev. Laws 1910), providing that entries in books of account may be admitted in evidence when it is made to appear by the oath of the person who made the entries that such entries are correct and were made at or near the time of the transaction to which they relate or upon proof of the handwriting of the person who made the entries, in case of his death or absence from the county. This section of the statute has been construed by the court in First Nat. Bank of Enid v. Yeoman,
The judgment of the trial court should be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
By the Court: It is so ordered.