67 P. 1015 | Or. | 1902
Lead Opinion
after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
Two errors were assigned; one relating to the court’s action in sustaining the demurrer to the separate defense, and the other in rejecting, as immaterial and irrelevant, the latter clause of said stipulation, both of which present but a single question; that is, whether the contract or agreement relied upon by plaintiff, and which is admitted by both parties to be
By the English rule, and by the doctrine of some of the courts of this country, such a receipt of goods for transportation, without else to indicate the intent of the parties concerned, implies, prima facie, an undertaking or contract upon the part of the carrier to convey them to the point of destination, as indicated by the direction or consignment, whether the carrier owns or controls all the lines of transportation in the route of their travel or not: Hutchinson, Carr. §§ 146, 147; 4 Elliott, Railroads, § 1435. The disinction between the two rules is that by the former the duty implied is to carry the goods to the end of the receiving carrier’s line, and there to deliver them to the next carrier in the route, to be forwarded thereby [Michigan Cent. R. Co. v. Mineral Springs Mfg. Co. 83 U. S. (16 Wall.) 318]; while by the latter the duty implied is to carry them through to their destination. The engagement, of course, may be varied in either case by express contract, or the circumstances attending the shipment may raise a different obligation by implication: and thus, in order to exempt the carrier beyond its own lines, under the English rule, there must be an express or implied limitation or restriction of primary liability; and to enlarge the liability, under the American rule, there must be an express or implied understanding to that effect, aside from the mere receipt of the goods destined to a point beyond the route of its own authority. The so-called American rule is perhaps better grounded in equal justice towards the shipper and carrier, and in public policy, and is therefore preferable upon principle, as well as by the preponderance of American authority.
Both the parties to the shipment were cognizant of the fact
The stipulation must certainly prevail to its fullest import, but what is its significance? Looking upon the face of the bill of lading, we find by the first clause that the goods "were received of Taffe, “marked and consigned as noted below,” and the written pai’t denotes a consignnient ‘ ‘ as above, ’ ’ and in either instance the reference is to the direction, “Chesebro Bros., Fulton Market, New York City,” so that the consignment is nothing more than the ordinary one of designation by direction of the place of destination, without restriction or enlargement. This brings us to the especial and emphatic contention of counsel, which is that the service contracted for was a special one; that is to say, that the company agreed to cany a perishable quality of freight by fastest passenger train service, and, being a service that neither it nor any con
Now, are we to assume that the defendant is the only company that is a common carrier in that sense, or would it be more reasonable to assume that, by reason of the fact that it was willing to accept goods of the kind to be carried by a rapid service, its connecting roads are doing the same thing? If it was once conceded that its road was the only one conveying the special kind of freight on the particular condition, the presumption might be said to follow, without more, that
We have not overlooked the case of Colfax Mount Fruit Co. v. Southern Pacific Co. 118 Cal. 648 (50 Pac. 775, 40 L. R. A. 78). That case, however, turns upon the interpretation of the meaning of the word “forward,” which was used in three different and distinct clauses of the contract; and, it having been necessarily used in two of them in the sense of “to carry,” it was quite logically held to have been employed in a like sense in the other clause, so the contract was interpreted as an undertaking to carry to destination, and this upon the face of the instrument itself. The case could not, therefore, be controlling. From these considerations, the judgment of the trial court will be reversed, and the cause remanded for such further proceedings as may seem proper, not inconsistent with this opinion. Reversed.
Rehearing
On Motion for Rehearing.
delivered the opinion.
In plaintiff’s petition for a rehearing the opinion in this cause seems to be interpreted as holding to the doctrine that the stipulation in the bill of lading, “on fastest passenger train service,” “was a mere matter of designation of one service among many, and imposed no other obligation upon the defendant than if the designation had been by ordinary freight, assuming thereby that it, in either case, had no binding effect upon the company, and, even if the company had accepted the goods under either designation, it was not bound to carry them as directed, but might disregard its agreement at pleasure.” If such is the effect of the decision, we agree with counsel that it is an “ impossible ’ ’ doctrine. But the opinion does not so hold. The contract of shipment was interpreted, as other contracts are, by looking through its whole scope, and in the light of the circumstances attending its execution. One feature of the attending conditions, and an
The petition for rehearing is therefore denied.
Rehearing Denied,