28 F. Cas. 1078 | U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illnois | 1872
I shall decide the case on the ground that there was a bill of lading which was a contract between the parties, exempting the defendant from loss by fire. There is considerable difficulty in relation to the question of notice, whether or not the plaintiffs had a reasonable time after the notice was given, if given, to remove the goods from their place of deposit after they were landed. It is not necessary to decide the case on that ground; but I think that the weight of evidence is that there was a contract between these parties, which constituted the measure of responsibility on the part of the carrier in relation to the transit of the goods.
When the courts say that it is competent for the earner to relieve himself from his common law liability, and that it cannot be done by mere inference—that it must satisfactorily appear that the carrier has done so with the consent of the consignor—it is not meant that a court must not consider testimony according to its legal effect and according to the fair inferences deducible from what appears in the case in relation to this question, namely: whether there was a contract between the parties by which the carrier was to be exempt from his common law liability.
In this case the testimony bearing upon this question of the bill of lading is contained in the deposition of Benjamin K. Little. who testifies as follows: “On the 21st day of September, 1871, one hundred and sixty boxes of merchandise called ‘Kennedy’s Medical Discovery, were shipped by said company from Boston to Chicago, consigned to said Van Schaack, Stevenson & Reid. Thejr were, shipped by and at the request of Donald Kennedy, on application at the office of the company. At the time of said shipment duplicate bills of lading of said merchandise, under which said property was shipped, were made out. Said bills of lading were either delivered to said Kennedy or to his teamster who brought the goods at the time of the contract for shipment, or were at the time of said contract for shipment directed to D. Kennedy, and placed in a box in the office of said company, at No. 7 State street, as aforesaid, to which box the said Kennedy and his said teamster had access, and from which, in all cases of shipment of goods, they were accustomed to obtain bills of lading when the same were not handed to them personally. Said Kennedy had for years very frequently shipped goods from Boston to the west by said Northern Transportation Company, through the office at which I was employed, as aforesaid, and had been accustomed to obtain the bills of lading as above stated. Said duplicate bills of lading were either made by me personally in the performance of my duty as such clerk, or by my assistant under my immediate supervision and examination. The making of bills of lading of the company and shipments of goods are my duty.”
One of the plaintiffs was examined as a witness, and testified that no bill of lading was ever received by the plaintiffs; that after the goods were ordered, all they received was an invoice containing a memorandum that they had been shipped by the Northern Transportation Company; therefore it may be assumed that there is no evidence which, fairly considered, tends to establish that the plaintiffs themselves ever received this bill of lading.
Now this is the testimony in relation to the contract, which, it is alleged, was made between the parties as to the shipment and transit of these goods which were destroyed by fire; and the question is, looking at the testimony fairly, and drawing the infer-
Now there is often great difficulty, undoubtedly, in the application of this rule which allows a carrier to restrict his common law liability simply by making out a bill of lading and delivering it to the consignor or to his agent, and inferring thereby that the common carrier is exempt from liability; and while I am not prepared to say that the mere existence of such a state of facts would warrant the conclusion that a contract was made by the consignor, still we are to look at what is established, and see what it was within the power of the party to prove—see if the inference is not fairly to be drawn from the testimony which is presented. Now, this witness annexed to his deposition a copy of the bill of lading, which contains a clause of exemption from the common law liability in ease of loss by fire, and without saying that all the various conditions that were contained in this bill of lading necessarily bound the consignor, still it is fairly. inferable, I think, that this defendant was in the habit of transporting property shipped by Mr. Kennedy on a bill of lading which contained this exemption, and that this bill of lading came into the possession of Mr. Kennedy, and was received and acquiesced in by him as the measure of responsibility on the part of the defendant in the transit of those goods—at any rate so far as the exemption from loss in ease of accidental fire is concerned. The bills of lading were made out there. They were either given to Mr. Kennedy himself, to his teamster who delivered the goods, or were placed in a box where they were in the habit of placing bills of lading when they were not personally delivered to Mr. Kennedy, and where he was in the habit of receiving them, and for years he had been accustomed to ship goods to the west by this line.
Now, what is the necessary conclusion from this testimony in the absence of all countervailing testimony ? It is that this bill of lading was delivered, and received by Mr. Kennedy with this exemption clause in it. This was on the 21st of September. 1871. The evidence shows that property was shipped under the precise form of this bill of lading that has been introduced, at least during that season. Now. is it not fairly inferable that Mr. Kennedy understood that the goods were to be shipped, the carrier being relieved from his common law liability in that respect? It is, as I think. If it were not so it was competent for the plaintiffs, and was their duty under the state of case which is made by this deposition, to rebut the inferences which necessarily grew out of the statement of facts made by Mr. Little. They had no right, I think, to rest upon the doctrine that it was necessary for the defendant to rebut, or to prove that the contract was delivered to Mr. Kennedy. [The plaintiffs have not done so. Kennedy was their own agent; he was the party that shipped the goods. If he did not receive the bill of lading, or if he was not bound by this contract in any way, it was competent for them to show it; and. I think, they were bound to do it. I decide the question, therefore, without reference to the question as to whether there was a reasonable time on the part of the plaintiffs to receive and rake away the goods.]
Of course it is a hard ease: but courts are full of hard cases and it is simply a question as to who shall bear this loss; and it seems to me, under all the circumstances of the ease, that the plaintiffs must bear it, and not the defendant. The issue and judgment, therefore, will be for the defendant.
[From 5 Chi. Leg. News, 181.]