Walker v. Southern Ry.

56 S.E. 952 | S.C. | 1907

March 14, 1907. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company received from the plaintiff, Walker, at Louisville, Ky., nine horses to be delivered at Jellico, the junctional point, to the defendant, the Southern Railway Company, for carriage to Union, S.C. the ultimate destination. Only eight horses were found in the car on its arrival at Union. The plaintiff made out his claim against the Southern Railway Company for one hundred and forty-two dollars and fifty cents, the price paid for the missing horse in Louisville, attaching the bill of lading which had been sent to him. When the plaintiff went to the station at Union to present his claim, the agent in general charge of the office was absent, and the claim was filed with the cashier of the office, who acted for the agent in charge when he was out. The claim was not paid in ninety days, whereupon the plaintiff brought this action, alleging as a first cause of action, damages for the loss of the horse to the amount of three hundred dollars; and as a second cause of action, the liability of the defendant for the statutory penalty of fifty dollars for failure to adjust and pay within ninety days after *310 claim filed. The plaintiff recovered judgment for two hundred and twenty-five dollars.

The appeal relates to three defenses set up in the answer: 1st, delivery by the defendant to the plaintiff of all the horses received by it from the Louisville and Nashville Railway; 2d, limitation in the bill of lading issued by the Louisville Nashville Railroad Company to liability of seventy-five dollars for each horse; 3d, failure by the plaintiff to file his claim with the agent of the defendant at the point of destination, such filing being, under the statute, a condition precedent to the recovery of the penalty demanded.

Error is assigned in the refusal to grant a motion for a nonsuit on the ground that there was no evidence showing the lost horse ever came into possession of the defendant. It was said in Willett v. Railway, 66 S.C. 478: "The general rule is, that the burden is on the carrier which delivers the goods to the consignee to respond to any damage which occurs in transit, or show that it was done while in the hands of some other carrier. This rule has never been under judicial discussion in this State, but it is supported by the great weight of authority elsewhere."

The application of this rule to the case now under consideration is denied by the defendant because this is not a case of damage to goods received by the initial carrier in good order and delivered by the terminal carrier in a damaged condition, but of the complete loss of a part of the property shipped. Authority has been adduced in favor of the view that a presumption of loss by the terminal carrier does not arise where no part of the goods received by the initial carrier reached their destination. In such case the argument is, that there is nothing whatever to show that the terminal carrier ever received the goods, and therefore there is no foundation for the presumption that it lost them. But this case is entirely different. The shipment was a single carload of nine horses. The defendant received the car from the initial carrier and delivered the horses contained *311 in it as a single shipment. All the horses were in the car and in good condition when shipped from Louisville, and they are all presumed to have so continued in the car when it came into the hands of the defendant. The principle and reasoning on which the case of Willett v. Railway,supra, was decided are as applicable to the failure of the terminal carrier to deliver all of a carload which came into its hands as to the delivery of a single article in a damaged condition.Faison v. Railway, (Miss.) 30 Am. St. Rep., 577;Cooper v. Railway, (Ala.) 25 Am. St. Rep., 59; Harris v.Railway, (Fla.), 23 Am. St. Rep., 551; Smith v. Railway, 43 Barb., (N.Y.) 225. The motion for nonsuit on this ground was, therefore, properly overruled.

On the same point, it is insisted the evidence adduced by the defendant after the refusal of nonsuit, affirmatively showed beyond all doubt the missing horse was lying dead in the car when it was received by the defendant from the Louisville Nashville Railroad Company; and it is submitted, the Circuit Judge erred in refusing to direct a verdict for the defendant. The evidence tending to that inference was certainly very strong, but we do not think strong enough to warrant the Court in saying no other inference could be drawn from it. The car reached Jellico at about 2.15 A.M., and one of the defendant's witnesses testified he found the horse dead when he examined the car from three quarters of an hour to an hour afterwards. But this witness stated nothing indicating whether the horse died before or after arrival. It is true, other witnesses concerned with the transfer of freight at Jellico said they saw the horse and he was cold and stiff, but this was several hours after the arrival of the car. It does not clearly appear whether the car was still in the custody of the Louisville Nashville Railroad Company or had then passed to the care of the defendant. The presumption of loss by the defendant, the terminal carrier, was not so conclusively rebutted as to warrant the Court in directing a verdict. *312

Filing the claim with the cashier of the Union office of defendant, who was apparently in charge of the business in the absence of the agent having general charge, was manifestly a sufficient compliance with the statute which requires the claim to be filed with the agent of the defendant at the point of destination. The case ofBrown v. Railway, 71 S.C. 273, 51 S.E., 151, is different.

The attack on the constitutionality of this statute being made for the first time in this Court cannot be considered. Lowrimore v. Mfg. Co., 60 S.C. 153,38 S.E., 430.

For the purpose of showing the limitation of liability to seventy-five dollars for each horse, the defendant sought to introduce a copy of the bill of lading. The evidence showed the bill of lading was issued in triplicate. Only one was signed by the shipper, and this was sent to the office of the auditor of the Louisville Nashville Railway as the original. On the others the signatures were copied, one sent to the shipper and the other retained for filing. The defendant offered the copy retained for filing, alleging the loss of the original and the copy given to the shipper. Plaintiff attached the bill of lading received by him to the claim, and at the time of the action it was still in the hands of the defendant. It seems plain the paper signed by the shipper and sent to the auditor, and that accepted by the shipper, should each be regarded for all practical purposes the original bill of lading. Both of them express the contract and evidence the assent of the parties. The paper retained for filing not being signed by the shipper nor accepted by him is only a copy, and therefore admissible only as secondary evidence on proof of loss of the original. We agree with the Circuit Judge that there was no such evidence of loss of the originals as would make the copy admissible. Nor was it admissible because offered only on a collateral issue. One of the main issues was, whether the shipper had agreed to a limitation of liability *313 and this paper was offered as furnishing the direct proof of such agreement.

The case of Woods v. Cramer, 34 S.C. 518,13 S.E., 660, is conclusive that there was no error in charging that interest should be allowed on the value of the property fixed as the measure of the damages.

It is the judgment of this Court that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.

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