44 A. 304 | N.H. | 1894
Whether the plaintiffs seek to recover of the defendants as common carriers, or as warehousemen, or on the statute (G. L., c. 162, s. 8), the form of the action has been misconceived. Case, and not assumpsit, is the appropriate action for such a claim. The trial, however, appears to have been had upon the merits of the case without regard to the form of the action. We assume, although the case does not so state, that the fire was communicated from the defendants' locomotive.
"The proprietors of every railroad shall be liable for all damages which shall accrue to any person or property by fire or steam from any locomotive or other engine on such road. Such proprietors shall have an insurable interest in all property situate on the line of such road, exposed to such damage, and may effect insurance thereon for their own benefit." G. L., c. 162, ss. 8, 9. This statute was manifestly passed in aid of adjoining landowners and of persons having property on adjoining lands. In such cases the liability of the proprietors of the road is made absolute. *207
No question of care or negligence on their part is left open. Rowell v. Railroad,
The defendants are not liable as common carriers. Their duties as such terminated when the goods reached their destination, after notice to the plaintiffs that they were ready to be delivered, and a reasonable opportunity for examination and removal by them. Moses v. Railroad,
If there was any liability on the part of the defendants, it was that of a warehouseman, or of a gratuitous depositary; and as the referee has not found that they were negligent in either capacity there must be
Judgment for the defendants.
CHASE and WALLACE, JJ., did not sit: the others concurred. *208