81 Ga. 522 | Ga. | 1888
Tbe Exposition Cotton Mills, of Atlanta, Ga., sued tbe Western & Atlantic Railroad Company for damages upon tbe following state of facts: Tbe plaintiff purchased from Riley & Co. certain cotton mill machinery, and made a contract with tbe Virginia, Tennessee and Georgia Air Line, to ship tbe machinery from Boston and other places in tbe east to Atlanta, at a reduced rate of freight and at tbe “owner’s risk.” ’ Tbe different roads over which it was to be shipped were mentioned in tbe bill of lading, commencing with tbe New York and New England Railroad Co. and ending with tbe Western and Atlantic Railroad Company, tbe latter having its terminus in tbe city of Atlanta. A por
Of course none of the carriers could exempt them;selves from liability arising from their own negligence. Although the goods were shipped at the owner’s risk, sand the carriers were not to be liable for damages . caused by the weather or rust, still if the damage was . caused by the weather or rust, occasioned by the negligence of the carrier or by unreasonable delay upon the ■ road, the carrier guilty of the negligence wo uld be liable. The owner could well say, “While I agreed to • take the risk, I did not agree to take the risk of your ■ negligence. I agreed to take the risk of the weather ' in open cars, if delivered within a reasonable time; but I did not agree to take the risk of the weather for over thirty days, when you should have delivered in ten.” We also think that if the shipper of this machinery : agreed that it might be loaded and transferred upon open cars, the railroads should not be held liable for ; any damage caused by its being so loaded, or any damage which occurred during its transportation by reason of its being in open cars. The carrier should be held liable only for its own negligence, or for the damage ■ caused by its unreasonable detention on the road. If • ordinary diligence required the carrier to cover these ■ cars during a detention on the road, and it failed to do ¡ so, it would be liable for any damage occurring while thus detained, if the damage arose from the want of , such covering. These being the rules of law controlling this case, under the pleadings, and the trial judge having failed to apply them, it follows that his judgment must be reversed.