St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co. v. Starbird
St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co. v. Starbird
Opinion of the Court
The suits embraced in this appeal were originally begun on the 7th ¡of April, 1908, and those causes were removed to the Federal Court, "Western District, of this State, where nonsuits were taken in July, 1910. And thereafter the suits were again brought in the Greenwood District of the Sebastian Circuit Court. Ten carloads of peaches are involved in this litigation, and there were originally ten suits, hut the causes were consolidated .and tried together, and a ¡single appeal has brought the judgment in ¡all of the eases before us for review.
The peaches were ¡shipped from Greenwood, in Sebastian County, to Adam Miller in New York City, and suit was brought by Miller to recover damages to compensate the loss sustained to the peaches in transit. Miller died before final judgment, and the cause was revived in the name of a ¡special administrator.
There was .proof to .support the finding by the court below that the damage to the peaJdhes resulted from the failure of the railroad to ship the peaches promptly and to ice them properly, and the evidence was also sufficient to sustain the amount of damages found by the court in the case of each of the cars.
The bills of lading for the respective cars all contained the provision that the carrier should not be liable for any 'damages sustained by tbe peaches, unless written notice was given within thirty-six hours after the arrival of the peaches at their destination of the damages sustained. It was .alleged in the complaint .that a written notice had been given; but the proof is insufficient to sustain that .allegation. It is very earnestly urged, however, that personal notice was given .and that .the delivering carrier had such actual .knowledge of the damage done the peaches as that a written notice was unnecessary, and would only have advised the delivering carrier of a fact about which it already had full information. The proof on the part of appellee was to the effect that the .ears were delivered a!t the railroad terminal in Jersey City, after which they were switched from the road to a. lighter, which was ferried across the Hudson River to a pier numbered 29, which was devoted to the reception of perishable fruits. The oars were taken from the lighter to the dock, which was entirely closed, (and no one was allowed inside the dock 'until the cars had been unloaded and the fruit placed in piles, 'the crates of peaches in each car being placed in a separate pile. The cars were unloaded hy employees of the railroad company, and at midnight bulletins were posted up showing the car numbers and the dealers to whom the fruit was consigned, and at 1 o’clock in the morning the dock doors were opened and the dealers permitted to go in and get their peaches. But no one was permitted in the .dock until the peaches were ready for delivery, and no consignee would know whether the oars consigned to him had been received until midnight when the bulletins were posted. The custom was that, if the peaches were sound, they were sold at the dock and were usually gotten rid of before noon of the day of their receipt; but, if many of them were bald, and had to be sorted out, the authorities 'at the dock required the consignees' to haul the peaches to. their places of business .and there sort them out, at which time the sound fruit would be repacked in orates and the faulty fruit thrown away.
It is insisted on behalf of appellees that Ithe delivering carrier was necessarily charged with notice of the condition of the fruit at the .time of its arrival .at its destination ; that 'this is so because the delivering carrier had inspectors at the docks whose business it was to inspect and .ascertain the condition of the various shipments, and that the consignments here involved were in such bad shape that ithe .carrier must necessarily have known that considerable damage had been sustained, as the fruit was shipped in crates Which were 'open so that from a superficial examination it could be seen .that the fruit had discolored and had become specked .and 'that large quantities off juice from the fruit had run out off the orates over other crates, .and that these crates could not have been handled without the railroad company acquiring this knowledge.
The deposition of Adam Miller was taken upon interrogatories in each of these cases, and in five of those depositions he was asked this question: Interrogatory No. 17. . State whether you, or .any of your .employees, told any of the employees of the delivering carrier of the damaged condition of peaches in said car, and Whether or not employees off said railroad company went into the car and inspected the peaches, and, iff they did not go into the car, did they unload or see the peaches unleaded, or see them after they were unloaded, and knew of the damaged condition of the peaches, giving name of the employee, if you know, -and the position he holds with ithe company?
“His answer was, I don’t know.’ ”
The following question was .also iasfced: “Interrogatory No. 18. State iff you know whether the railroad company, at that end off the line, had an employee to inspect said car of peaches, and knew of the condition in which the car .arrived?
“Answer to Interrogatory No. 18, ‘I don’t know.’ ”
But different 'answers were given in regard to the remaining five ears, which had the same initials and were numbered as follows: 10640; 8683; 10875; 10542; 10052. As to these last-numbered oars, the witness answered the Interrogatory No. 17 as follows: “I called the attention of the dock foreman to the had peaches, and told him they were not iced and had gone bad. I do not know the dock foreman’s name. He is in the employ of the Pennsylvania Railroad, Which ownsi the dock where the peaches were unloaded from the car which was lightered from Jersey City to New York. I don’t know his name. He looked at them and went away. ’ ’ And, in .response to Interrogatory No. 18, he testified: ‘ ‘ The railroad company has a man .at the dock who inspects the peaches as they come on the dock off the cars and see the condition which they arrive in.”
We have today handed down an opinion in a companion. case. See St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v. Cumbie et al., 118 Ark. 478. In that case we reviewed our previous decisions on the question of the validity of the stipulation contained in the hill of lading requiring notice to he given of the damaged condition of the goods within thirty-six 'hours .after arrival at their destination. The validity of the stipulation was again upheld in that case, as it had been in several prior decisions, and the judgment recovered in that case was reversed because the proof did not show a compliance with this condition. That case also stated the rule .as to the circumstances and conditions under which the knowledge of the carrier in regard to the condition of the damaged goods, would he held to dispense with the necessity of giving notice. That opinion quoted with approval from the case of Cumbie v. St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co., 105 Ark. 406, the following language:
“Where the facts stated show that the delivering carrier has actual knowledge of all (the conditions that a written notice could give it, then written notice is not required, and a provision requiring it under such circumstance's would he unreasonable. ’ ’
The purpose of this notice is manifest, and has been stated in our decisions upholding- it. Its object is that the carrier may inspect the goods and ascertain the nature and extent of the damage while the truth in regard to any claim for damages may he known. But where the carrier possesses this information independently of the notice, the giving of the notice can serve no ¡necessary purpose.
The depositions of Miller, upon motion of appellant, had been suppressed at a former term of court for the reason, principally, that the certificate of the notary was defective. This certificate was .amended, and upon motion of appellee the court .set aside its former order suppressing the depositions and permitted them to be read upon the hearing of the cause. There was no intimation that the integrity of the depositions had not been preserved, neither was there any question about the depositions having been properly transmitted by the clerk. No prejudicial error was committed in this respect.
As to the five cars last mentioned, the'judgment will be .affirmed; but as to the others, the judgment is reversed and the cause dismissed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company v. Starbird, Administrator
- Status
- Published