Kerr v. Georgia Railroad
Kerr v. Georgia Railroad
Opinion of the Court
The St. Louis, Alton & Terre Haute Railroad Company undertook and agreed with one J. N. Hall to-transport a car-load of goods from Murphysboro, 111., to Atlanta, Ga., the consignee being J. B. Kerr. It was, in behalf of the company above mentioned and its connecting lines, expressly stipulated in the bill of lading that the contract therein embraced “will be accomplished and the liability of the companies as common carriers thereunder will terminate on the arrival of the goods or property at the station or depot of delivery.” Kerr, the consignee, resided at Decatur, Ga., a station on the line of the Georgia Railroad, and really desired the goods to be delivered to him at that place. It appears, however, beyond question, that Atlanta, the point of destination designated in the original contract of shipment, could not conveniently be-reached, and was not, by the terms of that contract, intended to be re'ached, by transporting the goods over any portion of the line of the Georgia Railroad Company. In other words, the company last mentioned was not one of the connecting lines over which it was contemplated by the parties the goods should be transported in order to reach the point of destination named in the bill of lading. When the goods reached Atlanta, this, company took charge of the car and transported it to Decatur. The evidence does not disclose why, or at whose instance, it did this, except that in a receipt acknowledging payment of its own. freight charges and those which had accrued up to the time when the car reached Atlanta, the Southern Railway Company is designated as the consignor which t delivered the car to the Georgia Railroad Company. Whether the goods were in bad order when received by the latter company does not appear, nor is there any evidence showing that it receipted for them as in good order, or, indeed, receipted for them at all. Upon opening the car at Decatur, the goods were found to have been very seriously damaged, but when, where or by what means, was not. shown.
Kerr brought in the city court .of DeKalb county an action against the Georgia Railroad Company, and obtained a verdict, which was, on .certiorari to the superior court of that county, set aside; and of this he complains in his bill of exceptions.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.