Parker Buggy Corp. v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
Parker Buggy Corp. v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
Opinion of the Court
The decisions of this State uphold the position that where goods are shipped with a common carrier, under circumstances importing absolute ownership of same on the part of the consignee, and of all pecuniary and beneficial interest in the contract of shipment and its proper performance, the right to recover damages for delay in the shipment, or negligent injury to the goods during their transportation, rests in the consignee, and he alone can maintain an action for such wrong.
Our authorities are also to the effect that where a vendor ships goods to a vendee on an ordinary and open bill of lading, that the purchaser designated as the consignee in such bill of lading is prima facie the owner of the goods, and of all interest in the contract of shipment; and, in the absence of any evidence tending to qualify or restrict the conditions stated, on injury wrongfully suffered, the consignee and not the consignor is the proper party to institute and maintain the suit.
The -principle indicated has of late been more frequently recognized and applied with us in actions against common carriers under the penalty statutes of the State in defining who is the “party aggrieved,” designated in most of them as the person who may bring the suit, as in Stone v. R. R., 144 N. C., 220, but they are made to rest on the principle that where a vendor ships goods to a purchaser with a common carrier designated by such purchaser, or with a common carrier whose lines afford the usual route and ordinary method' of shipment, and on a bill of lading of the kind described, the carrier, is con
We are aware that other courts, eminent for their ability and learning, bold, as we interpret their opinions, that in actions on tbe contract of carriage both tbe consignor and consignee may ordinarily sue, and if it is disclosed on tbe trial that tbe consignee is tbe sole owner of tbe goods, and of all interest affected by tbe wrong, that tbe recovery will be to bis use. Mr. Hutchinson, in bis valuable and accurate work on carriers, gives an interesting account of some of tbe different decisions on tbe subject, Hutchinson, 3 Ed., secs, 1304-5-6-7 et seq. (original secs. 720 et seq.), and adds tbe weight of bis own opinion in favor of this view. Secs. 1312-13. The author, however, states that tbe contrary position is maintained by courts of recognized authority, citing Potter v. Lausing, 1 Johnson, 215; Meigs v. Hagan, 86 Fed., 926; Everett v. Salters, 15 Wendell, 474; McLanglin v. Mastín, 12 Col. App., 268; 55 Pacif., 195; R. R. v. Metcalf, 50 Neb., 452, and other authorities in support of this statement.
While we are deeply sensible of tbe great consideration due, and which should always be given to courts and text-writers of tbe character referred to, we have concluded to adhere to our own position on tbe question presented, as grounded on repeated adjudications with us, as more in keeping with tbe spirit and letter of our law, which requires that actions shall be prosecuted in tbe name of tbe real party in interest; and as presenting, perhaps, fewer complications than may often arise in the administration and enforcement of tbe contrary ruling.
While, on tbe facts presented, this is tbe position which prima facie obtains with us, it is open to tbe consignor to sustain his right to sue on tbe contract by evidence relevant and sufficient tending to qualify the conditions indicated. Thus he may show that tbe goods were shipped under stipulations that in effect retained tbe title thereto, or some interest therein, in the consignor, as in Mfg. Co. v. R. R., 149 N. C., 261; or that the goods were shipped on consignment, or under other circumstances showing that the consignor had a pecuniary and beneficial interest in the proper performance of the contract of shipment; as in Summers’ case, 138 N. C., 295, or in Rollins’ case, 146
On these facts, we are of opinion, and so hold, that the defendant’s motion to nonsuit should have been sustained, and it is so ordered.
Reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- PARKER BUGGY CORPORATION v. ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD COMPANY
- Cited By
- 12 cases
- Status
- Published