Frasier v. Charleston & Western Car. Ry.
Frasier v. Charleston & Western Car. Ry.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion o.f the Court was delivered by .
The plaintiff brought this action for damages for loss of a horse, which died from injuries received in transportation from Augusta, Georgia, to Mt. Carmel, South Carolina, and for the penalty of fifty dollars, as provided by statute, for failing to adjust and pay said claim within ninety days. The jury rendered a verdict for the whole amount claimed, including the penalty, and defendant now seeks to reverse the judgment thereon.
The third exception charges error *in refusing defendant’s motion for nonsuit on the ground that the evidence showed conclusively that the horse injured was not the property of the plaintiff at the time of the injury. There is no. ground *144 for this exception. The witness, Carswell, who shipped the horse to plaintiff, testified that he sold the horse to plaintiff tor $125, and plaintiff testified he gave that sum for the horse.
The fourth exception imputes error in charging the jury as follows: “The statute law of Georgia has been introduced in evidence, which provides that a common carrier cannot limit its common law liability, but they can make express contracts and be bound thereby. I charge you under that statute, and it construes1 the law of Georgia, that when a bill-of-lading is issued and is signed only by the common carrier, that the shipper is bound by all of the general provisions in that bill-of-lading whether signed by the shipper or not. But any special contract limiting its liability, there must be a signing of the contract by the shipper or he must expressly assent to the terms of the contract. The mere acceptance of a bill-of-lading by the shipper, and his acting upon it, will bind him' so far as a general contract is concerned, but it will not bind him as to limiting the liability of the common carrier, but he must sign it at the time of shipping or expressly assent thereto'. I charge you that is the law of Georgia. If you find from the testimony that at the time of this shipment this bill of lading was delivered to Mr. Carswell or some one acting as his agent and he shipped it under the bill-of-lading, he is bound by the general provisions of that bill-of-lading, and so is the plaintiff in this case.” The specifications of error are: 1. That plaintiff could not avail himself of the law of Georgia without having pleaded the same. 2. That the charge was upon the facts, in violation of art. V., sec. 26, of the Constitution. 3. That it was competent to show a ratification, of the contract after shipment, such as would bind the plaintiff.
The first specification above cannot be sustained for reasons given in considering the second exception.
*145
The special contract sought to be established by defendant contained, among other things, a provision limiting liability for damages for loss or injury to' the horse to $60. Such a contract when fairly made upon consideration is binding on the shipper. Johnstone v. Railway Co., 39 S. C., 56, 17 S. E., 512. The Circuit Court, however, charged in effect that the existence and validity of the special contract set up in this case must be governed by the law of Georgia, where it was made, and that the shipper would not be bound by such stipulation in the bill of lading unless he expressly *146 assented thereto. We think the Circuit Court was correct in this, and that all exceptions by appellant based upon a contrary view must be overruled. The general rule on this subject is that clearly stated in Scudder v. Union Nat. Bank, 91 U. S., 406, 412.
“Matters bearing upon the execution, the interpretation or validity of a contract are determined by the law of the place where the contract is made. Matters connected with its performance are regulated by the law prevailing at the place of performance. Matters respecting the remedy, such as bringing of suits, admissibility of evidence, statutes of limitations, depend upon the law of the place where the suit is brought.” In Levy v. Boas, 2 Bailey, 219, approved in Ayers v. Audubon, 2 Hill, 604, it is declared, “that the lex loci contractus is ta be observed in deciding on the nature, validity and construction of the contract; but the form of the action, the course of judicial proceeding and the time when the action must be commenced, must be directed exclusively to the laws of the State in which the action is brought.” This general rule is well settled and understood, but the real contention in this case is whether the requirement by the Georgia law that the shipper shall expressly assent to' the special contract, touches the validity of the contract or only the remedy upon it or the evidence of it. Upon a similar contract the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, in Hoadley v. Northern Trans. Co., 115 Mass., 304, held that the question was one of evidence, and was to be determined by the law of the place where the suit is brought; while in Missouri, in the case of Hartman v. Louisville etc. Ry. Co., 39 Mo. App., 88, it was held that the question related to the validity of the contract, and was governed by the law of the place of .contract. We think this latter rule is the correct one. %The contract was alleged to have been made in Georgia concerning a shipment from that State into South Carolina. It was, therefore, not to be fully performed in.South' Carolina, but was to be at least partly performed in Georgia, where made. It, therefore, falls within the general rule stated in *147 4Elliott on Railroads, sec. 1506 : “That the law oí the place where it is made and is to be performed, either in whole or in part, governs as to its nature, validity and interpretation.” To treat the question as relating to the remedy, or the evidence of the contract, is to assume that a contract has been made to be evidenced and enforced, whereas the real question is whether any such contract exists. By the law of Georgia, there is no contract limiting common law liability unless the shipper expressly assents thereto'.
Such exceptions as may not have been specifically mentioned herein have been duly considered, and are controlled by the principles herein announced.
All exceptions are overruled, and the judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
Reference
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- 1. Common Carrier — Evidence—Bile of Lading — Written Instrument. — Where a carrier set up a special contract limiting its liability for damage to freight, consignee may show that the contract was not binding on him, that it was not signed by shipper until after injury, and then with the understanding that it would not be prejudicial to rights of consignee. 2. Ibid. — Pleadings—Foreign Laws. — In action in tort to recover damages for breach of carrier’s duty in transporting freight from a foreign State into this, when carrier sets up special contract, consignee may prove laws of foreign State to show invalidity or legal effect of special contract without pleading them. 3. Charge. — Foreign Laws. — Judge should construe the laws of a foreign State. 4. Common Carrier — Foreign Laws — Bill of Lading — Freight—Ratification. — Stock.—A contract between shipper of stock and carrier to transport it from one State into another, upon suit by consignee in the latter State for damages arising from its breach must be construed according to the laws of the State in which executed, and in this case the contract, executed in Georgia but not signed by shipper, under the laws of that State, so much as limits the value of the stock in case of loss is not valid, and mere acceptance of bill of lading by shipper or payment of reduced freight by consignee does not show ratification. 5. Ibid. — Freight—Constitution.—Act 23 February, 1903, 24 Stat., 81, imposing penalty on carrier for failure to adjust and pay, or to refuse to pay, claims for loss or damage to freight in specified time, is constitutional. O. Ibid. — Ibid.—Stock—Charge.—Reouest assuming existence of a contract in dispute and not framed to submit the question that carrier was not liable for damages if caused alone by consignee’s negligence in unloading animal, evidence being that the injury occurred while consignee and carrier’s agent was unloading, properly refused..' 7. Ibid. — Ibid.—Ibid.—Ibid.—Reuuest eliminating question of carrier’s negligence in furnishing safe place to unload a horse and in use of appliances, properly refused when those acts of negligence are alleged, and reference to negligence in general terms in charge must be construed to refer to acts of negligence alleged. 8. Ibid. — Ibid.—Ibid.—Negligence.—It is duty of carrier to furnish suitable appliances for unloading stock and to use them with due care, but even under a special contract making it the duty of shipper to unload, if agent of carrier is present and assisting in unloading in unsafe way, it is negligence in carrier. 9. Ibid. — Ratification.—Request to the effect that shipper ratified contract limiting its liability by accepting reduced rate of freight, properly refused, because it assumed the existence of the special contract, which was denied.