Jonesville Mfg. Co. v. Southern Ry.
Jonesville Mfg. Co. v. Southern Ry.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This action was begun on August the 4th, 1905, by the plaintiff to recover of the defendant railroad company the value of five cases of hosiery delivered to it at Jopesville, S. C., consigned to Kaufer, Smithing & Co., Milwaukee, Wis., the same being five of a shipment of seven cases. The defendant admitted the receipt of the goods but alleges that they were lost by a connecting carrier and produced in evidence a contract of carriage signed by both parties, by which it was agreed defendant’s liability should be limited to its own line. Also by its amended answer, it set up loss by the act of God.
The case came on for trial before his Honor, Judge Geo. E. Prince, and a jury at the June, 1906, term of Court for Union County and resulted in a verdict of three hundred and thirteen dollars and thirty-nine cents for the plaintiff. A motion for a new trial having been refused defendant appealed.
The question arises, then, what constitutes a receipt in writing. The term usually implies a formal paper signed by one party and delivered to another. This was doubtless the meaning of receipt in the mind of the Circuit Judge when he charged the jury in this case. We do not, however, think that such a limitation should be put upon the act. Its purpose was to enable railroads to relieve themselves from liability for loss of goods by showing by written evidence that they had been delivered to a connecting carrier. In the case of Miller Bros. v. Railway, 33 S. C., 359, 366, 11 S. E., 1093, in which objection was made to the admission of certain evidence, thus raising the identical question raised here, the Court said: “Without now undertaking to decide whether there are circumstances under which parol testimony may be admissible to prove the delivery of property by one carrier corporation to its next connecting line, we think the testimony of Cudworth as to the receipt of the property by the steamship line, cannot be said to be ‘merely oral.’ He said ‘he recollected the receipt of the goods by referring to my receipts.’ Being shown the paper, dated October the 4, 1887 (exhibit C), he said, ‘That is the origi *485 nal in my handwriting. These (describing the property), are checked off as received. They are records of my office; duplicates were furnished the South Carolina Railway Company,’ &c. We do not understand that the act requires the receipt spoken of to be in any particular form. The intention was to require the delivering company, in order to discharge itself, to produce such written evidence of the receipt of the property by the connecting carrier to which it is delivered as will shift the liability to account for the property to that company. As it seems to us, the paper dated October 4, 1887, and signed by Alfred Cudworth ‘for steamer,’ sufficiently identifies the property received, and is substantially such ‘receipt in writing’ as to be a 'discharge to the railroad company.” Applying this language to the case now under consideration, we think there is such production of a receipt that will prevent the Circuit Judge from holding that there was a total failure on the part of the defendant to produce a receipt in writing, and therefore, it could not possibly get a verdict in its favor. Witness Pollard, the freight agent of the M. & O. Railroad Company at St. Louis, testified from a record of his office known as the per diem sheet, that “the seven cases billed K. F. products were received at. East St. Louis, June the 4th, 1903, in Southern Car No. 24082, from Corinth Miss., on way bill 25, dated June 1st, 1903. That they were transferred, on June the fifth, 1903, into C. & A. car No. 15173, which was delivered to the Terminal Railroad Association at East St. Louis, 111., for the C. & A. Road on June the 6th, 1903, and were receipted for by them at 3 :45 that day.” According to the testimony, the per diem sheet accompanies all cars transferred from one railroad company to another, and is signed by the agent for both receiving and delivering roads, and it is an acknowledgement of the receipt of the car by the receiving company. It is to establish the delivery of cars to the railroad interested. This sheet was also introduced in evidence and was, according to the language of the Court above cited, of itself apart from other records and testimony based upon them, *486 sufficient receipt of the goods by the M. & O. Railroad Company.
This conclusion, we think, is decisive of the case. There are other exceptions but the decision of this question either decides them or makes consideration of them unprofitable.
It is the judgment of this Court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed and the case remanded for a new trial.
Reference
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- 1. Carrier — Freight—Notice.—Under the common law, presumed to be of force in Wisconsin, and under the customs proved in this case, it was duty of carrier to notify Milwaukee consignee of arrival of freight at its destination. 2. Ibid.- — Connecting Line — Constitutional Law — Freight.—Sec. 2176, Code op 1902, making initial carrier liable for loss of goods shipped over it and connecting lines unless it produce a receipt in writing from its connecting carrier, is constitutional, and production by initial carrier of a per diem sheet showing delivery to connecting carrier of cars and goods each day, including the goods in question, signed by connecting carrier, is a receipt in writing under the terms of the statute.