Moody v. Southern Ry.

Supreme Court of South Carolina
Moody v. Southern Ry., 60 S.E. 711 (S.C. 1908)
79 S.C. 297; 1908 S.C. LEXIS 73
Woods

Moody v. Southern Ry.

Opinion of the Court

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

This ’appeal is from a judgment of -a magistrate -court, affirmed by the Circuit Court, fo-r $23.20, the value ¡of five barrels -of flour alleged to have been lost between Nashville, Tenn., and H-agood, S. C., and fifty dollars, the 'statutory penalty.

*299 Section 1710 off Civil Code and the act of February, 190'3 (24 Stab, 81), on ¡which the action ’depends, have been so often set out in recent cases that familiarity with them will be assumed.

1 Testimony as to the diligence actually exercised in the effort to trace 'the goods and ascertain on wh'at lime they were lost, damaged or destroyed was oif course admissible under Section 1710' of Civil Code; but evidently the miagisr-trate Was right in excluding the opinion of a witness as to the sufficiency of the forty days allowed by the statute, and as to whether in case 'certain difficulties! — not. however, appearing here — arose, the information could be given within the prescribed time. The question of due diligence Was for the jury.

2 The bill of lading, which was issued by Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis Railway Company, contains- the following 'clauses': “Received by the Nashville, Chattanooga & Sh Louis Railway, at....... .,. .Station........... 190.., from. .1. .1. .1. .1, 'the property described below, in 'apparent good order, 'except as noted (contents- and condition of contents -of packages unknown), marked, consigned, and destined as indicated below, which carrier agrees to carry to said -destination, if on its -own road, or otherwise to deliver to another carrier on the route to said destination. In consideration of. the rate charged, under the conditions of -this bill oif lading, it is mutually .agreed as to each carrier, severally, not jointly, of all or any oif said' property over all or any portion of said route to destination, and as toi each party at -any time interested- in all or any of said property, that -every service to be performed hereunder shall be subject to all the 'Conditions, whether printed or written, on the face or back hereof, all of which are agreed to by the shipper as owner or agent for the owner, -and accepted -for himself or his assigns as just and) reasonabl-e. No carrier shall be liable for loss or damage not 'Occurring on its portion of the route, nor after said property is ready for delivery to consignee.”

*300 These stipulations make each carrier liable for the lose or damage on its owin line; and under them, the responsibility of each carrier would cease iwhen it delivered to the next carrier the goads in the same order in which it received them.

The first Cause of action was brought tinder Section 1710' of Civil Code, which applies only when the contract of shipment provides the responsibility ¡of each' carrier shall' cease on delivery to the connecting line “in good order.” On the strictest technicality, a distinction m|ay be drawn between a bill of lading ¡like ¡this, under which the responsibility of each Carrier is to cease when it delivers to the next carrier the goods in the same order in which it received them, and one under which Hie responsibility of each ceases on delivery to the next carrier “in good order.” But the two' 'contracts are substantially the same. For damage to goods there dan be no delict or breach' ¡of ¡the contract of carriage of a Connecting carrier whb delivers the goods to the succeeding carrier in the same ¡order in) which it received therm from the preceding carrier. Delivery by the carrier in the same order as existed at tbje receipt of it, is. a delivery in good order as far 'as that carrier is concerned. lit is true the words' “in goad arder” used in the statute are in quotation marks, but it would he disregarding the substance to hold the statute noit to apply to' contracts in which equivalent word's ate used.

We do not question the authority of Cave v. Ry. Co., 53 S. C., 496, 31 S. E., 359, but it will be seen by reference to that case that there w-as no allegation in the complaint of any such provision in the contract of shipment as appears here in the 'bill of lading. The shipment, therefore, fell under the statute and the magistrate was right in not granting the motion for a nonsuit as toi the first cause of action.

3 There is evidence that the flour that was shipped on 12th February, 1906, was found by the Georgia Railroad Company in its possession on 1st July, ¡and immediately tendered to the plaintiff. Notwithstanding ¡the delay, the plaintiff wlas bound to receive the flour, the liability of the carrier ¡being to compensate for the damages *301 growing out of the delay, but not for loss. Nettles v. R. R. Co., 7 Rich., 190; Turner v. Ry. Co., 75 S. C., 58; McKerall v. R. R. Co., 76 S. C., 338. The magistrate was in error ini refusing so to charge.

4 There Was ialsoi error in refusing to charge the juiry that if loss- or damage toi the flour did not occur on the defendant's own line, then there could be nio recovery against 'the defendant for the statutory penalty. Venning v. R. R. Co., 78 S. C., 42.

5 .The defendant’s agent testified he sent the plaintiff a voucher or order for payment of the value of the flour, issued by the Georgia Railroad 'Company, which plaintiff retained but did not present for payment. On this point the defendant requested -the magistrate to 'charge the plaintiff oould not recover the -statutory penalty “when he accepts and retains the voucher for the value of the flour.” There was no evidence of the negotiability -of the voucher or of its use 'by defendant, or of ,any action on his part, beyond his failure -to return it, going to show an intention to -accept the voucher in payment. Whether -it was received a-s payment was a question of fact for the jury, the burden of proving it was so received being on the defendant. Johnson v. Clarke, 15 S. C., 72; McKibben v. Salinas, 41 S. C., 105, 19 S. E., 302. There was no error in refusing to Charge the jury, as a legal proposition, the failure to return the order estopped plaintiff from! setting up a .-claim for the value of 'the goods and the penalty. It w!as for the jury to gay ‘whether, under all the circumstances proved, the plaintiff should be charged with ;an intention 'to accept the order as payment.

The judgment of this Court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed and the cause remanded to the magistrate court for a mewl ¡trial.

Reference

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