Ferguson v. Southern Ry.
Ferguson v. Southern Ry.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Plaintiff recovered judgment against defendant for $34, the value of a lost shipment of sugar and rice, consigned to him, at Yorkville, S'. C., by the Tiedeman Company, of Charleston, S. C., on August 24, 1908, and also the penalty of $50, provided by statute, for the failure of defendant to pay the claim' therefor within the time fixed by the statute, after the filing thereof. Defendr ant admitted the loss- of the goods while in its possession, at Kingville, S. C., on August 28, 1908, and undertook to excuse itself from liability by showing that they were destroyed by the act of God, without any fault on its part. *63 At the close of all the testimony, defendant moved the Co-urt to direct the verdict in its favor, on the ground that nio reasonable inference could be drawn from the testimony other than.' that the plaintiff’s goods had been destroyed by ah unprecedented flood', without any negligence on its part. The Court ruled that the flood which destroyed the goods was, indeed, unprecedented, and was, therefore, the act of God, but refused the motion, holding that the testimony was susceptible of more than one inference upon the question whether defendant’s negligence contributed to the loss1. Counsel on both sides agree that the sole question for the consideration of this Court is whether there was error in this ruling.
*64
Before proceeding to a consideration of the testimony, we state some of tine principles which should guide the Court in deciding whether there is any evidence of negligence on the part of a defendant in a case like this, and which should likewise guide the jury in passing upon its' sufficiency, and in determining whether it preponderates'.
In 1 Thomp. on Neg;, -sec. 28, the author saysi: “In determining whether the due degree of care has been, exercised in any situation, reference must be made to the facts and surroundings of that situation, and the .question1 cannot be determined by abstract theorizing or idealizing. The question must be looked at as the defendant might have looked at it, situated ‘as be was, and surrounded" as he was. The jury ought to determine it by their foresight, and not by their hindsight. Speaking with reference to' this question, it has been quaintly reasoned that the fact that, after an inijury occurs by accident, some man of genius discovers a superior method of 'preventing such accidents, does not show negligence in failing to use such method of prevention. Accordingly, that which never happened before, and which in its character is such that it would not naturally occur to prudent men to guard against its happening, cannot, when, in the course of years, it does'happen, furnish good grounds for a charge of negligence in not foreseeing its possible happen *65 ing, and guarding against that remote 'contingency.” In Cornman v. Eastern Counties R. Co., 4 H. & N. 786, Bramwell, B., said: “In su-db a ease, it is always -a question' whether the mischief could have been reasonably foreseen. Nothing- is so easy as to< be wise after the event.” In 21 A. & E. Enc. L. (3 ed.), it is said: “The mere fact that an injury might have been avoided by the adoption of certain precautions does not prove that there was fault in failing to anticipate and provide against it. Nor is the fact that after the occurrence of an accident it is seen that such: accident might have been easily guarded against conclusive of negligence. Thus, where the possibility of a particular occurrence is demonstrated only by its 'happening, there is no liability in negligence. But the fact that no such accident as the one complained of had ever ’happened before is not, of course, conclusive of the fact that there was mo negligence.” In volume 13 of the same work,.page 731, it is -said: “An extraordinary flood is to be classed amiomg the acts oif God which no human power can prevent or avert. Whether it will relieve the carrier from liability, depends upon whether its -results or natural consequences could, by the exercise of reasonable foresight and prudence, have been foreseen and guarded against. If the emergency was- one that no human sagacity, guided by ‘any of the known principles of human reasoning, could 'have anticipated, the earner will be relieved. If, on the other hand-, its effects might' have been foreseen by the exercise of reasonable diligence and prudence, a failure to do so would be negligence and subject the carrier to damages, although the original cause was the a'ct -of God.” And, on page 733 of the same volume, this rule is- 'stated: “If a carrier discovers that goods intrusted to his care are in peril of injury or destruction by a flood, then it becomes his duty to use actively and energetically all the means at his command, or which it might be reasonably expected that one engaged in such' business would posses®, to' meet the emergency, and save the property from injury, and any *66 neglect to use the means stated! above, which prudent, skillful men in that business might ordinarily be expected to use in such an emergency, will subject the carrier to liability.”
It requires no citation, of authority to sustain the proposition that after a carrier has discovered, or, by the exercise of reasonable prudence and diligence should 'have discovered, that goods in 'his possession are subject to the perils of an unprecedented flood, or other vis major, it is h'is duty to exercise reasonable care and diligence to' save them' from damage or loss.
The testimony covers some 240 pages: of the “Case,” and, while there are some differences 'between -the witnesses as to minor details., the material facts are practically undis:puted; yet it would be difficult, if not impossible, to- set forth in a brief statement of the testimony,—and nothing more can be attempted in this opinion—the settings and colorings of the- case, in the lights ini which it appears from a reading of all the testimony. Neither can the minor details-, which impress the mind, as. the testimony is read, be clearly brought out in such a synopsis.
Plaintiff’s goods were destroyed at Kingville, which is a station on defendant’s road from Columbia to' Charleston, and is the point of junction of that road with 'another road-operated by defendant, running to Marion, N. C., via. Camden and Yorkville, the destination of plaintiff’s goods. Kingville is situated in the fork of the Congaree and Wateree rivers, which- unite about seven or eight miles below to' form the Santee. It is between1 three and four miles from the ' Congaree, -and from five to -seven miles from -the Wateree. If i-s in the edge -of the swamp of the, Congaree, and the land 'between it and each of the rivers is low, flat,, swamp, land, subject to inundation by freshets. The station is built upon made land, and the railroad tracks are raised several feet above the adjacent -swamps by .embankments and trestles. The rivers meet approximately at right angles.. Just below their -confluence there is a high bluff .on one side and the *67 'highlands come down pretty close on the other, so- that the swamp is narrow. Therefore ini times of very high water in both rivers the passage is inadequate and the waters- are dimmed up and thrown back in the swamp- above.
Besides the two- lines mentioned, -the defendant -operates other roads in the State whi-ch pretty well cover the territory traversed by those riv-ers- and th-ei-r tributaries1 which form the Congaree and Wateree, and it has along its roads telegraph lines as a means of communicating intelligence as to conditions affecting the proper operation thereof. The United States government has a weather bureau- at Columbia which- co-operates with- the railroads in obtaining and sending out information- relative to- th-e- -physical conditions which affect the operation -of the roads. It maintains gauges at different places on the principle river-s from which reports are sent in and a -record of them- is kept. In times of high water in the rivers-, flood warnings and -bulletins giving information of the- present and probable near future conditions are issued, and sent to those who are- interested. Besides its -own sources- of information-, the -services- of this bureau were- at d'ef■eod'ant,s, -command. Ordinarily, therefore, the defendant would be expected to keep its agents advised of -the approach of flood© of su-ch magnitude a-s to cause -apprehension of danger. The testimony -shows that, in this instance, the defendant was advised o-f the conditions existing throughout the State -on the streams -tributary to- the Congaree and Wateree; and that it knew that, -beginning about the 3 9th of August, rains- had -been continuously falling over the watersheds of these streams; and -that, -beginning about the- 23d, they became unus-ual, both in quantity and in the -extent of territory covered; -so- that, by the 24th, nearly all the streams- in the upper part- of the State began to rise, and on the 25th and 26th they had- reached the flood stage. It was known that the floods in some of the larger of these ¡streams' were unprecedented- in magnitude and destructive power. It was afeo 'known1 that they would *68 surely find their way info the Congaree and Wateree. Defendant also knew the records of previous floods in these rivers. The four greatest, of which there is- any record, were those of 1852, 1865, 1888 and 1908. Those of 1852 and 18G5 were about the same'—about 34 feet in height at Columbia; that of 1888 33.3 feet, and that of 1908 35.8 feet. In 1888, the highest reading of the gauge at Camden, on the Wateree, wa-s 33 feet; in 1908 it was- 39.7 feet. Just here it should be noted that ‘the Channel to' which the Coogaree is confined at Columbia, even in times of' flood, is much narrower than it is at Kingville. At Columbia, it is about 1,300' feet wide, while at Kingville it is between three and four miles wide. Hence, ordinarily, after the flood stage is reached, the river rises only about one-foorth as high at Kingville as it does at Columbia. In 1888, the waiter rose from 8 to 12 inches above the railroad tracks' at Kingville. After that flood, the tracks were raised, according to the different witnesses, from' 2 to 3 feet to' put them safely above 'high water. In 1908, notwithstanding the river at Columbia was only about 2*4 feet higher than in 1888, the water rose about six feet higher at Kingville ¡than it did ini 1888. The only reasonable explanation of this unusual phenomenon was attempted by Mr. J. W. Bauer, the section director of the weather bureau at Columbia, who thought it was caused by the fact that the crests of the floods in the Wateree and Congaree reached their confluence simultaneously, and the channel below, being too narrow to carry off the combined floods, the waters were thrown back into the swamps above, and upon Kingville. His theory was verified, at least to some extent, by the fact that the river gauge at Remini, on the Santee, showed only one flood crest, whereas, if the crests in the two rivers had not reached the Santee at the same time, it would have shown two flood crests; as it had theretofore always done, when there were floods in both rivers. He thought it a mere coincidence, which had *69 probably never 'happened before, and might never happen again.
Under the principles of law hereinbefore announced, it is clear that, if there was nothing more, defendant could not, in reason, have been expected to anticipate such an' unprecedented occurrence, and provide against it.
It appears, 'however, that on Thursday morning, August 27-th, the water began to rise in the swamp around Ring-ville, and about 7 o’clock that evening, it began to run over the railroad, tracks-, and was rising about 2Jd inches an hour. This, indicated that it had risen from 2 to 3 feet higher than the flood of 1888, and that all previous high water records- bad been broken. There were on the sidetracks in the yard from 15 to 17 cars of merchandise freight, including the plaintiff’s goods. There were also- -some empty cars, and s-ome loaded with dead freight, such as stone, coal, etc. Defendant had two. engines on the ground, one attached to a construction -train, and the other had just arrived, bringing the regular freight train- from Columbia for Charleston. The freight train had to. wait for the arrival of two passenger trains ’bound for Columbia, one a regular train on defendant’s road, and the -other a train of the Seaboard Air Line Railway which had been detoured over defendant’s- tracks- on account of a wash-out on the Seaboard- road. Th-ose trains were n-o-t expected, and did not arrive, until eleven o’clock. So far as. it appears from the testimony, -both the engines at Kingville stood there idle from 7 until 11 o’clock. -Either -could have carried -the- cars containing merchandise to Gadsden, a station on defendant’s road about fo-u-r m-ile-s from Kimgvil'le, and -put them in the sidetrack there. It is said, however, that the reason this was not done was becaus-e no one thought, or had any reason to think, that the water would rise as high as it did. Bearing in mind, ho-wever, that defendant kn-ew of ’the extraordinary flood's in nearly all the -tributaries of th-e Coragaree and Wateree; and, therefore, that it should have anticipated, *70 as it evidently did, an unprecedented rise of the water at Kingville; and that the water had already risen from 2 to 3 feet above all previous records; and was then rising at the rate of 2JÜ inches an hour, the question whether an ordinarily prudent and diligent person would then have thought that the time had come to- take steps to save property which was. exposed to the perils of such- a flood is one .about which reasonable men might differ. When the passenger trains passed, on their way to Columbia, the water had risen from 8 to 12 inches over the tracks.. By order of the road master, who was on the ground, the freight train, after leaving about forty of its cars on the bridges and trestles through the swamp to weight them down and keep- them from being-washed away, was allowed to proceed on its way to- Charleston. Tire -other engine was kept busy cutting out and placing empty cars, an-d cars containing dead freight on the other bridges and trestles in the swamp, until- 1 o’clock a. m. on the 28th, when -the water got so- high that it pu-t out the fire in the fire-box. When the freight cars were placed on the bridges -and trestles, on the m-ain line, there could have been no other traffic over the road, and the cars containing merchandise freight could have been carried to- safety by placing them on the main line a few 'hundred yards, west of Kingville. Two of defendant’s employees, testified -that they intended to do that, as soon as they got through placing the cars, on the trestles, but that when they had finished-that w-o-rk, it was too late, because the water was then so high they could not run the engine.
Under the facts and circumstances- -stated, the question whether an- ordinarily pruidenlt and diligent carrier would have removed the goods to- a place of safety was properly submitted to the jury.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Ferguson v. Southern Railway
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Carrier—Freight—Negligence.—W|hether freight may have been at the place it was damaged by a flood by reason of negligent delay of transportation and' whether such delay was only a remote cause of the damage, is an open question in this State. 2. Ibid.—Ibid.—Act op God—Issues.—Under the evidence in this case it was properly held that the flood which damaged' the freight in question was the act of God, but in view of the information the carrier had as to the flood' and the opportunity to remove the goods to a safe place, whether it was negligent in not so doing was properly sent to the jury.