Missouri Pacific R'y Co. v. Harris
Missouri Pacific R'y Co. v. Harris
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
§ 1257. Common carriers; contracts limiting their liability; invalid when in derogation of law; valid, when. Harris sued the railroad company to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by him by the failure of the company to transport, within a reasonable time and
§ 1258. Railroad companies are common carriers; constitutional provision. The constitution [art. X, § 2] fixes the status of railroad companies as common carriers, and limits the power of the legislature to vary their liability from that which pertains to common carriers, as distinguished from private carriers. •
§ 1259. Common carriers; contracts limiting liability of; statute on the subject. The scope of article 278 of the Revised Statutes is to render inoperative such special agreements made in contravention of such liability of railroad companies as common carriers, as the common law attached to common carriers; therefore the statute does not superadd any additional or more stringent liability than existed at common law, but simply maintains that liability of common carriers, as known to the common law, intact, and exempt from the carrier’s power to vary the same by any special agreement, or notice general’ or special, or by inserting exceptions in the bill of lading, or by limiting or restricting such liability in any other manner whatever.
§1261. Common carrier; what constitutes a. Neither the constitution nor the statute undertakes to establish a new and different rule of law in respect to the established maxim that “a carrier of goods for hire, although he may be a common carrier, is not such as to other goods or kinds of property than such as he holds himself out to transport in the capacity of a carrier of such for hire.” To bring a person within the description of a common carrier, he must be engaged in the business of carrying goods for others, as a public employment; he must undertake to carry goods of the kind to which his business is confined for persons generally, and he must hold himself out as ready to engage in the transportation of goods for hire as a business, and not as a casual occupation. [Hutchinson on Carriers, § 47.]
§ 1262. “Goods, toares and merchandise;” meaning of, as used in the statute relating to common carriers. The words “common carriers of goods, wares and merchandise,” as used in article 278 of the Revised Statutes, are not to be construed as either limiting or extending the class of property to be embraced by the carrier undertak
§ 1263. Carrier may relieve himself from transporting particular kinds of property by public notice; mixed question of lain and fact. It is consistent with the rights of the common carrier of goods at common law, to relieve himself from obligation to carry particular kinds of goods, by giving public notice. [Hutchinson on Carriers, § 112.] But this privilege does not extend to railroad companies under our statute, with respect to any property which they are adapted to transport, and which the public have a right to expect them to transport. They are common carriers for the benefit of the citizens of the state, as to all such property as according to modern usage railroads have been accustoihed to transport, and cannot limit their liability as such with respect thereto.
§ 1261. Live stock; railroad companies are common carriers with respect to, when, etc. Whenever a railroad company receives cattle or live stock to be transported over their road from one place to another, such company assumes all the responsibilities of a common carrier, except so far as such responsibilities may be modified by special contract. [R. R. Co. v. Nichols, 9 Kansas, 235; Hutchinson on Carriers, § 221.] And under our statute the modifications which may be made by special contract, and which are to operate within the limits of this state, can only be such as will not diminish the common law liability of the railroad as a common carrier.
§ 1265. Contract; lex loci contractus governs as to validity of. If a contract be entire and indivisible, and is to be partly performed in the state where it is made and partly in another, then the lex loci contractus or law
Reversed and remanded.
Note.— On a motion for rehearing, Judge Watts delivered the opinion of the court refusing the motion. No new questions of importance are discussed in the opinion, but the correctness of the former, opinion of the court is strongly maintained by the clear and cogent reasoning of the learned judge.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.