Director-General of Railroads v. Chandler
Director-General of Railroads v. Chandler
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was a notice of motion for judgment brought by J. W. Chandler against the director-general, operating the New York, Philadelphia and Norfolk Railroad. There was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, and the defendant assigns error.
On July 6, 1918, Chandler purchased from Louis Distributing Company, represented by and hereinafter called Louis, 199 barrels of Irish potatoes, supposed by Chandler to have been already loaded by Louis on a car of the N. Y., P. & N. Railroad at Eastville, Va. At the time of such purchase nothing had been done with reference to billing the car for shipment, and no freight receipt or bill of lading had been requested of or issued by the railroad company. Chandler instructed Louis to have the car shipped from Chandler at Eastville to Chandler at Chicago, thus naming Chandler as both consignor and consignee; and Louis procured from the agent at Eastville a bill of lading accordingly, which he delivered on the same da,y to Chandler, and the latter thereupon paid Louis $965.15, the agreed price of $4.85 per barrel for the 199 barrels covered by the contract of purchase. The bill of lading recited that the 199 barrels had been delivered to the railroad company. The plaintiff’s notice of motion expressly states
As a matter of fact, it developed that the goods recited in the bill of lading were never delivered to the carrier. This is not conceded by the plaintiff’s counsel, but it is, as we view the evidence, clearly proved. Although another car number was used in the notice of motion, there is no dispute about the fact that the claim is made on account of the contents of a certain car, known as S. A. L. No. 24053. It is shown that this car, containing 199 barrels Irish potatoes, had been already billed out by Louis on July 1, 1918, to another party at another destination, and had gone for
Having reached this conclusion, we need not consider the further contention of the defendant that even if the plaintiff could claim to be a third party holding the bill of lading as a bona fide assignee for value, the fact that no goods had actually been delivered to the carrier would still defeat the liability. The decisions of various State courts are in conflict upon this question. Sec. 4 R. C. L., pages 25, 26, sec.
Reversed.
Reference
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- Director-General of Railroads v. J. W. Chandler
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- Syllabus
- 1. Carriers of Goods —Bill of Lading — Prima Facie Evidence of Delivery to Carrier — Rebuttal.-—A bill of lading constitutes prima fade evidence of the fact that the carrier has received the goods recited therein, but this evidence may be rebutted. 2. Carriers of Goods — Bill of Lading — Rebuttal of Prima Fade Presumption of Delivery — Case at Bar. — In the instant case plaintiff bought a carload of potatoes from a dealer and instructed the dealer to ship the same in plaintiff’s name to Chicago. The dealer procured from defendant’s agent a bill of lading accordingly, and upon presentation of this bill of lading plaintiff settled with the dealer, treating that document as evidence that the contract of purchase and the incidental instructions as to shipping had been complied with by the dealer. Plaintiff was in both form and substance the shipper, and had made the dealer his agent in regard to the shipment. As a matter of fact, it developed that the goods recited in the bill of lading were never delivered to defendant carrier, and that the issuance of the bill was due to a mistake of defendant’s agent. Held: That the case was simply one of a shipper suing a carrier to recover for loss of goods which were never delivered for carriage, and that the recitals of the bill of lading in no way estopped the carrier from showing the true facts. 3. Appeal and Error — Judgment of Appellate Court — Section 6365, Code of 1919. — Where in an action by a shipper against a carrier it was conclusively shown that the carrier did not receive the goods, the Supreme Court of Appeals will not remand the .cause for a new trial, but will reverse a judgment for plaintiff pursuant to section 6365, Code of 1919. 4. Appeal and Error — Instructions—Reversal.—Where there is an irreconciliable conflict in the instructions, the judgment must be reversed.