A. F. Thompson Mfg. Co. v. Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co.

115 S.E. 877, 93 W. Va. 3, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 14
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 115 S.E. 877 (A. F. Thompson Mfg. Co. v. Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. F. Thompson Mfg. Co. v. Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co., 115 S.E. 877, 93 W. Va. 3, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 14 (W. Va. 1923).

Opinion

MbRbdith, Judge:

The A. F. Thompson Manufacturing Company recovered a judgment of $3,519.12 for the. damaging of a large part of a shipment of stoves delivered to the defendant company for carriage. Defendant seeks a reversal of that judgment.

Plaintiff is a manufacturer of sheet metal stoves in the city of Huntington. Defendant is a railway engaged in both inter-state and intra-state commerce. On June 9, 1920, plaintiff delivered to defendant for shipment, and packed in two cars furnished for the purpose 1700 small gas heaters, receiving two bills of lading therefor. The stoves, about 800 in one car, and 900 in the other, were consigned to the Richards & Conover Hardware Company, Kansas City, Missouri. From 20 to 30 per cent of them were packed in corrugated pasteboard cartons, sealed with gum tape; the remainder in small wooden crates. Under the terms of the sale, the stoves were purchased f. o. b. Kansas City.

On June 26, the cars reached Kansas City and were examined, though not opened, by the car inspector, who found them in first class condition. They were, according to evidence, placed on the unloading siding at different times, [5]*5one car being so placed on July 1, tbe other on tbe evening of tbe 3rd or morning of tbe 4tb. Employees of tbe consignee unloaded the cars on July 4th, which was Sunday, and while so engaged, discovered the damage complained of. It appears that a majority of the stoves, when unloaded, especially those not packed in the cartons, were badly rusted or corroded. The nickeled corners and trimmings were in many instances very badly rusted, and there were large spots of rust on the polished sheet iron. So damaged was their condition, that although the purchaser was very much in need of the stoves, it was compelled to reject 778 of them as unsalable, and so notified the plaintiff, the seller, to whom they were later returned. '

In the declaration, plaintiff’s claim for recovery is founded, first, upon .defendant’s general duty as a common carrier to transport the stoves without injury to them, and its negligent failure to do so; and, secoitd, upon defendant’s negligent and improper conduct in taking an unusual and unreasonable time for the carrying and delivering of the shipment.

The controversies of fact in this case are somewhat unusual, and upon them are based the conflicting theories of the parties. First of all, counsel for plantiff urge that defendant being a common carrier, it is therefore an insurer absolutely, except as to acts of God and the public enemy and that consequently, under no view of the facts, could the verdict have been otherwise than for the plaintiff. Counsel for the defendant, on the other hand, while not undertaking to excuse it of the responsibilities of a common carrier, insist with equal vigor, that under the principles applicable to the facts here no liability attaches to the carrier in this ease. They say, in short, that the facts show beyond doubt that the rusting -of the stoves was brought about, not by any act or default on the part of the defendant or its agents, but by natural agencies, the result of a.vice or defect inherent in the stoves themselves, and of which defendant had no knowledge or control.

Plaintiff denies the propriety of the defense offered. While [6]*6admitting the application of defendant’s reasoning to some classes of cases, counsel argue that the courts have never extended, and should never extend, the doctrine so as to include s-ueh inanimate objects as heating stoves. As this cause is to be. remanded, it is incumbent upon us to determine this issue.

The evidence- submitted includes, in addition to general statements as to the rusty condition of the stoves on arrival in Kansas City, the testimony of several chemists, introduced by both parties. Summarized, the evidence for the plaintiff is that a chemical analysis of the rust taken from the stoves showed traces of hydrochloric acid and the absolute absence of acetates. Having qualified as an expert witness, and having testified as to the presence of hydrochloric acid in the rust, D. M. Strickland, plaintiff’s chief technical witness was asked hypothetically whether the rusting might have resulted from the ear loads of stoves being placed while in transit, in juxtaposition to some chemical plant from which the hydrochloric fumes could have entered the cars. The answer was that such might easily have been the case. This reinforced by other like evidence, represents plaintiff’s theory of the rusting of the stoves, and for which, of course, the defendant would be liable.

Defendant, on the other hand, offers evidence of a very similar character to the effect that the tests showed no hydrochloric acid in the rust, but did indicate positively the presence of acetates. Defendant’s chemist also testified that he tested samples of the asbestos with which the fire fronts of the stoves were .lined, and found acetates present in large quantities, accounting therefor by explaning that acetic acid is generally used in the refining of asbestos. It being also shown that the inside walls of the stoves, near the asbestos, were more heavily corroded than other parts of the metal, the defendant moulded from the circumstances its theory that •the corrosion of the stoves was due not to their exposure to any outside agency, but to the chemical union of the acetic acid in the asbestos and the iron or ferrous parts of the stoves; i. e. to an inherent vice in the goods.

[7]*7Plaintiff’s witness, A. P. Thompson, qualified as one informed as to the methods ,of refining asbestos and denied that acetic acid was used in the manufacture of commercial asbestos.

With the true solution of the facts we are not concerned, we need ■ only determine whether defendant’s theory of defense is an allowable one. As stated above, plaintiff’s counsel admit that there is such a circumstance, known to the law of carriers, as the inherent vice of goods. They wish, however, to limit the excusing of carriers from liability because of such inherent defects to two classes of goods, and claim the authority of the decisions in so doing. These two classes are, first, live stock; and, second, perishable food stuffs.

Whether we limit the doctrine in the strict manner contended for by plaintiff, or give it the more liberal application urged by defendant, we are not unmindful either of the strict accountability which sound policy exacts from common . carriers of goods, or of the spirit of the exceptions which are engrafted on that principle. We agree with counsel for plaintiff that there seems to be no decision expressly extending the idea of inherent vice to such inanimate articles as iron stoves. We can not agree, however, that the language of Judge Ritz in Talbott v. Payne, 90 W. Va. 280, 111 S. E. 328, precludes the propriety of such an extension.. The reasoning of the court in excepting the carrier from absolute liability in the transportation of live animals in that case might with almost equal persuasiveness apply to the present circumstances. By no packing or securing of packages or careful handling, however painstaking, could the defendant have forestalled or cheeked the corrosion of these stoves, if caused by the presence of acetic acid in the asbestos, as it contends. At an expenditure of $150, plaintiff had all of the rusted stoves cleaned and greased with paraffine oil, and was but partially successful in remedying their condition.

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Related

Adkins v. Slater
298 S.E.2d 236 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1982)
State Road Commission v. Riley
173 S.E. 783 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1934)
A. F. Thompson Manufacturing Co. v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co.
123 S.E. 421 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
115 S.E. 877, 93 W. Va. 3, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-f-thompson-mfg-co-v-chesapeake-ohio-ry-co-wva-1923.