A. Polk & Son v. New Orleans & N. E. R. Co.

185 So. 554, 184 Miss. 559, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 22
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1939
DocketNo. 33494.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 185 So. 554 (A. Polk & Son v. New Orleans & N. E. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. Polk & Son v. New Orleans & N. E. R. Co., 185 So. 554, 184 Miss. 559, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 22 (Mich. 1939).

Opinion

McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Polk & Son, appellants, brought their action on a contract (bill of lading) for failure of appellee to deliver one brown mule, tag number 8077, and for overcharges in freight.

The mule was alleged to have been shipped from Port Worth, Texas, to Polk &Son, at Hattiesburg, Mississippi. The appellee, Railroad Company, was the delivering carrier. The shipment of livestock, of which the mule was a part, was delivered to the Texas and Pacific Railroad, the initial carrier.

The defendant plead general issue and gave a notice under the general issue that would prove the mule died by the act of - God, in that it died with pneumonia, without negligence on its part.

On hearing the evidence the county court judge, without the intervention of a jury, denied appellants a recovery and rendered judgment in favor of appellee, the railroad company. .On appeal the circuit court affirmed this judgment.

.■-The evidence for the appellants in the court below .showed by the bill of lading that a shipment of livestock .was' delivered to' the initial carrier at 7:15 P. M. May 7, 1935, "in apparent good order,” to be delivered to Polk & Son, at Hattiesburg, Mississippi. In the ship *567 ment there were twenty-three mnles and one horse. Number 8077 was described in the invoice rendered by the consignor as “one brown mule.” The mule was not delivered at Hattiesburg. Appellants also proved by their purchasing agent that the particular mule in question was examined within two or three hours before the mules were delivered to the carrier, and that the particular mule in question was sound and in good order, being tagged by him in the tail as number 8077. The bill of lading, the invoices, and the freight bill paid by the appellant, were all introduced in evidence. The freight bill shows that on May 8, 1935, the mules were unloaded and fed at 5:30' A. M., and were reloaded at 1:30 P. M., and charge was made for feeding the mules. The carload of mules was shown to have been received at Hattiesburg on the morning of the ninth.

By way of defense the railroad company offered a veterinarian, who testified that between 9 and 10 A. M., May 10, 1935, he was called on to examine a mule, with tag number 8077 affixed to its tail, dead on the platform of the railroad. He testified that this mule bore no marks, abrasions, scars, or wounds, either externally or internally. He made a post mortem examination of the mule thoroughly and found that the mule had pus in the lungs, and that the mule had died from pneumonia, not traumatic or mechanical, that the mule had been dead about ten hours when he examined it, and that, in his opinion, it died from influenza or from a cold, and that it would have required thirty or forty hours from inception to death from that disease. He did not see the mule removed from the car, nor did he know anything about the time the mule he examined was unloaded, if unloaded at all, except from an examination of the railroad files, where he found that this mule had been removed from the particular car in which the entire shipment was made. In rebuttal the appellants showed by a practical veterinarian, who was the buyer at Port "Worth, that the particular mule was examined by him at Port Worth shortly *568 before its delivery to the railroad, and at that time it had no external symptoms of disease, of fever, of heavy breathing, or of any symptom of pneumonia. He ascertained this by feeling of the mule’s mouth with his hand. He had studied as a veterinarian, but was not a licensed veterinarian, but had had twenty-five years experience in handling mules and as a practical veterinarian.

There was evidence on the question of extra charges and overcharges, which we shall not detail here for the reason that the finding of the county court judge, in our judgment if the evidence was conflicting, cannot be said by ns to be manifestly wrong or against the overwhelming weight of the evidence.

There are many assignments of error, all of which can be reduced to one — dhat is that the appellants were entitled to a judgment and that the judgment in favor of the appellee was erroneous under the facts detailed.

1. It will be observed at once that this was an interstate shipment of livestock, and the question of liability or not of the carrier and burden of proof is to be settled by the rule in the federal courts as the Carmack Amendment (1906), making the initial carrier liable and fixing the rule with reference thereto, supersedes the rules, not in accord therewith, adopted by the several states theretofore. See 34 Hi. S. Stat. 595. . By a subsequent amendment thereto the delivering carrier was also made liable in the same manner as the initial carrier. See 44 U. S. Stat. 1448 as amended in 46 U. S. Stat. 251, 49 U. S. C. A., section 20 (11, 12).

The uniform livestock bill of lading, upon which this suit is based, contains the following exceptions: “Sec. 1. (a) Except in the case of its negligence proximately contributing thereto, no carrier or party in possession of all or any of the livestock herein described shall be liable for any loss thereof or damage thereto or delay caused by the act of God, the public enemy, quarantine, the authority of law, the inherent vice, weakness, or natural propensity of the animal, or the act or default of *569 the shipper or owner, or the agent of either, or by riots, etc.”

The appellant proved a delivery of the mule in apparent good order to the initial carrier and nondelivery thereof by the carrier at destination. Thereby he made out a prima facie case whether the action was in tort or on the contract. See 1 Roberts Federal Liabilities of Carrier (2 Ed.), sec. 384.

The carrier then availed itself of its right to the exception that the animal died from pneumonia of a type not produced by rough handling, which was due to the “inherent vice, weakness, or natural propensity of the animal.” This exception in the contract is recognized by common law.

"When the detailed condition of the mule was put in evidence by the carrier, was it further incumbent upon the carrier to trace the journey of the animal from Fort Worth to Meridian and exclude negligence of any kind on its part? If the described condition of the mule raised an inference of negligence, then the carrier had not brought itself within the exception, but if on the contrary the circumstances, the state of the dead body and signs thereon, raised the fair inference of no negligence, the carrier had established its defense.

The court below_ evidently reached the conclusion that when the carrier showed that the mule had died from pneumonia, not traumatic or mechanical, and without wounds or bruises either external or internal, that it brought itself within the exception — the inherent vice, weakness, or propensity of the animal, and under the federal rule as to the burden of proof it devolved upon the appellants to go forward with their proof and show some negligence on the part of the carrier proximately causing or contributing to the death of the animal from pneumonia. See Southern Railway Company v. Prescott, 240 U. S. 632, 36 S. Ct. 469, 60 L. Ed.

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185 So. 554, 184 Miss. 559, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-polk-son-v-new-orleans-n-e-r-co-miss-1939.