Adams Seed Co. v. Chicago Great Western Railroad

181 Iowa 1052
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 10, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 181 Iowa 1052 (Adams Seed Co. v. Chicago Great Western Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams Seed Co. v. Chicago Great Western Railroad, 181 Iowa 1052 (iowa 1917).

Opinion

Gaynor, O. J.

3" terstateScomSack AmendSrrier’s1 uabiiThis action is brought to recover the vaue of certain wool delivered to the Chicago Great Western Railroad Company for shipment, and claimed to have been lost or destroyed. The plaintiff makes all the companies over whose lines the shipment passed parties defendant, and asks judgment against each and all of them. The defendants are railway companies engaged in interstate commerce. The plaintiff is a co-partnership doing business under the name of The Adams Seed Company, at Decorah in this state.

[1055]*1055The plaintiff alleges, in the first count of its petition, and in an amendment thereto, that, in the month of May, 1909, it delivered the wool in controversy to the Chicago Great Western Railroad Company at Mclntire; that it was shipped from Mclntire to the city of Philadelphia by the several defendants named herein, and thát it was received by said companies for shipment as aforesaid; that, after its delivery to the Great Western Railroad Company, it was transported by said defendants, each in turn, until it reached its destination at Philadelphia. The allegation of the pleading is that each of said defendants, as common carriers, received said merchandise and took possession thereof for shipment in due course of transportation, and that said shipment was consigned by the plaintiff to itself ; that defendants carried said wool to its destination at Philadelphia, but failed to deliver the same to the plaintiff (the consignee), and failed to notify the plaintiff of its arrival at its destination; that the defendants have appropriated the same to themselves, or have retained the same, or have delivered it to some person unauthorized, or have lost or wasted it in some manner unknown to the plaintiff.

Plaintiff further alleges, in an amendment to its petition, that the shipment was delivered as above, and was carried by the Chicago Great Western, the initial carrier, to Des Moines, and there delivered by it to the Wabash Railway Company, and carried by it to some point unknown to the plaintiff, and delivered to the other defendant, the Philadelphia & Reading Railway Company; that the last named company carried the goods to Philadelphia. The plaintiff further alleges that, upon the arrival of the wool in question at Philadelphia, the same was taken possession of by the defendant the Philadelphia & Reading Company and there converted to the use of said company, to the loss and damage of the plaintiff in the sum claimed; that the wool arrived at Philadelphia about June, 1909; that none [1056]*1056of the defendants herein, over whose lines the goods were shipped, notified the plaintiff of the arrival of said goods in Philadelphia.

In the second count of its petition, the plaintiff makes all the allegations of the first count a part of 'the second count; and alleges that the wool in question was delivered to the Chicago Great Western Company, to be carried by it to St. Louis; that both the Chicago Great. Western and the Wabash were initial carriers; that they wholly failed to deliver the wool to the plaintiff at St. Louis or elsewhere, or to notify the plaintiff, so that it could obtain the same; that they negligently and without authority from the plaintiff caused said wool to be reshipped from St. Louis to Philadelphia; that neither of said companies had authority to do so, and had no authority to deliver it to the Philadelphia & Reading Company or to cause the wool to be moved over the lines of said company; that the Philadelphia & Reading Company had no authority from the plaintiff to move said wool, and that plaintiff had no knowledge that it exercised such authority; that all of said companies, defendants, acted jointly, and all were negligent in failing to notify plaintiff of the movements of the wool, and in failing to deliver the same to the plaintiff, and in failing to notify the plaintiff where it was, so that plaintiff could obtain possession.

In the third count, plaintiff makes all the preceding allegations a part of this count, and alleges that none of the defendants had any authority to move the wool from St. Louis to Philadelphia, and that, in moving it, they acted negligently and without authority, and all were negligent in respect to the matters hereinbefore referred to.

In the fourth count of plaintiff’s petition, plaintiff alleges that, upon the arrival of the wool in Philadelphia, it was taken possession of by the defendant the Philadelphia & Reading Railway Company, and converted to its own use; that, after the shipment reached St. Louis, the plain[1057]*1057tiff did not thereafter direct its movements, hut that the wool was moved under the direction of the defendants the Chicago Great Western Railroad Company or the Wabash Railroad, or both; that the Philadelphia & Reading Company was especially negligent in failing to advise plaintiff of the arrival of the wool, and in failing to deliver the same to the plaintiff and failing to notify the plaintiff of. the arrival of the wool and in failing to give plaintiff an opportunity to get possession of it; that all the defendants had knowledge that plaintiff was the consignee, and of plaintiff’s home address.

The defendants filed separate answers.

The Chicago Great Western Railroad Company, answering, admits: That, on or about the 29th day of May, 1909, at the station of Mclntire on its line of road, it received a consignment of wool from the plaintiff, consigned to the plaintiff at St. Louis, Missouri; that it carried said wool on its line to the city of Des Moines, and there delivered it to the Wabash Railway Company, its codefendant; that the Wabash Company carried it to St. Louis; that, after it had delivered the wool to the Wabash, this defendant received instructions from the plaintiff, or one of its agents, to reconsign the wool to Philadelphia; that it immediately issued instructions by telegram to the Wabash Company to reconsign the wool to Philadelphia; that said wool was thereupon reconsigned and carried by the Wabash Railway Company and other carriers to Philadelphia; that, immediately upon the arrival of the wool in Philadelphia, there was a notice mailed to the Adams Seed Company, addressed to General Delivery, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, of the receipt of said goods; and that, after the expiration of four days from the date of the .mailing- of the notice, the Philadelphia & Reading Company moved and stored said wool in a public licensed warehouse in Philadelphia, where the same remained, without being claimed [1058]*1058by the plaintiff or anyone for it, until October, 1913, when the same was sold by said warehouse company to the account of plaintiff; that, at the time the said Philadelphia & Reading Railway Company delivered the wool to the warehouse, the liability of the railway company as a common carrier had ceased, and it was holding the same as warehouseman, and that, if there was any conversion by the Philadelphia & Reading Company in the delivering of said goods to the warehouse, it was while said company was acting as a warehouseman, and not as a common carrier; that plaintiff, at the time, had no office or agency in Philadelphia, and had not, previous to the arrival of the goods, advised any of the defendants of the manner or means in which it could be notified in said city of the arrival of said wool; that, upon the arrival of said goods in Philadelphia, they were unclaimed b} the plaintiff or anyone for it, and for this reason were placed in storage.

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Bluebook (online)
181 Iowa 1052, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-seed-co-v-chicago-great-western-railroad-iowa-1917.