American Railway Express Co. v. Peninsula Produce Exchange

121 A. 240, 142 Md. 422, 1923 Md. LEXIS 41
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 12, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 121 A. 240 (American Railway Express Co. v. Peninsula Produce Exchange) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Railway Express Co. v. Peninsula Produce Exchange, 121 A. 240, 142 Md. 422, 1923 Md. LEXIS 41 (Md. 1923).

Opinion

*424 Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought in the Circuit Court for Wicomico County by the Peninsula. Produce Exchange, incorporated, against the American Railway Express Company, a corporation, to recover a, loss alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the failure of the defendant to transport and deliver with reasonable dispatch a carload of strawberries shipped from Queponco j in Worcester' County, Maryland, and consigned to Frost & McUab, Jersey City, New Jersey.

The plaintiff offered evidence tending to show that the berries were delivered to the defendant at Queponco. on Saturday, June 12th, 1920, and that the oar containing the berries., initialed and numbered P. L. 608380, was attacked to a passenger train which left Queponco. at 2.21 P. M., and which, according to the schedule and the usual running time of such trains, was due to arrive at- Hudson Terminal, Jersey City, at 11.21 o’clock the same day; that in accordance with its custom the plaintiff notified the consignee, Frost & MoUab, by wire of the shipment and the number of the car; that when carload shipments arrive at. Jersey City they are switched from, the track on which they arrive to the delivery track, where they are delivered to and unloaded by the consignee or his agents; that it usually takes the defendant from an hour to an hour and a half to have a car switched or moved to the delivery track; that the agent or truckman of the consignees, after receiving the telegram from the plaintiff, went over to the Hudson Terminal Sunday night for the berries but found that the car had not been placed on the delivery track; that about 3 o’clock Monday morning the defendant or one of its agents telephoned to the store of Frost & McUab that the car was ready for them, but that when the consignees’ truckman arrived at the terminal a few minutes later the car had not been placed on the delivery track where he could unload it; that if he, the truckman, had waited there for it to be placed on the delivery track it would have been too late for Monday morning’s market, and as the car was a refrigerator car and the berries would keep better in the car than *425 they would have kept if taken out of the ear, he left the car until Monday night, when he unloaded it in time for the Tuesday morning market; that the market is from 12 o’clock at night to 5 o’clock in the morning, and the best market is between 1 and 4 o’clock in the morning; that if the car had been delivered in time for the Monday morning market the bert'ies could have heen sold at from twenty to thirty cents per quart, and. that, by reason of a fall in the market value of the berries, they were sold on the morning of the 15th of June at from fifteen to twenty-two- cents per quart.

The defendant offered evidence tending to- show that the car in question left Queponeo at 1.45 o’clock in the afternoon of June 12th and was attached to- a. special express train which arrived at Jersey City at 10.45 o’clock Sunday morning; that it arrived on track five in the passenger station and was ordered hy the yard foreman of the defendant at 12 o’clock to be placed on track eight in the local yard so that it could be moved from there and placed on the delivery track. One of the yard foremen testified that the car was on track eight when he left the yard at 5 o’clock that evening; that about 5 o’clock that evening; some inexperienced men in the employ of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, while pushing two carloads of coal on the coal wharf, pushed one of the co-al cars -oft’ the wharf and blocked track eight for several hours; that it took about five hours, to clear up the wreck, and that when ho returned to the- yard again about 11 o’clock that, night the wreck was not fully cleared up; that there are special tracks, for delivery “of car lots” of strawberries to truckmen; that there was one track for such purpose during the day and more than one- at night. Another yard foreman of the defendant, who. was on duty from 6 P. M. to 4 o’clock in the morning, testified that the ear in question was on track eight at C o’clock, Sunday evening; that the wreck of the coal car was cleared up about 1.30 o’clock standard time, or 2.30 o’clock day-light saving time Sunday night; that the car, with eleven -other cars, was placed o-n the delivery track about 3 o’clock Monday morning; that there was a strike of the *426 Pennsylvania Railroad switchmen at that time; which had been in existence since the 9th of April; that the railroad company was employing inexperienced men and working two crews instead of three, and that they couldn’t move the cars as fast as they could have moved them with experienced men. Another employee of the defendant testified that there were two carloads of berries consigned to Frost & MeETab placed on the delivery track about 3 o’clock Monday morning; that the other car* was ear ET. P. 96129, and that the truckman of Frost & MeETab unloaded car ET. P. 96129 at about 4 o’clock that morning and left the car in question in "this case until Monday night-. In rebuttal Frost & McETab’s truckman testified that it would be impossible to unload eleven oars on the delivery track at one time, as it would not be possible for eleven trucks “to back in there all at once.”

At the conclusion of the evidence the plaintiff offered seven prayers, the first, second, fourth and seventh of which were granted, and the defendant offered nine, the first of which was granted, the fourth was granted as modified, -and the others rejected. The defendant excepted to the granting of the plaintiff’s prayers and to the rejection and modification of its prayers, as it did to a. number of rulings on the evidence, and has brought this appeal from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff.

The first, second, third, fourth, fifth and sixth exceptions were to the testimony of a witness as to the schedule time for the arrival of the train to which the car of berries was attached in Jersey City, and the usual and ordinary time consumed in transporting a carload of berries by express from Queponeo to Jersey City. The witness had stated that he had been the agent of the plaintiff for a number of years as sales manager; that in the performance of his duties he gave another agent of the plaintiff the billing instructions for the cars shipped, and that when the billings were made out he wired the consignee, giving the car number and contents, and the consignee wired him of the arrival of the car; that he had frequently been in Jersey City when the shipments from the *427 plaintiff arrived; that the plaintiff ships on an average about two hundred carloads of berries and other perishable fruits a year to Jersey City, and that he was familiar with the usual and ordinary running time for “ear lot shipments” by express .between Queponco and Jersey Oity, and that the ordinary and usual running time for such shipments was ten hours. We see no objection to this evidence. The witness mot only testified that he was familiar with the schedule of the trains and the ordinary and usual time required for the transportation of shipments from Quenponco to Jersey Oity, but, it would seem, that his duties were such as required him to have such knowledge.

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Bluebook (online)
121 A. 240, 142 Md. 422, 1923 Md. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-railway-express-co-v-peninsula-produce-exchange-md-1923.