Baltimore & Ohio Rail Road v. Green

25 Md. 72
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 8, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 25 Md. 72 (Baltimore & Ohio Rail Road v. Green) 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
Baltimore & Ohio Rail Road v. Green, 25 Md. 72 (Md. 1860).

Opinion

Howie, J.,

delivered the opinion of this Court:

The appellee sued the appellant as a common carrier, upon a contract “ to take, carry and deliver a large quantity of oats, then in the city of Baltimore, to the city of Washington, at the foot of 6th street in said city, at and for the sum of $18 per car loadand that the plaintiff delivered to said defendant three thousand bushels, of the value of sixty cents per bushel, which were so negligently and carelessly carried, that they were lost to the plaintiff, to which the defendant pleaded “ that the oats mentioned in the nar., were delivered according to the obligation of the defendant in regard thereto,” [86]*86upon which plea there was joinder in issue, and waiver of errors in pleading.

At the trial, after testimony of the delivery of the oats by the plaintiff to the defendant for transportation, to be delivered to Lt. Fergusson, forage agent of the IT. S. Government at Washington, it was proved by one Putnam, that he was clerk of Fergusson, and being informed of the consignment of the oats by Green, and not having received them, he went to the depot of the defendant and saw the four cars which were missing, on the track inside of the depot, which ears were marked Nos. 67, 895, 889 and 542, and marked “ to be delivered to Lt. Fergusson, 6th street wharf.” That said cars not arriving at 6th street wharf, the witness made inquiries for them but could only find one of them, that being the car numbered 542, which he found subsequently had been discharged in Alexandria. It was conceded that streetage was charged on the cars.

The defendant proved by a competent witness, that it was his duty to attend to the delivery of cars from the Washington station, upon Maryland avenue, 6th street siding, and 6th street wharf. That the three missing ears were hitched to a locomotive with other cars at the Washington station, in different trains, and hauled therefrom and left either on Maryland avenue or 6th street siding, or at 6th street wharf^ he did not remember which. The custom was to deliver all cars marked for Lt. Fergusson at the foot of 6th street. The defendant further proved by a certain George Koontz, that he was agent of the defendant and had been so since April, 1862; that the Washington Branch Rail Road terminated at the station house at N. Jersey avenue; that it had been the custom since he had been there to regard the station as the place of delivery of the cars when they are put on the Maryland avenue, it is with the distinct understanding; that the owner ■takes the risk, if any. The cars for the Washington station. [87]*87as a general tiling', are marked Washington city, D. C., and generally with chalk, they are so marked when they come to Washington; the manifest tells where they are to go, and sometimes the name of the consignee. The defendant will not deliver cars outside of the station at its risk; the-witness says this is the custom since he has been there.

Objections were taken to the testimony of this, and others of the witnesses, which it is unnecessary io notice, as they form no part of the bill of exception.

The appellee offered a prayer which was granted, and the appellant offered a series of prayers numbered from 1 to 5 inclusive, all of which were rejected; besides which, in reply to an inquiry from tíre jury after they had retired, the Court gave a written instruction. To the granting of which prayer of the appellee and instruction of the Court to the jury, as well as to tho rejection of the appellants’ prayers, the appellant excepted and prayed an appeal. The legal proposition contained in the plaintiff’s prayer is, that if the defendant accepted the oats for transportation from Baltimore to Washington, and charged in addition to the usual freight for transportation between these points a further compensation for streetage to the foot of 6th street, and failed to deliver the oats to Fnrgusson or his agent, or at the foot of 6th street, then the plaintiff was entitled to recover, although the jury might find the terminus of the road is within the depot in the city of Wa&Mngton and said oats -wore delivered safely at that point.

The appellant’s first prayer is the converse of the appellees, with several additional qualifications of liability. This asserts as a legal proposition, that if the Washington branch of the defendant’s road, terminated at their station in Washington, and the road from such station to the Maryland avenue, 6th street, etc., was not the road of the defendant; and the oats were safely transported from Baltimore to the station in Washington, then said station was the proper place for the [88]*88delivery of tlie oats, and tlie obligation of the defendant, as a common carrier, for their transportation and delivery, did not extend beyond; and if the jury believe, that at the instance of the appellee, or his agent, the defendant hauled the oats beyond the limits of the station, upon a road or roads belonging to other parties, and where the defendant had no station or agencies to receive them, then the oats, after leaving defendant’s station, were at tlie risk of the owners; and if the jury believe the oats were in fact hauled from the station of the defendant on the road spoken of by the witnesses, as belonging to the U. S., and were left in cars containing them on tlie Maryland avenue, or 6th street siding, or 6 th street wharf, then the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.

The second affirms, that if the jury shall find the facts stated hypothetically in the first prayer, and shall further find, that it was the cusiom of the defendant to refuse to transport goods on tracks outside of the station at Washington, except at the risk of the owner, then the plaintiff (the appellee) is not entitled to recover.

3rd. If the jury shall find from the evidence, that the oats were received without any bill of lading, and that the evidence of the obligation of the defendant to transport them is in the bill for the freight thereof offered in evidence, and that the cars containing them were marked accordingly in Baltimore, then the defendants became bound to transport the oats to the said city, and their obligation in this respect was discharged on the safe arrival of the oats at the station in Washington; and if the jury believe the witness, Putnam, was authorized by Fergusson to act for him, and that he saw the oats in the station at Washington, then Fergusson had notice of their arrival at their destination, and it was his duty, if ho desired them to be transported further, to provide therefor.

[89]*89The 4tli prayer affirms, that if tlie jury find tlie facts stated hypothetically in the first, and that the cars containing the oats were transported beyond the defendant’s premises, at the instance of the plaintiff and his agents, then the plaintiff should have had an agent oil the spot to receive the same, and the defendants were not bomuLto give notice of the arrival of the ears.

5th. That there is no evidence in the cause of an undertaking on the part of the defendant, to transport the cars ■spoken of by the witnesses to the foot of 6th street.

The several propositions of the appellant and appellee, involve the liability of common carriers for transportation of articles accepted to be delivered beyond the terminus of their lines; the obligation arising-from compensation charged for transportation ^ ultra mam ^ and the operation of “course of dealing” upon the duty of the carrier to give actual notice to the consignee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Md. 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-ohio-rail-road-v-green-md-1860.