Bamberg v. South Carolina Railroad

9 S.C. 61, 1877 S.C. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 24, 1877
StatusPublished

This text of 9 S.C. 61 (Bamberg v. South Carolina Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bamberg v. South Carolina Railroad, 9 S.C. 61, 1877 S.C. LEXIS 7 (S.C. 1877).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

McIver, A. J.

This was an action to recover damages from the defendant as a common carrier for injuries sustained by a horse, the' [62]*62property of the plaintiff, in its transportation from Augusta, Ga., by the defendant’s cars, to Bamberg, S. C. The horse in question, with a number of others, forty-two in all, was forwarded from Augusta by G. W. Conway, the agent of the plaintiff to the plaintiff, who is a dealer in stock at Bamberg. A. W. Lewis, an assistant agent of the defendant at Augusta, was charged with the duty of superintending the loading of cars with live stock, being furnished with hands for that purpose. It appeared from a paper offered in evidence and headed “ Rates of transportation on the South Carolina Railroad,” that special rates for the transportation of live stock from Augusta to Bamberg had been established, whereby the charge for the transportation of a single horse, &c., was nine dollars ; ten to twenty horses, each three dollars and a half; for a “car load of any of the above stock, passenger to accompany each car of stock, but one kind of stock to be put in each car, and load not to exceed 16,000 pounds, thirty dollars.” This paper also contained sundry rules and stipulations, amongst which are the following: “The company will not be responsible for any damage occasioned by delays from storms, nor will they guarantee special dispatch in the transportation ; nor will they hold themselves liable for damages, or as common carriers, for any article, after its arrival at its place of destination and unloaded in the company’s warehouses or depots.” Conway, in reply to the question as to what arrangements he made with the railroad officials for the transportation of these horses, said “ that he did as usual, engage a car for their shipment,” while Lewis testified that “G. W. Conway applied to him for two cars for shipment of live stock to Bamberg. The two cars were chartered to Conway at thirty dollars each and placed at his disposal for loading.” The plaintiff, however, testified that “I have never, at any time, made any special arrangement with defendant or its agents in regard to the transportation of my stock. When I have had stock to ship I have always notified defendant’s agents and they have the cars placed in position to receive my stock, and I have always paid the regular rates of freight. I never have chartered a car from defendant; rny stock shipped on their road have always been shipped in the manner just stated, and, as I have before testified, the company has always paid me for stock injured in transportation until this instance.” The horse was found to be injured when taken from the cars at Bamberg, but there was no [63]*63evidence showing the cause of the injury complained of. The defendant requested the Circuit Judge to charge the jury as follows:

1. “That the plaintiff having chartered the car in question from defendant upon a fair view of same, the liability of defendant, as a common carrier, does not attach, nor can the defendant be held liable for any amount in this action.”
2. “That in this instance the defendant was only liable for the proper transportation of the cars from Augusta to Bamberg.”
3. “That the facts disprove negligence on the part of the defendant.”
4. “That the defendant is not liable at common law as a carrier of live stock.”
5. “That if they find for the plaintiff they must deduct the freight of the two ears of stock, forty-two head, at three dollars and a half per head, from the amount so found.”

All these requests were refused, to which refusal the defendant excepted, and, the jury having found a verdict for the plaintiff, we are now to determine whether any error was committed by the Circuit Judge in refusing to charge as requested. The first and second requests may properly be considered together. It is very manifest that the Circuit Judge could not have given the instructions asked for without invading the peculiar province of the jury by determining the disputed question of fact as to w'hether the cars were chartered by the plaintiff. And as the case is presented to us it becomes unnecessary for us to volunteer an opinion as to whether, looking at the facts in the most favorable light for the defendant, the transaction amounted to a chartering-of the car in the proper sense of that term, or whether the plaintiff, being tendered by the printed paper offered in evidence three different rates of transportation, — one by the single horse, cue by the lot of ten to twenty, and one by the car load, did not simply make his selection of the one which he regarded as most favorable. . Nor is it necessary for us to determine what would be the effect upon the liability of a railroad company as a common carrier, where a shipper charters, in the proper sense of that term, one of-its trains, assuming full control and management of it.

The third request is open to the same objection. For while it is true, as stated by Moses, C. J., in Scott, Williams & Co. vs. Crews, (2 S. C., 538,) that “ negligence is a mixed question of law and fact,” which expression, we take it, was simply designed to convey [64]*64the idea that, while it would be the duty of the Court to lay down the rules by which it is to be determined whether certain given conduct falls within the one kind of negligence or the other, it would, at the same time, be the duty of the jury to determine what facts were proved in a given case, and, applying the rules furnished by the Court to the facts thus ascertained, determine whether any negligence, and, if any, of what kind, had been proved. The very fact that it is a mixed question shows that the instruction asked for was properly refused, for it was asking the Court not only to perform its own duty by laying down the rules of law applicable to questions of negligence, but to go on and usurp the prerogative of the jury by determining what facts were proved in the case. This request is also open to another objection. For if the defendant, when it undertook the transportation of the horse in question, assumed the liability of a common carrier at common law, then the question for the jury to solve was not a question of negligence as in the case of an ordinary bailee, but the sole question was whether the defendant had shown that the damage sustained resulted from any one of the causes which would exempt a carrier from responsibility — the act of God, or the public enemy, or other causes hereafter to be mentioned. For the rule that, in an action against a common carrier, the onus is upon him to show that the damage complained of was occasioned by causes which exempt him from responsibility, and that it is uot enough for him to prove that he was not guilty of any negligence, but had used the utmost care and diligence, is so well settled as to admit of no question. — Ewart vs. Street, 2 Bail., 157; Smyrl vs. Niolon, 2 Bail., 421; Cameron vs. Rich, 4 Strob., 168.

This brings us to the consideration of the question raised by the fourth request: whether the defendant is liable at common law as a carrier of live stock, or, to state the question more precisely, whether a railroad company, in the transportation of live stock, is not exempt from the operation of the common law rule by which the liability of a common carrier is tested.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 S.C. 61, 1877 S.C. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bamberg-v-south-carolina-railroad-sc-1877.