Barber v. Southern Pac. Co.

185 P.2d 979, 51 N.M. 396
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1947
DocketNo. 5047.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 185 P.2d 979 (Barber v. Southern Pac. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barber v. Southern Pac. Co., 185 P.2d 979, 51 N.M. 396 (N.M. 1947).

Opinion

McGHEE, Justice.

The plaintiff shipped nine boxes of household goods from Harlingen, Texas, to Deming, New Mexico, under the terms of the uniform bill of lading prescribed by the Interstate Commerce Commission to govern interstate shipments.. The customary route for the shipment was via the line of the Texas & New Orleans Railroad Company from Harlingen to San Antonio, thence to El Paso, Texas, and from El Paso to Deming, New Mexico, via either the rail line of the Southern Pacific Company, or its affiliated subsidiary, Pacific Motor Trucking Company. When the shipment was being transferred in transit from one car to another at San Antonio, one item of the shipment, a crated sofa weighing 240 pounds, was by the negligent mistake of the carrier’s employees, placed in a car moving to St. Louis, Missouri, over the line of the Cotton Belt route. The agent there discovered the sofa as an “over” or ■“astray” shipment without billing and thereupon returned it to San Antonio by the route over which it had been received, .and it was from that point carried by the T. & N. O. Railroad Company to El Paso, and then by Pacific Motor Trucking Company to Deming where it arrived in bad condition and was refused by the shipper.

Claim was seasonably filed by the plaintiff for the value of the sofa in the sum of $137.50, but the defendant declined to pay more than $24, which was the value declared by his representative when the sofa was tendered for shipment at Harlingen, plus $5.83 freight charges it had collected.

On April 15, 1946, the plaintiff filed a conventional action to recover the value of the sofa, and the defendant answered admitting the goods were shipped as alleged, and that the sofa arrived in a damaged condition; it further pleaded the mistake in sending the sofa via St. Louis, and then pleaded the uniform bill of lading, that the shipper had declared a value of $10 per hundred weight on the shipment and received a reduced freight rate on account thereof, and tendered damages based on such reduced rate. It further pleaded thát the suit was barred by limitations, in that it had not been filed for more than two years after it had on January 31, 1944, declined to pay more than $24.

On the trial the court below held against the defendant on its plea of limitations, and concluded that the carrier’s mistake in loading the sofa into the St. Louis car instead of the El Paso car constituted a common-law “deviation,” which had the effect of breaching the shipping contract, rendering the carrier liable as for conversion, and estopping it from relying upon the provisions of the uniform bill of lading 'as a defense to the action. Judgment was rendered for the plaintiff in the sum of $137.50, together with interest and costs .of suit. i i i l ■

The uniform bill of lading under which this shipment moved contains a provision that suit must be instituted within two years and one day after the carrier has declined liability. as authorized by Sec. 20 of the Interstate Commerce Act, 49 U.S.C.A. § 20. This provision was held reasonable in Leigh Ellis & Co. v. Davis, 260 U.S. 682, 43 S.Ct. 243, 67 L.Ed. 460, and is not open to question.

The plaintiff seeks to avoid limitation by the fact that after the receipt of the letter of January 31, 1944, the defendant company continued to negotiate with him, and that the suit was brought in less than two years after negotiations were finally terminated on June 5, 1944. The letter of January 31, 1944, stated, among other things:

“Mr. Barber, we are anxious to serve you and give you the best repair job that is possible. We have our limitations as to material and as to cost of repairs as well. We can under no circumstances pay more than $24.00 for the repairs. The exact cost cannot be determined until it is known the quality of material that is to be used on covering the back. We feel sure though the total cost will not be more than $30.00.
“This shipment could have been released to 20‡ 50‡ or even $2.00 a pound but the rates would have been increased depending on the declared valuation. The U. S. Supreme Court has ruled that a common carrier may not accept liability greater than the declared basis when rates are assessed depending on value; to do so would be nothing less than a rebate.”

Thereafter and in response to certain letters and communications passing between the plaintiff and the defendant, the question of the liability of the defendant company under the common-law deviation rule was discussed between the plaintiff and representatives of the defendant, which included an exchange of legal authorities, and continued until the 5th of June, 1944, when the claim agent of the defendant at El Paso wrote the plaintiff advising him that the claim filed had been received by him that day from his superior officer in San Francisco, with the advice that he, the claim agent, would not be permitted to pay more than the declared valuation of 10 cents a pound

We begin a consideration of the question of limitation with the knowledge that this court in Mersfelder v. Atchison, T. & S. F. Ry. Co., 24 N.M. 518, 174 P. 989, 990, held that the defense of limitation of time in which a suit may be brought for damage to an interstate shipment may not be waived, even though the delay be caused by the carrier treating with a claimant for settlement and thereby leading him to believe his claim would be settled without suit. It is there said:

“The scope and exact effect of the federal law will be ascertained best from the construction placed upon it by the court intrusted with its interpretation. In the case of A. J. Phillips Co. v. Grand Trunk Western R. Co., 236 U.S. 662, 667, 35 S.Ct. 444, 446, 59 L.Ed. 774, the court said:
“' * * * To permit a railroad company to plead the statute of limitations as against some, and to waive it as against others, would be to prefer some and discriminate against others, in violation of the terms of the Commerce Act, which forbids all devices by which such results may be accomplished. The prohibitions of the statute against unjust discrimination relate not only to inequality of charges and inequality of facilities, but also to the giving of preferences by means of consent judgments, or the waiver of defenses open, to the carrier.’ ”

The Phillips case has been consistently followed by the Supreme Court of the United States and the various state courts as will appear from the annotation in 135 A.L.R. at page 612, following the case of Kirkpatrick Co. v. Illinois Central Railroad Co., 190 Miss. 157, 195 So. 692, 693, 135 A.L.R. 607. In the Kirkpatrick case it is said: “The outstanding purpose of the Commerce Act was to absolutely uproot and destroy all discriminations in interstate commerce regardless of how conceived or by what plan, scheme or device they may be sought to be accomplished. To that end, the carrier is without power to waive any valid provision of .the contract constituting a defense. * * * The carrier cannot by conversations, letters and negotiations extend the time for suit beyond that limited by the bill of lading and the Commerce Act.”

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185 P.2d 979, 51 N.M. 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barber-v-southern-pac-co-nm-1947.