Beaufort Truck Growers Ass'n v. S. A. L. Railway Co.

121 S.E. 357, 127 S.C. 496, 1924 S.C. LEXIS 138
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 2, 1924
Docket11411
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 121 S.E. 357 (Beaufort Truck Growers Ass'n v. S. A. L. Railway Co.) 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
Beaufort Truck Growers Ass'n v. S. A. L. Railway Co., 121 S.E. 357, 127 S.C. 496, 1924 S.C. LEXIS 138 (S.C. 1924).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Cothran.

Action for $1,382.70 damages on account of loss and damage to a shipment of potatoes which moved by rail from Lobeco, S. C. (Beaufort County), to Toronto, Canada, over several lines of railroad, but, as the defendant contends, by disconnected movements. The plaintiff recovered a judgment in the Circuit Court for $300, and the defendant has appealed.

The shipment was received by the defendant, Seaboard Air Line Railway Company, at Lobeco on June 3, 1920; the carrier issued and delivered to the plaintiff a bill of lading showing that the plaintiff was both consignor and consignee, and that the destination was Potomac Yards, in the State of Virginia.

The “Case” contains this stipulation:

“The bill of lading under which the shipment in question moved was introduced in evidence, and is to be exhibited to the Court at the hearing of this appeal.”

At the hearing the bill of lading was not produced, but by agreement of counsel it was to be produced and submitted to the Court, which has been done.

The bill of lading is, as it is denominated, a “straight bill of lading,” in which the plaintiff is both consignor and consignee; the destination is Potomac Yards; there is no notation upon it or any provision in it, tending to show that the shipment was expected or intended to be diverted before it reached destination, or reconsigned afterwards; nor is there any evidence in the record for appeal tending to show that such was the intention of the shipper, or any agreement to that effect binding upon the defendant, the receiving carrier.

Upon receipt of the shipment, the defendant transported it to Richmond, Va., the northern terminus of its line, and *499 there delivered the car to the Richmond, Fredericksburg & Potomac Railroad, which carried it to Potomac Yards, the destination named in the bill of lading. There is no evidence of damage to the shipment between Robeco and' Potomac Yards.

The complaint alleges that the shipment was made to Potomac Yards, for reconsignment, of which, as has been stated, there is no evidence, and that thereafter (whether while the shipment was in transit or after it had arrived at Potomac Yards, is not stated), the plaintiff reconsigned the car to its order at Buffalo, N. Y., again for reconsignment, and thereafter reconsigned it, freight prepaid, to Toronto, Canada, there to be delivered to Charles Simpson, to whom the plaintiff had sold the potatoes, subject to arrival in good condition. The agreed facts contain this statement:

“From Potomac Yards the shipment was directed to Buffalo, N. Y., upon orders of the plaintiff to the agent of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company at Potomac Yards. From Buffalo the shipment was directed to Toronto, Canada.”

The record for appeal is silent upon the movements of the car or shipment from Potomac Yards to Buffalo and from Buffalo to Toronto; that is, whether new bills of lading were issued Jay the Pennsylvania Railroad at Potomac Yards, and by the unnamed carrier at Buffalo, or whether it moved from Potomac Yards to Toronto upon the original bill of lading issued by the Seaboard Air Riñe at Robeco, S. C.

Upon arrival at Toronto, the potatoes were found in a damaged condition, the loss amounting, as alleged, to $R-382.70, to recover which from the original receiving carrier this action was instituted.

The real question in the case is whether or not, under the circumstances stated, the defendant can be deemed the initial carrier for the entire transportation from Robeco to Toronto, and thereby, under the Carmack Amendment (U. *500 S. Comp. St., §§ 8604a, 8604aa), be held responsible for the loss and damage occurring between Potomac Yards and Toronto.

The defendant concedes, as a matter of course, that the original shipment was interstate, and that it held itself responsible for any loss, damage or injury that ipay have been caused by it or by any connecting carrier over whose lines the shipment may have passed, on the through bill of lading —that is, between Lobeco and Potomac Yards; but it denies that it can be deemed the initial carrier for any part of the transportation between Potomac Yards and Toronto, and so be held responsible for loss, damage, or injury, which may have occurred between those points upon the extended transportation.

We are not called upon to decide what would have been the effect of issuing a bill of lading with a notation thereon, “for consignment,” or “for diversion”; or of an agreement or custom on the part of the receiving carrier that perishable freight might be shipped to a distributing point and thence reconsigned to other destinations; or of the movement beyond the primary destination upon the original bill of lading pursuant to an implied or express agreement among carriers to that effect; for there is no evidence before us which would justify a deliverance upon these questions, and it will be time enough to consider them when they may be properly presented.

There are several question’s in connection with this transaction, interesting if not material, that are unanswered in the record:

(1) Was there an agreement, verbal or otherwise, with the receiving carrier, that the shipment was to be reconsigned at Potomac Yards to other destinations?

(2) Was there a course of dealing between the receiving carrier and the shipper from which such an agreement may-have been implied?

*501 - (3) Was the freight from Robeco to Potomac Yards paid by the shipper upon arrival there ?

(4) Was the original bill of lading surrendered at Potomac Yards by the shipper?

(5) Did the Pennsylvania Railroad issue a new bill of lading at Potomac Yards covering the transportation to Buffalo ?

.(6) Was the freight from Potomac Yards to Buffalo, or from Robeco to Buffalo, paid on arrival- of shipment at Buffalo ?

(7) Was the original bill of lading, or the bill of lading for the second journey if issued, surrendered by the shipper at Buffalo?

(8) Did the carrier at Buffalo issue a new bill of lading covering the transportation to Toronto?

(9) Did the shipment move all the way from Robeco to Toronto upon the original bill of lading?

(10) If so, was it done with the knowledge and consent of the receiving carrier by agreement with the connecting carrier at Potomac Yards, or in the course of their dealings from which such agreement might be implied ?

(11) Did the shipment move upon a through rate from Robeco to Toronto, and was the freight paid upon that basis ?

(12) Was notice of the reconsignment from Potomac Yards to Buffalo, or from Buffalo to Toronto, given during transit or after arrival?

In the absence of evidence upon these points, there is presented simply a straight shipment from Robeco, S.

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Related

Southern Produce Co. v. Norfolk Southern Railroad
132 S.E. 360 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1926)
Moise v. Southern Railway Co.
123 S.E. 791 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
121 S.E. 357, 127 S.C. 496, 1924 S.C. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beaufort-truck-growers-assn-v-s-a-l-railway-co-sc-1924.