Bowman Dairy Co. ex rel. Phoenix Insurance v. Megan

15 N.E.2d 878, 296 Ill. App. 20, 1938 Ill. App. LEXIS 349
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 21, 1938
DocketGen. No. 39,840
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 N.E.2d 878 (Bowman Dairy Co. ex rel. Phoenix Insurance v. Megan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowman Dairy Co. ex rel. Phoenix Insurance v. Megan, 15 N.E.2d 878, 296 Ill. App. 20, 1938 Ill. App. LEXIS 349 (Ill. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Friend

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the afternoon of October 1, 1935, four cars of milk, being transported in interstate commerce by the Chicago and North Western Railway to Chicago, were destroyed at Genoa City, Wisconsin, by a group of farmers who were conducting a so-called “milk strike.” The Phoenix Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut, had issued a policy covering these shipments and paid the Bowman Dairy Company, nominal plaintiff herein, the sum of $3,593.84 on account of the loss incurred. The insurance company, claiming subrogation to the rights of the Bowman Dairy Company, brought suit for its claim against Charles P. Megan, who had been appointed trustee of the property of the railroad company by the United States court, pursuant to a reorganization proceeding under sec. 77 of the Federal Bankruptcy Act. Megan, as trustee, filed an answer in which he admits the delivery of the shipment to him for transportation to Chicago, pleads a contract provision exempting the railroad company from liability for loss, damage or delay resulting from riots or strikes, and avers that the reason for such nondelivery was that the cars containing milk were, while at Genoa City, Wisconsin, and in transportation in interstate commerce, violently and forcibly destroyed by a group of rioters who were conducting a “milk strike” and who, without warning to defendant, overpowered its crew, seized the cars and destroyed the contents thereof, without negligence on the part of defendant. For a second defense Megan’s answer pleads a contract provision under which defendant claims to be entitled to the full benefit of any insurance effected on the property, so far as this should not avoid the policy of insurance, avers that the policy contained no clause under which the contract of insurance would be voided by the contract provision giving defendant the full benefit of any insurance effected upon the property transported, and therefore denies that the insurance company was the owner of the claim and asserts that by reason of the fact that insurance was effected upon the property and full reimbursement made by the insurer the defendant was not liable for the loss, whether or not he otherwise would have been liable. Plaintiff filed a reply setting forth in detail certain facts alleged to constitute negligence on the part of the defendant, and also asserting the invalidity of the contract provision with respect to defendant having the benefit of the insurance. The cause was tried by the court without a jury, resulting in findings and judgment for plaintiff. Megan, as trustee, has prosecuted this appeal.

It appears-from the evidence that two of the milk cars originated at Harvard, Illinois, one at Capron, Illinois, and one at Poplar Grove, Illinois. Poplar Grove and Capron are stations west of Harvard on a branch line of the Chicago and North Western Railway. Between Harvard and Chicago the railroad company has one line wholly within the State of Illinois and another line, over which these cars were routed, running in an easterly direction from Harvard across the Wisconsin State line toward Kenosha, where it joins with a north and south line into Chicago. It was stipulated that for good and sufficient operating reasons the railroad routed these shipments over into Wisconsin instead of entirely within the State of Illinois, and that in so doing it was not in any manner seeking to bring itself under the Federal law instead of the law of Illinois.

The shipments from Poplar Grove and Harvard were made under what is known as the “milk and cream way bill, ’ ’ a document issued in the case of milk shipments under a special tariff of the Chicago & North Western Railway governing milk and cream shipments into Chicago. This waybill performs the functions of the ordinary bill of lading, and the tariff under which it is issued specifically provides that traffic handled under it will be subject to the terms and conditions of the uniform bill of lading as published in the classifications. Among the contract terms and conditions of the .uniform bill of lading is a provision that no carrier shall be liable for loss, damage or delay “caused by the act of God, the public enemy, the authority of law, or the act or default of the shipper or owner, or for natural shrinkage,” and that “except in case of negligence of the carrier or party in possession, the carrier or party in possession shall not be liable for loss, damage or delay . . . resulting from . . . riots or strikes.” Under the provisions of the bill of lading the burden of proving freedom from negligence is cast upon the carrier or party in possession.

After picking up the milk cars, the train, consisting of a locomotive and tender, four milk cars, one empty car, and a baggage combination car and a coach, left Harvard at 3:20 p. m., passed through Hebron, a station about eleven miles east of Harvard and arrived at Genoa City, Wisconsin, at 4:26 p. m. It stopped at the outskirts of Genoa City, near a switch from which there is a track leading to the Borden-Wieland, Inc., plant at that place. The reason for stopping at that point was to enable the engine to uncouple, proceed to the Borden-Wieland plant and pick up a car of milk there. When the train came to a stop, the cars involved in this case were standing on the bridge over Nippersink Creek. While the train was thus standing on the track, with the engine cut off, a mob, consisting largely of young men, swarmed, without warning, out from under the bridge, up the embankment, seized the cars, broke the seals and dumped the milk.

The record discloses that Bowman Dairy Company had consistently refused to patronize the railroad for more than a year, and had regularly transported milk by its own trucks to Chicago. When it became aware of dissatisfaction among producers in its territory, culminating in a strike on October 1, its executives, apprehending possible trouble to its trucks on the highway, on September 30, 1935, took out the policy of insurance against riot, upon which the insurer now relies for subrogation, and directed that shipments be made by rail, because they “didn’t want to take any chances” in getting their trucks through on the highway. It is evident that the Bowman Dairy Company took out this insurance because it anticipated some risk in making shipments, and although it could have fastened upon the railroad company the more stringent liability imposed upon carriers at common law in the absence of contract, by payment of a 10 per cent higher rate of insurance provided for in the classification, it elected to ship at the lower of the two optional rates, so that the carrier would be liable only if negligent in fact.

As affecting these questions, a summary of the facts preceding October 1,1935, discloses that the ‘ ‘ Chicago Millc Shed, ’ ’ from which this city obtains its supply of milk, embraces large portions of Indiana, Illinois and Wisconsin. The milk was supplied by some 26,000 farmers, of whom about 16,000 were members of the Pure Milk Association, which had contracted to sell the milk of these farmers to the milk companies at a stipulated price and for a specified time. The association had made an agreement with the milk companies, effective September 1, 1935, to lower the price of milk 20 per cent. Thereafter meetings were held at Hartford, Capron, Poplar Grove, Hebron, Genoa City and other towns in the district, by farmers who were dissatisfied with this reduced price, and rumors were spread that a milk strike was impending.

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.E.2d 878, 296 Ill. App. 20, 1938 Ill. App. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowman-dairy-co-ex-rel-phoenix-insurance-v-megan-illappct-1938.