Central of Georgia Railway Co. v. Bird

73 S.E. 599, 10 Ga. App. 423, 1912 Ga. App. LEXIS 546
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 30, 1912
Docket3335
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 73 S.E. 599 (Central of Georgia Railway Co. v. Bird) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central of Georgia Railway Co. v. Bird, 73 S.E. 599, 10 Ga. App. 423, 1912 Ga. App. LEXIS 546 (Ga. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Hill, C. J.

Bird recovered a verdict from the Central of Georgia Bailway Company, for $3,053.58 as damages, the value of 41 bales of cotton consumed by fire while in a car of the defendant, and the case is here on exceptions to the judgment overruling the defendant’s motion for a new trial. The facts, briefly stated, are as follows: Bird, the owner of the 41 bales of cotton, placed them in the Farmers’ Union Warehouse at Metter, Georgia, marked for shipment to Savannah, Georgia. This warehouse was within three or four yards of the track of the defendant, and between three and four hundred yards from its depot. The defendant, in pursuance of custom and under an agreement it had with the warehouse company, placed a car for the reception of this cotton near the warehouse, the owner of the cotton intending that it should be transí ported to Savannah the day after the loading of the car with the cotton. The agents of the warehouse company loaded the car with [424]*424the cotton, and, in the afternoon, having completed the loading, closed the door of the car, but did not seal it. The evidence was in conflict as to whose duty it was to seal the door of the car, whether that of the agents of the warehouse company, or that of the agents of the railway company. The loading of the car was completed in the afternoon, about 5 o’clock. On the same night, between 10 and 11 o’clock, the car, with the cotton, was entirely consumed by fire. A mixed freight and passenger train passed between 12 and 1 o’clock in the daytime, while the car was being loaded. The next and only train that passed before the fire was a passenger train, which-passed at 5.45 o’clock p. m. The agents of the warehouse company who did the loading testified that neither one of them smoked, that there were no matches about the car, nor anything else by which the cotton could have been ignited, so far as they could discover, when they closed the car and left it. It was proved by the railroad company that at the point where the car was located, although the track was up-grade, on account of its proximity to the depot where both the freight and passenger trains were stopped, no sparks were emitted by either one of the engines of these trains, the engineers of both trains testifying that their engines were simply rolling as they passed the warehouse, and that engines never emit sparks when rolling, but only when they are working. The first freight train upon which the cotton could have been moved after it had been loaded in the car was one on the next day, which was expected to take up the ear for the purpose of transporting it to Savannah, its destination, and this train was expected to pass Metter on the next morning between 10 and 11 o’clock.

A contract between the Farmers’ Union Warehouse and the Central of Georgia Bailway Company was introduced in evidence, by the terms of which the railway company agreed to issue “ its regular cotton bills of lading on cars by the said Farmers’ Union Warehouse at cotton warehouse situated upon the side-track of the said railway company at Metter, Ga., upon the written statement of the said Farmers’ Union Warehouse, their agents or employees, as to the consignor, consignee, destination, number of bales, and marks of all cotton so loaded at cotton warehouse,” upon certain conditions as to the method of loading and as to the care and diligence of the warehouse company to see that the cars were in a proper and “clean condition, that is, free from anything likely to damage the cotton, [425]*425such as loose matches, waste, oils, filth, etc., and [should] have the end windows of the cars closed, stripped, and sealed in a proper manner,” and that when the cars had been loaded, the Farmers’ Union Warehouse should cause the doors thereof to “be also closed, sealed, and stripped in a proper manner.” There was also introduced in evidence an agreement between the railway company and the Farmers’ Union Warehouse that the former should pay the latter stipulated amounts for its services in loading the cars. There was no evidence that any bill of lading was issued for the cotton to the warehouse company, or to the shipper. There was no evidence that the railroad company had been notified after the loading of the car that it was ready for shipment, but the evidence is undisputed that the bales 'of cotton were marked for destination, and that the cotton was to be shipped by the first freight train passing on the next day; that the custom of the company was to deliver the cars to an adjacent entrance into the warehouse, for the purpose of having the warehouse agents load the cotton thereon; that this cotton was loaded on the car which the railway company placed there on the day the cotton was burned; and the value of the cotton was proved.

Under this evidence the attorney for the railroad company contends, (1) that there was no delivery of the cotton to the railway company in its capacity of a common carrier, nor any delivery to it as a warehouseman; and (2) that there was no evidence whatever that any spark from a passing engine consumed the cotton, of that it was destroyed by any negligence of the railway company or its agents.

1. Did the facts show delivery to the railway company, and, if so, was that delivery to the company as a common carrier, or as a warehouseman ? Of course, if it was delivered to the railway company in its capacity of a common carrier, the plaintiff was entitled to recover, upon proof of ownership, delivery, and loss. The question is not free from doubt, but our opinion is that, under the law, the facts show a delivery to the railway company as a common carrier. The Civil Code (1910), § 2730, declares that “the responsibility of the carrier commences with the delivery of the goods, either to himself or his agent, or at a place where he is. accustomed or agrees to receive them.” Whom did the warehouse company represent in loading the cotton on the car? Did it represent the rail[426]*426way company, or the owner of the cotton, or both? It was unquestionably the agent of the owner in receiving the cotton into its warehouse, but it seems to us plain that it was the agent of the company in loading the cotton from the warehouse on the companjf’s car. The company, by a written contract, created this relationship between it and the warehouse company, so far as the loading of the cotton was concerned. It stipulated that the loading was to be done by the warehouse company, and how it was to be done, and it had agreed to pay the warehouse company compensation for the work of loading the car. In addition to this, it seems to us, from the fact that the car was placed by the railway company near the warehouse, where it was accustomed to place it, and where it had agreed to place it for the warehouse, for the purpose of having it loaded by the warehouse agents with cotton for shipment, that when the cotton was loaded on the car at that place, it was a delivery to the railway company. When the cotton got out of the warehouse and into the car of the railway company, it got into the control and custody of1 the railway company, and out of the control and custody of the warehouse company. We think the delivery in this case, under the facts, was an actual delivery, and that it was accepted by the railway company. Certainly there was such constructive and implied delivery and acceptance as would make the railway company liable as a carrier.

It is insisted that there was no complete delivery, because there was something else for the shipper to do, and that no bill of lading had been issued by the company, and that there could not be, in law, a complete delivery until a bill of lading had been issued.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 S.E. 599, 10 Ga. App. 423, 1912 Ga. App. LEXIS 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-of-georgia-railway-co-v-bird-gactapp-1912.