Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. National Fruit Products Co.

155 S.E. 630, 155 Va. 438, 72 A.L.R. 878, 1930 Va. LEXIS 175
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 13, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 155 S.E. 630 (Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. National Fruit Products Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. National Fruit Products Co., 155 S.E. 630, 155 Va. 438, 72 A.L.R. 878, 1930 Va. LEXIS 175 (Va. 1930).

Opinion

Browning, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The parties litigant will sometimes be referred to as they were related in the trial court.

The National Fruit Products Company, by motion for judgment, proceeded against the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company to recover the sum of $953.24, a portion of this, $136.08, was the value of vinegar which leaked from a tank in transit, and the residue, $817.16, was for the cost of repairs to the tank car of the plaintiff, both items of damage alleged to have been caused by negligence of the defendant in handling the said tank car over its lines between Waynesboro, Va., and Charlottesville, Va., or at its yards in the latter place. The suit was in the Circuit Court of Augusta county, Va., and the court entered judgment upon a verdict of a jury against the defendant for $833.77.

The case is before us upon a writ of error awarded to the defendant.

There are two assignments of error which are as follows:

“First: The circuit court erred in overruling the defendant’s motion to set aside the verdict of $136.08, for the value of the vinegar lost, as contrary to the law and the evidence, and to enter final judgment in favor of the defendant.”

[441]*441“Second: The circuit court erred in sustaining the plaintiff’s motion to set aside the said verdict of the jury in so far as the jury did not find for the plaintiff, in addition to the sum of $136.08, damages to the plaintiff’s tank car; in impanelling a jury to assess such damages, and after-wards in overruling the defendant’s motion and refusing to set aside the verdict of the jury so impanelled, assessing the plaintiff’s damages to its said car at $697.60, as contrary to the law and the evidence.”

It will be noted that upon the trial in the first instance the verdict of the jury was only for the value of the lost vinegar, and upon the motion of the plaintiff the court set aside the said verdict in so far as the jury failed to allow damages for the cost of repairs to the tank car, and impanelled another jury to assess such damages. The second jury assessed the damages at the aforesaid sum of $697.60, whereupon the court then set aside the former verdict and entered judgment for the aggregate of the two verdicts, to-wit: $833.77.

Responding to the notice of motion for judgment, the defendant filed in writing its statement of defense consisting of five grounds of defense. Four of these were denials of the allegations of negligence and an affirmance of the bad condition of the tank car when delivered to defendant, and inherent defects in the same and faulty structural condition.

The fifth ground of defense was as follows:

Fifth: “Under the terms of the bill of lading issued for said shipment, there can be no liability upon the part of the defendant for the further reason that the claim of loss, damage, and costs was not made within the six months period therein limited.

The bill of lading was put in evidence by the plaintiff as were the claims made by it to the defendant for loss, damage and costs of repairs to the tank car. The defendant by cross-examination of plaintiff’s witness emphasized the dates of such claims.

[442]*442It will inure to clearness of understanding to here give briefly the facts incident to the shipment which is the basis of this controversy.

The plaintiff is a manufacturer of vinegar and one of its plants is located at Waynesboro, Va. It operated two additional plants, one at Winchester, Va., and the other at Martinsburg, W. Va., and at the time of this shipment it owned one tank car, a complete structure, designed to be operated and roll on any standard railroad. This tank car was fitted with two tanks, placed end to end on the car, with wood structures, with iron angles, at both ends of the tanks, together, and a similar structure in the middle of the car between the two tanks, such structures being called bulkheads. There were also iron tie rods which were fastened to the end bulkheads and which extended obliquely to the bottom part of the middle bulkhead and were secured to it by being put through the piece of timber and made fast by a nut on the threads of the projecting end of the rod. The tanks rested upon what was designated as saddles. There were also some scantlings or wooden braces which extended horizontally along the side of the tank car. These were all designed to make stationary or fixed the tanks upon the car.

At the time of shipment the car had been in use fifteen years. It had been built over and reconditioned when necessary and in February before the tanks and woodwork had been rebuilt and upon its last journey, previous to the one in question, one of the tanks had leaked to about one-half of the leakage in question, on account of some impairment of two staves in the tank which, however, had been remedied. This car, with 8,316 gallons of vinegar in the two tanks, weighing over 64,000 pounds, over 32,000 pounds in each tank, was delivered on the 21st day of July, 1925, to the defendant at Waynesboro, Va., en route to Somerville. Mass., by way of Charlottesville, Va.

[443]*443The tank car went forward on the day of its delivery to the defendant as part of the make-up of a local freight train. When it arrived at Charlottesville the train line or air pipe of this car, used in connection with the automatic brakes, was badly deteriorated and leaking and one of the braces was loose at one end, and a “bad order” card was placed on it by defendant’s inspector. ' This meant that it was necessary for the car to be shopped for repairs and preliminary to this it had to be removed to the bad order track. Thus the car in question, with another loaded with ballast, were switched to the last named tracks and coupled with other cars already there. The yard brakeman rode on the front end of the tank car and operated the brakes in the process of coupling.

Necessarily there is a jar from the impact when one car is coupled to another.

When the coupling was effected one of the tie rods was disconnected with the timber of the middle bulkhead to which it was held by the nut already referred to, which caused the surging of the vinegar to move the front end bulkhead forward, which in turn made the tank lurch toward the front end and then the larger part of the leakage ensued. The tank was repaired to prevent further leakage and the car was returned the next morning, July 22, 1925, to Waynesboro, Va., and when it arrived it was in bad condition—29 staves of the tank broken at the ends, some stay rods, bulkheads, etc., broken—and there the vinegar was pumped out and it was discovered that some 900 gallons had been lost. The empty car was then routed to the plaintiff’s repair plant at Martinsburg, W. Va., where other and further damages to the car were detected.

Witnesses for the plaintiff, who inspected the car when it was delivered to the defendant at Waynesboro, testified that it was in excellent condition. The bill of lading also bore the notation, “in apparent good order.”

[444]

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.E. 630, 155 Va. 438, 72 A.L.R. 878, 1930 Va. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesapeake-ohio-railway-co-v-national-fruit-products-co-va-1930.