Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. Peed

160 S.W. 472, 155 Ky. 696, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 337
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 11, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 160 S.W. 472 (Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. Peed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky 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. Peed, 160 S.W. 472, 155 Ky. 696, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 337 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

[698]*698Opinion op the Court by

Judge Carroll

Affirming.

The appellee brought this suit against the appellant railroad company to recover damages for its negligent carriage of a car load of cattle delivered to it at Mt. Sterling, Ky., for shipment to Shelbyville, Ky.

The contract of shipment, among other things, provided “that the said shipper has delivered to the said carrier live stock of the kind and number and consigned and destined by said shipper as follows: Consignee, G-. A. Peed; destination, Shelbyville, Ky.; for transportation from Mt. Sterling to destination if on the said carrier’s line of railroad. Otherwise to the place where such live stock is to be received by the connecting carrier for transportation to or towards destination.”

The trains, freight and passenger, of the appellant en route from Mt. Sterling and places East thereof to Louisville, Ky., the terminus of the road, pass through Shelbyville, and so did the train that took up the cars of cattle in question at Mt. Sterling on March 18th. It appears, however, that this car of cattle was carried by the appellant to Lexington, Ky.,.a point on its line of road between Mt. Sterling and Shelbyville, and there delivered to the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. for transportation to Shelbyville. The car containing the cattle left Mt. Sterling after six p. m. on the day it was loaded and arrived at Lexington on the same day at 8:20 p. m. About an hour afterwards the car with the cattle in good condition was delivered to the Louisville & Nashville and carried by that company to Louisville, and from thence to Shelbyville, arriving at the latter place at 8:20 a. m. on the 21st.

In ordinary course of transportation by the appellant, if the car had remained a part of the train in which it was put at Mt. Sterling it would have arrived at Shelbyville during the night of the 18th and within a few hours after leaving Mt. Sterling, but in the negligent delay in its transportation by the Louisville & Nashville the cattle did not reach Shelbyville until many hours after they should have been delivered there. The evidence shows that by the unreasonable delay in their carriage the cattle were damaged in the sum of $250, at which the jury assessed the recovery.

The trial court, in the course of the instructions, told the jury that “it was the duty of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. to carry plaintiff’s stock on its own line of [699]*699railroad from Mt. Sterling to Lexington, and thence on the line of railroad of the Lonisville & Nashville Bail-road Co., operated by it from Lexington to Shelbyville by the way of Christiansbnrg, and within a. reasonable time and without unreasonable delay.” And the correctness of this portion of the instruction presents the only question in the case.

It is shown by the evidence that the trains of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad Co. run on its own line of railway to and from Lexington, Ky., and Mt. Sterling, Ky., and points east thereof, extending through the State of Kentucky to the West Virginia line. From Lexington, Ky., to Lonisville, Ky., its trains are run over a line of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. that goes by way of Shelbyville, thence to Louisville.

The trains of the Chesapeake & Ohio are run over the line of the Louisville & Nashville from Lexington to Louisville under a contract entered into between the two companies in March, 1895, that became effective in January, 1896, the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. being the party of the first part and the Chesapeake & Ohio being the party of the second part in the contract. By the terms of this contract it is continued in effect for one hundred years. In section five of the contract it is provided that:

“All business originating upon the line between Louisville & L.exington, not including business between either of said points to the other, shall belong exclusively to the first party, but the second party shall have the right to honor upon their trains passenger tickets of the first party for passengers to Frankfort and Shelbyville, and also any other points at which the trains of the second party may be obliged to stop on account of railroad crossings, train orders, water, etc., all of which tickets so honored shall, as soon as may be after the end of each month, be returned by the second party to the first party, and the first party shall thereupon pay the second party 25 per cent of the value of such tickets, and in the event of conductors of second party collecting cash fares to such points on the line used jointly (exclusive always of fares through from Louisville to Lexington and vice versa), second party shall in like manner at the end of each month report such cash fare collections to first party and remit to it 75 per cent thereof. The parties of the second part on their regular through trains may carry passengers to and from local points on the joint [700]*700tracks if such passengers he destined from or to their own lines, and for all such passengers they shall likewise pay party of the first part 75 per cent of the local fare.”

One of the contentions of counsel for the Chesapeake & Ohio is that this section of the contract prohibited the Chesapeake & Ohio from carrying this load of cattle in its own train from Mt. Sterling to Shelbyville and' obliged it to transfer the car at Lexington to the Louisville & Nashville for carriage from there* to Shelbyville. In support of this construction counsel say ‘‘ Section five, after providing that all business originating on the line between Lexington and Louisville shall belong to the Louisville & Nashville, contains an exception as to certain passenger business the Chesapeake & Ohio may do and provides how the revenue from that service may be divided, if it elects to perform it. The fact that it was necessary to insert this exception in order that appellant might do a passenger business at Frankfort and Shelbyville clearly shows that it was the intention of the parties to prohibit the appellant from doing any business on that line by the first part of that section, namely: ‘All business originating upon the line shall belong exclusively to the first party,’ else it would not have been necessary to insert that exception. There is.no exception at all as to freight. The appellant is given the right to do no freight business between Lexington and Louisville. * * '* The phrase ‘all business originating’ means simply that all revenue arising or earned on that line, except revenue on the other business, shall belong to the Louisville & Nashville, or that the handling of all traffic on that line, except the through business between Lexington and Louisville, shall be done by the Louisville & Nashville.”

In addition to this a number of other reasons are assigned why the Chesapeake & Ohio is and should be prohibited by the contract from doing any freight business between Lexington and Louisville either by delivering or receiving freight. It is further said that this court in Commonwealth v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co., 120 Ky., 91, adopted the construction here contended for and we are referred to the following excerpt from that opinion:

“The contract between the railroad companies prohibits the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. from doing any local passenger or freight business from points be[701]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 S.W. 472, 155 Ky. 696, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesapeake-ohio-railway-co-v-peed-kyctapp-1913.