Chilean Nitrate Sales Corp. v. Southern Railway-Carolina Division

88 S.E.2d 242, 227 S.C. 423, 1955 S.C. LEXIS 42
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 18, 1955
Docket17033
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 88 S.E.2d 242 (Chilean Nitrate Sales Corp. v. Southern Railway-Carolina Division) 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
Chilean Nitrate Sales Corp. v. Southern Railway-Carolina Division, 88 S.E.2d 242, 227 S.C. 423, 1955 S.C. LEXIS 42 (S.C. 1955).

Opinion

Taylor, Justice.

Respondent here seeks to recover the value of 1,800 bags of nitrate of soda lost by fire after they had been loaded in three of appellant’s cars on December 20, 1950. By consent the matter was heard by the presiding Judge of the Court of Common Pleas for Charleston County at the November Term, 1953, without a jury. After hearing testimony from both sides,, the presiding Judge overruled respondent’s and appellant’s motions for directed verdicts and took the matter under advisement. Thereafter, by his decree dated April 26, 1954, he rendered judgment for plaintiff-respondent in the sum of $4,635.00 with interest and costs and this appeal presents the questions of, first, whether or not the delivery of the nitrate of soda to the carrier was completed at the time of its destruction; and, second, is carrier estopped to deny delivery of the nitrate of soda after having executed an unconditional bill of lading and, if not, can the carrier introduce evidence of long standing custom, usage, or practice relative to the matter in question.

[426]*426Respondent is a New York corporation operating in Charleston County, South Carolina, by and through its agent Etiwan Fertilizer Co., a South Carolina corporation. The respondent corporation imports nitrate of soda in bulk which is unloaded from ships at the Etiwan dock in Charleston County where it is bagged by Etiwan and shipped in boxcars according to its orders over three railroads serving the Etiwan plant.

The facts in this case are substantially undisputed. On the date in question, Etiwan loaded three of appellant’s cars with 600 bags each of nitrate of soda destined for various points in South Carolina. The loading was completed, the doors sealed, and cars placarded as required by the Interstate Commerce Commission on cargo of this type. The appellant railroad signed bills of lading for the three cars at 1:45 p. m. on the date of the fire at their office in the City of Charleston when they were presented by an employee of Etiwan. These bills of lading each bore the following certification as required by the Interstate Commerce Commission :

“This is to certify that the above articles are properly described by name, and are packed and marked, and are in proper condition for transportation, according to the regulations prescribed by the Interstate Commerce Commission. Dangerous Placard Applied.”

Such certification was placed thereon by the use of a rubber stamp and then signed by the general manager of respondent.

At approximately 2:55 p. m., fire was discovered in the warehouse which ultimately consumed the three cars in question and their contents. Respondent took the position at the hearing, and the trial Judge found that there had been an actual and complete delivery of this 1,800 bags of nitrate of soda “in proper condition for transportation,” and that there was nothing further to be done by the shipper.

[427]*427Respondent’s place of business, from which the loading operations in question were conducted, was served by three parallel tracks, the first, or No. 1 track, being adjacent to the shed, close enough to the platform for the intervening space between the cars and the platform to be bridged by a steel “gang board” or “gang way.” The next, or No. 2 track, was constructed parallel to No. 1 or in such proximity that when the cars were spotted in such manner that the doors were opposite the cars previously spotted on No. 1 track, that the intervening space between the cars on No. 1 track and No. 2 track could be bridged by the placing of similar “gang boards” or “gang ways” and the third track was constructed in the same relationship to the second track as the second was to the first. The testimony reveals that the placing of the cars to be loaded was controlled by Etiwan through what is known as its switch list of the previous day. Over a period of more than ten years the manner of doing business between appellant and respondent was that respondent would prepare its switch list and leave it in a designated box in the yard where it was picked up by the crew of the Southern Railroad at approximately 4:30 every afternoon and pursuant to this switch list such cars, as directed, were removed from the tracks and such empties, as directed, placed in position for loading the next day. These tracks had a capacity of approximately thirty cars and on the day in question was occupied by twenty-three cars. These cars were loaded by hand trucks with the gang boards being placed by respondent between the platform and the cars.on No. 1 track and between the cars on No. 2 track and No. 31 track so that the appellant’s cars for all intents and purposes were used as a platform or way to load the outlying cars. The cars on No. 3 track, furtherest away from the loading shed, were always loaded first with the cars nearest the loading shed being the last to be loaded, closed, and sealed. One of. the cars in question was the No. 2 car from the head end on No. 3 track, another was No. 5 car from the end on No. 1 track, and the other was car [428]*428No. 8 from the end on No. 1 track. Three railroads served respondent’s business, the Southern Railway — Carolina Division, the appellant here; the Seaboard Airline Railroad and the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, with the Southern being the first of the three to conduct the necessary shifting operations which commence at 4:30 p. m. each afternoon, in order not to interrupt Etiwan’s loading operations. The loadings of Etiwan were conducted in accordance with orders in duplicate issued from the office to those charged with loading the cars. The person in charge of loading would place the copy of such orders in the. car and proceed to load accordingly. He would place the number of the car on the original and return it to the office where the hills of lading would be made up in the morning to cover cars to be loaded during the day. At the time of the making up of -these bills of lading some of the cars would be completely loaded, some would be partially loaded, and some completely empty. These bills of lading would be delivered to the carrier’s office in the City of Charleston in the late morning or early afternoon of each day. On occasions a car would be held until the next day even though the bill of lading had already been made up and on occasions such bills of lading were changed and new car numbers assigned. In fact, one of the bills of lading in the instant case was so changed prior to its being carried to appellant’s office in Charleston. The switching crew who handled the removing and placing of cars never saw the bills of lading but were controlled entirely by the switch list which was prepared by respondent at the place of business.

The switch list bore the date and destination of such cars as were destined for removal and a list of the empty cars to be spotted. The entire operation was controlled by respondent through the switch list and no car was moved whether loaded or empty except when directed by Etiwan through the switch list.

At the time of the fire, as heretofore stated, respondent had completed the loading of the three cars in question but [429]*429the “gang way” was still in place between the platform and car No. 1 on track No. 1 so as to prevent the railroad from pulling the string of ten cars on track No. 1 which was nearest the warehouse and contained two of the cars in question.

There is no evidence of a switch list having been prepared on the day in question, but one witness testified that if it had been prepared, it had been lost in the fire.

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Related

Tallon v. Seaboard Coast Line Railroad
202 S.E.2d 16 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1974)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 S.E.2d 242, 227 S.C. 423, 1955 S.C. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chilean-nitrate-sales-corp-v-southern-railway-carolina-division-sc-1955.