Coyne v. Oregon Short Line Railroad

244 Ill. App. 359, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 175
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 17, 1927
DocketGen. No. 31,461
StatusPublished

This text of 244 Ill. App. 359 (Coyne v. Oregon Short Line Railroad) 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
Coyne v. Oregon Short Line Railroad, 244 Ill. App. 359, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 175 (Ill. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Fitch

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal is from a judgment against defendant for $85.43, the agreed amount of the loss sustained by the plaintiffs through the alleged negligent handling of five interstate shipments of potatoes. The trial was before the court without a jury and most of the essential facts were stipulated, although some evidence was heard in addition to the stipulation.

The shipments in question were made from points on the line of defendant’s railroad in Oregon and Idaho. The first carload was shipped on September 5, 1923, the second on September 11, 1923, and the last three on September 13, 1923. The shipper was the California Vegetable Union, and two of the cars were consigned to itself at North Platte, Nebraska, and three to itself at Denver, Colorado. While in transit, all were “diverted” and reconsigned by the shipper to itself at Chicago, with directions to “advise Coyne Brothers.” In the reconsignments, the cars were routed over the Chicago & Northwestern Railway. In making these reconsignments, the specified destination was “Chicago, Illinois,” without designating any particular team track in that city, although there were 25 places in Chicago at which there were team tracks ordinarily available for the delivery of such shipments. The stipulation states that the customary track for the delivery of potatoes handled by the Northwestern was at Grand Avenue, and it was shown that in July, 1922, plaintiffs had sent a written request to the Northwestern “to forward all cars of potatoes billed to Coyne Brothers straight or to shipper’s order, notify or advise Coyne Brothers, to Grand Avenue team track,” and that the Northwestern had acknowledged receipt of that letter, stating that it “will be governed accordingly,” and had acted upon that request.

It was stipulated that all the shipments were handled without negligence, over the prescribed route, to Proviso, Illinois, where the outer Chicago yards of the Northwestern Railway are located, and all arrived there on schedule time. As each car arrived at Fortieth Street, Chicago (a distributing yard of the Northwestern located 10 or 12 miles east of Proviso), an arrival notice was given to plaintiffs, who, on the same day, instructed the Northwestern to reconsign the car to the Grand Avenue team track. At that time, and for some time prior thereto, there was a congestion of potato shipments at Grand Avenue and such shipments were sent to Grand Avenue in the order in which reconsigning orders were received, without dscrimination in favor of any shipper, and the cars involved in this case were sent to Grand Avenue in their turn, in accordance with this practice.

On September 4,1923 (before the first of these shipments was made), the Northwestern Railway Company published and declared, in the manner prescribed by the Interstate Commerce Commission, an embargo on “all carload shipments of potatoes consigned to, for reconsignment to, or intended for delivery on any specified or designated team tracks at Chicago,” unless such carload shipments were “waybilled to Fortieth Street, Chicago, with notation on waybills and bills of lading — ‘Subject to such team track delivery as may be available. ’ ” The notice of the embargo, directed “To all Superintendents and Agents,” further stated that the embargo “does not interfere with shipping potatoes to Chicago, but merely means that team track assignment cannot be made in advance of arrival of cars at Fortieth Street.” It was shown that this embargo continued during all the time the shipments in question moved and until September 29, 1923, when it was superseded by a tariff to the same effect.

All the reconsignments from the destinations named in the original bills of lading were made during the life of this embargo, and while the stipulation states that the “shipper or party issuing the reconsignment in any instance did not have actual, as distinguished from constructive, notice of the embargo in question,” an agent of the Northwestern Railway, located at Fortieth Street, testified, without contradiction, that he personally notified the plaintiffs of the existence of the embargo “the first day after the embargo came out” (which was before the first reconsignment of any of the cars) and “that cars would go down to Grand Avenue in turn, ’ ’ if plaintiffs would not take any other team track. The same witness also testified that as each of the cars in question arrived at Fortieth Street, he called up the plaintiffs and notified them “that the car was being held for orders,” advising them at the same time that on account of the congestion at Grand Avenue, plaintiffs could have the cars taken to any one of several other specified team tracks, but that plaintiffs replied that “they would not take anything else but Grand Avenue,” whereupon the witness told them “the car would have to take its turn to Grand Avenue. ’ ’ One of the team tracks so offered to plaintiffs was at Clinton Street, four blocks from Grand Avenue, which had a capacity of 200 cars and was not congested.

It was stipulated that on account of these facts, four. of the cars in question were delayed one day each, and the remaining car was delayed two days, and as to each car, “that had it not been for the congestion hereinbefore referred to and the said embargo, the car would have arrived at Grand Avenue” that much sooner, and that by reason of such delays plaintiffs sustained losses aggregating $85.43 on the five cars.

Each of the bills of lading issued by defendant contains a provision that “no carrier * * * shall be liable for any * * * delay caused by * * * the act or default of the shipper or owner.”

The action is in assumpsit. There are three counts in the declaration as to each of the five carloads in question. The first count in each series alleges that defendant did not carry out its promise to safely and securely carry a specified carload to Chicago, Illinois, and there deliver the same to the plaintiffs. The second of such counts alleges a duty on defendant’s part to safely and securely carry the property to Chicago and there deliver it to the plaintiffs within a reasonable time, and that defendant so negligently handled the shipment that by reason of such negligence plaintiffs sustained the damage complained of. The third count of each series is based upon the alleged negligence of the defendant as a warehouseman. There is no evidence to sustain such third counts. It was shown that all the cars were delivered to the plaintiffs before the time prescribed by the bill of lading for the liability of a warehouseman to begin had arrived. We agree with defendant’s counsel that the only counts of the declaration to which the evidence applies are the second counts in each series of counts, which expressly charge negligence in not transporting and delivering the shipments within a reasonable time. Under those counts, it being stipulated that the cars were carried without negligence and on schedule time up to the time they reached Proviso, the main question presented is whether the defendant is liable for the subsequent delays.

Upon this question defendant contends that under the circumstances shown by the stipulation and the evidence, the delay was not its fault and could have been avoided by the plaintiffs if they had not refused to accept defendant’s offer, made upon the arrival of the cars at Fortieth Street, to send them .to the Clinton Street track or some track other than the congested track at Grand Avenue.

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Related

Eastern R. Co. of NM v. Littlefield
237 U.S. 140 (Supreme Court, 1915)

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Bluebook (online)
244 Ill. App. 359, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coyne-v-oregon-short-line-railroad-illappct-1927.