Cream City Railroad v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co.

23 N.W. 425, 63 Wis. 93, 1885 Wisc. LEXIS 241
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 23 N.W. 425 (Cream City Railroad v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cream City Railroad v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co., 23 N.W. 425, 63 Wis. 93, 1885 Wisc. LEXIS 241 (Wis. 1885).

Opinion

Tayloe, J.

This action was brought by the respondent, a street railroad company in the city of Milwaukee, to recover damages for injuries done to a street car while in transit from the city of New York to the city of Milwaukee. [95]*95The appellants are the carriers who transported the car from New York to Milwaukee. There is no dispute as to the facts. The car was delivered to one of the appellants in New York in good order. When it arrived in Milwaukee, aud before the same was delivered to the respondent, it had been injured. A hole was broken in the rear end of the car, and the sill was broken and split. The amount of damage done to the car, as found by the jury, is not in dispute. The respondent obtained judgment in the county court, and the defendants appeal to this court.

The bill of lading upon which the car was transported from New York to Milwaukee is headed as follows:

“CANADA S0UTHERN LlNE.
“Fast Freight Lme.
“ From New York, Boston, and all New England Points to the West, Northwest, and Southwest, Through Without Transfer in Cars of this Line.
“ Marks: Cream City E. Co., Milwaukee, Wis. (Canada Southern Line.)
“Bill of lading from New York to Milwaukee depot.
“ No. 413 Beoadway, New Yore, December 2, 1882.
“Eeceived from John Stephenson Company (Limited), in apparent good order (except as noted) the following packages (contents and value unknown), marked as in the margin, viz.:
“Two (2) new street cars on wheels, Nos. 61 and 63, covered, fixtures packed inside.
“ Both loaded on one (1) flat car.
“ Estimated weight, 20,000 lbs.
“To be forwarded to Milwaukee, Wis. It being expressly understood, that, in consideration of issuing this through bill of lading and guaranteeing a through rate, the Canada Southern Line reserves the right to forward said [96]*96goods by any railroad line between, point of shipment and destination, and under the following conditions:

[Here follows several conditions, none of which are material in the determination of this case, except the following:]

“Carriages and sleighs, eggs, furniture, looking-glasses, glass and crockery ware, acids, machinery, stoves and castings, rough marble, musical instruments, liquors put in glass or earthen ware, and all other frail and brittle articles, fruit, and all other perishable goods, will only be taken at the owner’s risk of fracture or injury during the course of transportation, loading and unloading, unless specially agreed in writing to the contrary. . . . -The acceptance of this bill of lading, or receipt for goods, made subject to the conditions of this bill of lading, makes this an agreement between the Canada Southern Line and carriers engaged in transporting said goods and all parties interested in the property.”

It is claimed by the learned counsel for the appellants that, under this bill of lading the carriers are not liable for any injury done to the plaintiff’s street-car while in transportation, unless it be affirmatively established by the evidence that the injury was occasioned By the negligence of the carriers, or some one of them, or of their agents or servants. This claim for exemption from liability on the part of the appellants is based wholly on the clause in the bill of lading above quoted; and it is insisted that there was no evidence given on the trial, which tended to prove that the injury to the car was caused by the negligence of the carriers, or of their servants, agents, or employees.

It is claimed by the learned counsel for the appellants that a street railroad car is a carriage,” within the meaning of that word as used in said bill of lading, and therefore the carriers are not liable for the injury to the same, except upon clear proof of negligence on their part causing the injury. The law seems to be settled that a common carrier [97]*97may, by express contract, limit his liability as such carrier; and when he has so limited his liability, he can only be held liable for a loss of goods intrusted to his charge, or for injury to the samé while in his possession, upon proof that the loss or injury was the result of the negligence of himself, his agents, or employees.

In construing contracts limiting the liability of common carriers, the provisions of the contract are not to be construed liberally in favor of the carriers. Blade v. Goodrich Transp. Co. 55 Wis. 319, 322, and cases cited in brief of the respondent. Under this rule we are clearly of the opinion that the word “ carriage,” as used in said bill of lading, when considered in connection with the other things from which exemption from liability is sought by the carrier, cannot, except by the most enlarged construction, be held to include a street railroad car. The carriers in this same bill of lading call this thing, which is said to be a “ carriage ” within the ordinary meaning of that word, a “street railroad car on wheels.” They do not designate it as a railroad “ carriage,” but a “ car.” To the ordinary mind, in this country at least, the word “ carriage ” alone does hot convey the idea of a railroad car, or of a street railroad car, nor does it even convey the idea of a wheeled vehicle used for the transportation of merchandise or products used in ordinary business. The idea conveyed is a vehicle used for the transportation of persons either for pleasure or business, and drawn by horses or other draught animals over the ordinary streets and highways of the country, and not cars used exclusively upon railroads or street railroads expressly constructed for the use of such cars. As yet in this country the vehicles used for the transportation of passengers on railroads and street railroads are generally called cars, and occasionally coaches; seldom, if ever, “ carriages.” The definition given by the older lexicographers of the word “ carriage ” was of the most general and indefinite [98]*98kind, but that given by those writing in our own times is more in consonance with the restricted and more definite meaning of the word as understood by people in general.

Johnson, in his dictionary, dating back' 130 years, defines-the word “ carriage ” as “ a vehicle; ” “ that in which anything is carried.” In later years Worcester defines it as “ any vehicle on wheels; especially a vehicle of pleasure, or for the conveyance of passengers.” Webster, as “that which carries or conveys on wheels; a vehicle, especially for pleasure or for passengers; sometimes -for burdens; as-a close carriage; a gun-carriage.” In the Imperial Dictionary, which is the latest authority, “ carriage ” is defined as “that which carries, especially on wheels; a vehicle.. This is a general term for a coach, chariot, chaise, gig,, sulky, or other vehicle on wheels,— as a cannon carriage on trucks; a block-carriage for mortars; and a truek-car-riage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 N.W. 425, 63 Wis. 93, 1885 Wisc. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cream-city-railroad-v-chicago-milwaukee-st-paul-railway-co-wis-1885.