Culbreth v. P. W. B. R.R. Co.

8 Del. 392
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 5, 1867
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Del. 392 (Culbreth v. P. W. B. R.R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Culbreth v. P. W. B. R.R. Co., 8 Del. 392 (Del. Ct. App. 1867).

Opinion

THIS was an action of assumpsit for alleged damages sustained on two boxes of soap shipped by the plaintiffs over the road of the defendant from Philadelphia to Dover, and upon a barrel of eggs to be shipped from the depot of the company at the latter place to Philadelphia, and also on a box of tobacco shipped over the road from Philadelphia to Dover and lost at the depot of the Company after its arrival at the latter place, amounting in the aggregate to $177.41. There were several counts in the narr against the company as common carriers, for the non-delivery of the soap and eggs, and also as depositaries of the box of tobacco.

It was proved that it was the usual practice of the agent at the depot to put goods and merchandize arriving at Dover by the cars, in the warehouse of the company in an hour or two, unless they were called for within that time. Also, that two boxes of soap arrived there for the plaintiffs by the freight train about 10 o'clock in the morning in the month of August 1864, and that in about an hour afterward the agent of the plaintiffs visited the depot and inquired of the agent of the company, if there was anything there for them, and was informed that there was, and that the same was then shown to him. Afterward, during the same day, the attention of one of the plaintiffs who was at the depot was called to them as they lay on a platform between two tracks of the road, and was informed that the warehouse was full and there was no room in it for them, and was requested by him to take them away. Both of the boxes were afterward seen the same afternoon on the pavement of the depot, with the end of one of them projecting so much over the curb stone and the inner rail *Page 394 of the main track that it was knocked off and run over by a passing train, and about thirty pounds of the soap was damaged and destroyed. The box with two small caddies of tobacco was shipped in June 1865, and soon after reaching the depot was put in the warehouse, and about noon of the same day, the clerk of the plaintiffs went to the depot and took away the two small caddies, but as the box contained a hundred pounds, the carter employed by him objected to taking it, as he then had with other goods for other persons in his wagon as heavy a load as he was willing to put in it; it was left out on the platform of the warehouse, near the door of it, and as Saturday afternoon was a very busy time with them at the store of the plaintiffs, he was not able to go for it again until the following Monday morning, when it was not to be found. It was also proved that the doors and locks of the warehouse were at that time in such bad order and condition as to afford scarcely any security for goods stored in it. It was in the preceding winter the barrel of eggs was sent to the depot to be forwarded to Philadelphia, containing about eighty dozen, then worth forty-five cents per dozen in the city, in regard to which the proof was that the barrel was in good condition when it left the store of the plaintiffs and when it was deposited on the platform at the depot; but afterward on the same day whilst the train hands of the company were carefully transferring it from the platform to the cars by moving and working it cautiously on the chime of the lower head of it, just as it reached the edge of the platform and whilst they were putting it in the car, a portion of the lower head of it fell out, and before it could be carefully turned down horizontally upon the platform or floor of the car, a considerable portion of the eggs fell out and were broken, but as there was snow on the ground at the time, they were not all broken, and such as were not, were picked up and put again into the barrel and in the depot with the others which had not fallen out of it, and the plaintiffs were immediately notified of the accident, but never sent for them, nor gave any order or direction in regard to them, and *Page 395 they remained there until they spoiled. Upon examination it was found that the head of the barrel had nothing within and around the rims of it, to strengthen and support the heads of it, as it should have had with such a weight in it for safe transportation of it over a railroad.

Watson, (Ridgely with him,) for the plaintiffs, contended that the contract and undertaking of the defendants as common carriers, was to carry the goods safely from the place where they received them to the place where they were to deliver them, and there to deliver them in as good order and condition as when they received them, and if any damage or loss occurred to them in the meanwhile, unless by the act of God, or the public enemy, they were responsible to the plaintiffs for it; and that their liability for such loss or injury did not terminate with the arrival and discharge of the goods from the cars at the depot at Dover, but their contract to take, carry, and deliver them continued until they could, with due notice and reasonable diligence on the part of the plaintiffs, be received and taken by them; and until that could be done, the defendants were equally bound for the safety and delivery of them in good order and condition. But if it were necessary in such a case for the plaintiffs to prove actual negligence on the part of the company, or its agents and representatives at the depot here, it was sufficiently shown in the evidence and manifested in the manner in which both the soap and tobacco were left exposed on their open pavements and platforms, the one for several hours, and the other for nearly two days and nights, after they had reached there. As to the barrel of eggs, the proof was that they had been put up in as good and safe a manner as was usual, and were in a good and sound condition when started for, and when left at the depot, and when they were received by the agent of the company for transportation by the railroad to their destination, without any objection to the strength or sufficiency of the barrel in which they were packed; and, as the loss upon it occurred after it had *Page 396 passed entirely into their custody and possession, the defendants, even without proof of negligence or of want of care or skill on the part of their servants in the handling of the barrel, were answerable for it. 32 N. H. Rep. 523. 16 Ill. Rep. 503. McHenry v.P. W. B. R. R. Co., 4 Harr 448. Hostrand v. Brown etal. 15 Johns. 39. Thomas v. B. P. R. R. Co. 10Metc. Rep. 472.

Comegys, for the defendant. On the deposit of the box of tobacco in the warehouse of the company, and notice thereof to the plaintiffs through their clerk, the defendant ceased to be liable, as a common carrier, for the safety of it, and after that became a gratuitous bailee or depositary merely of it, as there was no proof, nor was it the case in point of fact, that the company ever made any charge whatever for the deposit or storage of goods in its warehouses. In regard to bailments it is well known there are three kinds or degrees of diligence required by law, denominated extraordinary, ordinary and slight diligence, which vary according to circumstances and depend respectively upon the comparative hazard, danger and insecurity to which the goods, according to time and place, are incident or subject; and that a bailee or depositary without compensation, is bound only for slight diligence, is equally well known. Story on Bailms. secs. 2, 61; and is only liable for gross negligence in case of their injury or loss.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Del. 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/culbreth-v-p-w-b-rr-co-delsuperct-1867.