Deming & Co. v. Merchants' Cotton-press, etc., Co.

90 Tenn. 306
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 90 Tenn. 306 (Deming & Co. v. Merchants' Cotton-press, etc., Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deming & Co. v. Merchants' Cotton-press, etc., Co., 90 Tenn. 306 (Tenn. 1891).

Opinion

Snodgrass, J.

At the last .term of this Court two cases — Lancaster Mills v. The Merchants’ Cotton-press and Storage Company et al. and Coates § Co. y. The Merchants’ Cotton-press and Storage Company et al. — were decided. The first of these is reported in full in opinion by Judge Lurton. 5 Pickle, pages 1-62. In that opinion, which fully states many of the facts now being considered, and not necessary to he restated here, it was mentioned that the case was “ one of a series of suits [and the Coates case was another], involving the liabilities of the compress company and various railroad companies for the loss of [about] 14,000 hales of cotton, valued at $700,000, burned on the night of November 17, 1887, while in press No. 4 of the defendant compress company, at Memphis, Tenn.”

In the case now being considered are presented the . questions undisposed of in those two cases, and nineteen others herewith consolidated, together with all other questions arising on bills then pending in the Chancery Court, and amended and cross-bills subsequently filed against the compress com[312]*312pany and various railroad and transportation companies and insurance companies, to determine the several rights and liabilities of all such parties to complainants sustaining tlie loss and inter sese.

Obviously it is impossible, within the limits to which an opinion must, of necessity, be confined, to take up seriatim and state the pleadings and facts of each particular case embraced in a record of 4,500 pages; nor is it necessary, for the determination of certain questions disposes of the suits in classes, many of them depending upon the same questions and to be determined upon adjudication of certain general principles applicable alike to these and, in certain instances, to all the classes. Nor is it necessary to state in full the decree of the Chancellor. The modifications of that decree (which was an entirety in all the cases now consolidated), indicated as a result of the principles how settled by this opinion, determine the proper deci’ee to be drawn as a settlement of the questions raised in each particular case. It is sufficient to say that the skill and ability of the eminent counsel representing ‘the different parties in the pleadings there and assignments ' of error here, have so presented, and the ' forceful and far-reaching comprehension of the Chancellor has so determined, the various questions involved as to enable us to review them all as a series of general questions; and we proceed to present and discuss them in the most natural order in which they arise, inci[313]*313dentally noticing, of course, and applying those already settled in the Lancaster Mills case.

The principal 'question of primary liability of the compress company for loss on account of 'negligence, was settled in the Lancaster Mills case, on evidence not materially supplemented in this record, on the verdict of a jury finding that the company was not liable. The same result was reached in the several other case.s now before us by decree not upon verdicts, and with this result we are entirely satisfied, and to this extent the decree is affirmed.

Another question practically determined in that case was that the effect of the contracts of the compress company with the several railroads and transportation companies, and impliedly with all persons dealing with the compress company as depositors of cotton, was to make . that company liable to railroads and transportation lines who had such contracts, and to owners of cotton deposited with it for compression, not as an insurer, but upon its agreements express and implied to procure insurance in good and solvent companies sufficient to cover any loss while such cotton was under the control of the compress company, and until loaded on cars for transportation.

The inception of the liability thus assumed was in the contracts it made with carriers. One of these contracts is set forth in full in the Lancaster Mills ease, and the others stated to be, as in fact they are, in substance identical.

[314]*314Another, involved in this case, we quote in full for the purpose of more specific statement on points to be here considered:

“This agreement, made and entered into on this May 24, 1889, between the Cairo and Vincennes Railroad Company, * * * termed the party of the first part, and the Merchants’ Cotton-press and Storage Company, termed the party of the second part, witnesseth:
“First. — The party of the first part hereby agrees to give to the party of the second part all cotton to compress' that they carry out of Memphis compressed. The party of the second part bind themselves to properly and promptly compress all of said cotton, and shall insure the same for the benefit of the first party, and the price to be paid therefor by said first party shall be at the rate of twelve and one-half cents per one hundred pounds, bill of lading weights, for all cotton compressed, etc., on and prior to August 31, 1882, and ten cents per one hundred pounds, bill of lading-weights, for all cotton so compressed, etc., thereafter, during the term of this agreement.
“This compensation covers compressing and insurance, as well as the use of the second party’s grounds, sheds, platforms, steam-boat landing, and all services rendered by said second party in and about such cotton delivered it hereunder, until the same is delivered, either in cars or to steam-boats, to the first party by the second party.
Second. — Such insurance shall be taken for the [315]*315benefit of the first party in good and solvent companies, so as to cover any loss while such cotton is under the second party’s control, and until delivered to the first party.
Third. — The second party shall be liable ' for any loss arising from negligence or lack of care in anywise to such cotton while under its control, agreeing to be bound therefor as a bailee for hire, and for any such loss shall pay the first party all damages and cost, or the first party may retain any dues to the second party to cover such loss. This, however, not to be limited to the amount of such dues.
“Fourth. — The first party hereby constitutes the second party its agent to receive such cotton for it, and sign receipts, on which bills of lading may be issued when cotton is delivered in their compresses on the ground located at its river landing.
“Fifth. — So far as it can legally do so, the first party agrees to éstablish no other compress agency, nor employ any other compress to do its compressing of cotton at Memphis, Tennessee, during the term of this contract.
“Sixth,. — All bills for compressing cotton shall be paid weekly.
“Seventh. — This contract is to continue in force until August 31, 1896, said rate of twelve and one-half cents per one hundred pounds being for one year from September 1, 1886, and said rate of ten cents per one hundred pounds for the remaining nine years; and this conk’act is to relate back [316]*316to said first day of September, 1886, and is to cover, as to its terms, all compressing of cotton by the second party for the first party since that date.”

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Bluebook (online)
90 Tenn. 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deming-co-v-merchants-cotton-press-etc-co-tenn-1891.