Express Co. v. Jackson

92 Tenn. 326
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 92 Tenn. 326 (Express Co. v. Jackson) 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
Express Co. v. Jackson, 92 Tenn. 326 (Tenn. 1893).

Opinion

Wilkes, J.

The Adams Express Company was sued as a common carrier for damages alleged to have been sustained on a shipment of thorough *328 bred liorses from Nashville, Tennessee, to Hunt’s' Point, New York.

The declaration contained two counts — one for alleged breach of a special contract, and the other for the breach of the common law duty of the express company as a common earner.

The company pleaded the general issue, not guilty. There was verdict and judgment against the company for $8,000, from which it appealed.

The shipment -was made from Belle Meade June 6, 1889. The horses were to be exposed to public sale at Hunt’s Point by ¥m, Easton, on June 17, 1889, and notice of the sale had been extensively given by advertisement all over the Hnited States.

Much correspondence was- had between the company and Gen. ■ W. H. Jackson for several months before the shipment, the object of the shippers being to have the 'horses transported in propeidy constructed cars, with good ventilation, at a high rate of .speed, to avoid long confinement, and in time to reach their destination for several days before the sale, in order that they might rest and recuperate.

•The plaintiffs insist that they had a special contract with the company to furnish four red baggage-cars, such as were used by .the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, which were well ventilated and suited for the transportation of livestock; that the horses were to be carried at express rates of speed, so that the time consumed *329 would not exceed forty-eight hours; that the train, should be run as a special, and in charge of an agent of the company the entire route.

They allege that only one red baggage-car was-run, and the others were poorly ventilated ;• that the time consumed was eighty-six hours; that at' Pittsburg, Pa., they were abandoned by the agents of the company, and were attached to a coaling-train, and carried seventy-two miles behind it in twelve hours; and that the horses were badly injured and frightened by backing, switching, jamming, and being thrown down in the ca.rs.

They also insist that, in the absence of any special contract, the company was legally bound as-a common carrier, and breached its duty by failing to transport the horses in a reasonable time, to furnish suitable cars, to provide a route-agent, and by allowing the horse-cars to be attached to a coaling-train on a portion of the route, in consequence of which the horses were injured by the backing, switching, and jamming of such a train.. It was originally intended that the stock should be shipped on the fourth or fifth of June, and that they would go from Cincinnati to Eew York over the Pennsylvania Central Railroad, over which line the express company carried its shipments. On May 151, 1889, however, an unprecedented flood occurred at Johnstown, Pa., on this line of road,, about seventy miles east of Pittsburg, which completely washed away several miles of the road, and stopped all passage over- the same for several days- *330 This fact was well known,' both to the company and the shippers,t several days before the shipment was made. The company, however, received the stock about three o’clock on the evening of June •6, 1889, reached Cincinnati with them . at seven o’clock the next morning, and Pittsburg at seven o’clock in the evening thereafter. Up to this point every thing went well. The horses were carried safely, and at a high rate of speed, and in care of an agent. This was something over half-way to -New York, but, the break in the road at Johnstown not having been repaired, the horses could be carried no farther over the Pennsylvania road, nor did the Adams company have any ' route open to New York from that point. The express company thereupon delivered the horses to "Wells-Fargo & Co. Express, to be •carried over the Pittsburg and Western Railroad to Leavittsburg, on the N. P. & O. R. R., thence to Elmira, N. Y., where the Adams company would again take them in charge and carry them ■over the Lehigh Valley Road to New York.

The horses were delivered to the Wells-Fargo ■& Co. Express at night, at or near Pittsburg, and by it were carried,- over the Pittsburg and Western Railroad, to Leavittsburg, attached to a coaling-train, a distance of seventy-two miles, consuming twelve hours in the transit. The testimony is that between these two points there was much switching, jerking, and bumping of cars, noise and ■■smoke from passing engines, and that in conse *331 -quence the ■ Worses took fright, reared, plunged, and became unmanageable, and many of them were thrown down, crippled, bruised, and roughly treated.

The real controversy in the case narrowed down to and turned upon the liability of the company for the physical injuries to the horses, nearly, if ■not quite, all of which were sustained between these points.

The express company claims that it did the best it could under the circumstances; that it could not carry the horses farther over the line usually used by it; that it had a right to select another route, and transship the horses to another company; that, before shipping the horses, it had notified the shippers of all the facts, and requested them to delay shipment for a few days until their regular line was opened, which they declined to do; and that when it delivered the horses to the Wells-Fargo Company, that company, under the -circumstances, became the agent of the shippers, and not of the Adams Express Company.

The shippers, however, insist that they could not delay shipment, as their sale had already been advertised for a certain date; that they did not assume to dictate what route or means the express company should adopt to reach blew York; that they had nothing to do with the Wells-Fargo & Co. Express, and did not eVen know that any other company was to carry the stock, no matter what route might be selected; that the Adams company *332 undertook to carry the stock safely to Hew York,, and were bound, both under their special contract' and under their common law liabilities as common carriers, to carry them to destination; and if it employed another company over any part of the' route, such company would be the agent of Adams-company, and not of the- shippers.

Many errors are assigned to the charge of the Court below, but the controversy turns mainly upon one or two questions, the decision of which disposes of all the exceptions. The express company, after the interruption of their route by the floods, could have declined altogether to make the shipment, on the ground that the act of God had prevented it from safely and properly complying with its contract, as a common carrier, to transport the horses. Under the facts, this might have been a good defense. Having undertaken, however, to take the shipment, with the knowledge of the facts, the full extent of its liability as a common carrier attached, and it cannot set up as a defense the plea of a sudden emergency which would absolve it from liability under the facts/of this case.

An express company is a common carrier, and, as such, is subject to all the duties and responsibilities of common carriers at common law.

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Bluebook (online)
92 Tenn. 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/express-co-v-jackson-tenn-1893.