Fahey v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad

114 A. 905, 139 Md. 161, 1921 Md. LEXIS 150
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 28, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 114 A. 905 (Fahey v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fahey v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 114 A. 905, 139 Md. 161, 1921 Md. LEXIS 150 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Eight carloads of grain, purchased by the plaintiffs, were destroyed in accidents while in course of railway conveyance *163 to Baltimore from points in Nebraska, Michigan, Indiana and Ohio. The defendant railroad company, on whose line .the losses occurred, paid to the plaintiffs the value of the grain at the time and place of shipment. This was the measure of damages prescribed by the bills of lading under which the grain was being transported, hut it did not fully compensate the plaintiffs for the losses, actually sustained. The liability of the carrier could not be thus restricted unless, the grain was intended for export to a foreign country not adjacent to the Fnited States. If it was received for transportation only from one state to, another-, or was destined for export to an adjacent foreign country, the carrier was prohibited by the Federal Act to Regulate Commerce, and its amendments, from stipulating for recovery of less than the full amount of the actual loss, damage or injury to the property in transit, and the limitation of liability in the bills of lading before us would, under the express terms of that legislation, be null and void. 38 Stat. at L., 1196; Comp. Stat., sec. 8604a; 39 Stat. at L. 441. In this suit to recover for losses in addition to those for which payment was made as provided by the bills of lading, the court, below ruled that the stipulations, therein as to the measure of damages were valid because the grain was intended for export to a non-adjacent foreign country, and the shipments were consequently not within any of the classes of commerce to which the Federal statutes apply. Evidence tending to support a larger measure of recovery was, therefore, excluded, and a verdict in favor of the defendant was directed The exceptions in the record were taken on account of those rulings

In each of the bills of lading the consignment to which it refers is described as being “for export” The record contains an agreed statement of facts from which it appears that each of the carloads of grain, “at the time it, was so shipped and at the time it was destroyed,” was “intended for transportation by railroad from” the place of origin “to Baltimore, Md., at which point it was to be unloaded from said *164 car into the elevators of the defendant at Baltimore, and thereafter loaded out of said elevators into a vessel, or vessels, for transportation by water from Baltimore, Md., to* a point in Europe.”

The Supreme Court of the United States, in a series of decisions, has settled the principle by which a question like the present one should be controlled. The intention as to destination with which the goods are delivered and accepted for conveyance by the carrier is held to be the determining factor in such a problem. Whether or not in a particular case the bill of lading discloses that the shipment is for export, if that was the real design with which it was started ■ on the course of its transportation, and if it would proceed to a foreign destination as the normal result of the movement thus originated, it must be regarded and classified as foreign commerce for the purposes of such an inquiry as the one with which we are now concerned.

In the case of Texas & N. O. R. Co. v. Sabine Tram Co., 227 U. S. 111, the question was whether a shipment of lumher from an interior point in Texas to Sabine, a seaport of that state, and intended by the purchaser for export, was subject as foreign, commerce to1 the transportation rates, authorized by the Interstate Commerce Commission to the exclusion of the lower rates imposed by the Railroad Commission of Texas. -It was said in the opinion of the Court, as delivered by Mr. Justice McKewna : “We have, had occasion to express at what point of time a shipment of goods may be ascribed to interstate or foreign commerce, and decided it to 1)0 when the goods have actually started for their destination in another state or to a foreign country, or delivered to a carrier for transportation. Coe v. Errol, 116 U. S. 517; Southern P. Terminal Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 219 U. S. 498, 527.” The Court overruled the contention that the shipment was not in foreign commerce because the railroad carrier’s contract was fully and finally performed when the lumber was delivered at the seaport and a new and *165 independent contract was required for its movement beyond that point. “The determining circumstance,” said the opinion, “is that the shipment of the lumber to Sabine was but a step in its transportation to1 its real and ultimate destination in foreign countries. In other words, the essential character of the commerce, not its mere accident, should determine. It ivas to supply the demand of foreign countries that the lumber was purchased, manufactured and shipped, and to give it a various character by the steps in its transportation would ho extremely artificial. Once admit the principle, and means will he afforded of evading' the national control of foreign commerce from points in the interior of a state. There must be transhipment at the seaboard; and if that may he made the point of ultimate destination by the device of separate bills of lading, the commerce will be given a local character, though it be essentially foreign.” It wasi accordingly decided that the shipment there in question must he classified as foreign commerce and that the railroad carrier was entitled to charge the rates which the Interstate Commerce Commission had authorized.

The opinion from which we have quoted reviews earlier decisions by wbicb its conclusion is supported. In Southern P. Terminal Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 219 U. S. 498, one of the inquiries was whether the jurisdiction of the Commission applied to shipments of cotton seed cate and meal from various points to Galveston, Texas, where the cate was to he ground into meal on the terminal wharves by the consignee, and the meal thus produced, together with that received by rail, was to be exported to foreign countries. The answer was in the affirmative, the opinion, by Mr. Justice McKexxa, stating that “the manufacture or concentration on the wharves of the terminal company are but incidents, under tbe circumstances presented by the record, in the transshipment of the products in export trade, and their regulation is within the power of the Interstate1 Commerce Commission. To hold otherwise would he to disregard, as; the Commission *166 said, the substance of things, and make evasions of the Act of Congress quite easy. It makes no difference, therefore, that the shipments of the products were not made on through bills of lading, or whether their initial point was Galveston or some other place in Texas.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

The Ansaldo San Giorgio I
3 F. Supp. 579 (S.D. New York, 1933)
Lesser-Goldman Cotton Co. v. Missouri Pacific Railroad
12 S.W.2d 485 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1928)
Dexter & Carpenter, Inc. v. Davis
281 F. 385 (Fourth Circuit, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 A. 905, 139 Md. 161, 1921 Md. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fahey-v-baltimore-ohio-railroad-md-1921.