Fetzer v. Illinois Central Railroad

268 So. 2d 81, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6414
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 2, 1972
DocketNo. 8947
StatusPublished

This text of 268 So. 2d 81 (Fetzer v. Illinois Central Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fetzer v. Illinois Central Railroad, 268 So. 2d 81, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6414 (La. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

TUCKER, Judge.

Plaintiff-appellee brought suit against the delivering carrier, Illinois Central Railroad, for the cost of 6,000 damaged roofing tiles, part of a shipment of 27,000 roofing tiles shipped to plaintiff from Monterrey, Mexico, and received in Baton Rouge, Louisiana in May, 1968. Plaintiff sued for ONE THOUSAND EIGHT HUNDRED SEVENTY-NINE AND 80/ioo ($1,879.80) DOLLARS for items as follows:

6,000 pieces of roofing tile $428.68
Freight on the damaged tiles from Laredo, Texas to Baton Rouge, Louisiana 103.90
Mexican freight on damaged tiles 55.68
U. S. Custom duty 102.64
Usual retail mark-up 689.90

and for reasonable attorney fees of FIVE HUNDRED AND NO/100 ($500.00) DOLLARS.

The trial judge found that plaintiff had made a prima facie case showing that the [82]*82tiles were delivered to the carrier in good condition, and that the carrier failed to sustain its burden of showing that the damage resulted from some cause which was not the responsibility of the carrier. The trial judge awarded plaintiff-appellee $432.00, representing the cost of the damaged tile at $72.00 per thousand, plus $208.-56, representing %?ths of the total freight and customs duty charged for the shipment, or $640.56, in toto, plus legal interest from the date of judicial demand until paid. He taxed the deposition costs equally between plaintiff and defendant.

Plaintiff filed another suit, our Docket No. 8948, against the same defendant herein, regarding a second shipment of damaged roofing tile, which arrived in Baton Rouge more than a year later, in July, 1969. These two cases were consolidated for trial, and judgment was given against the plaintiff in the second suit. Inasmuch as plaintiff in that suit did not file an appeal bond, his appeal was never perfected, and said appeal in Docket No. 8948 will be dismissed ex proprio motu because of the failure of plaintiff-appellant to' properly perfect same.

Defendant carrier appealed from the judgment alleging error by the court as follows: (1) In holding that the notation, “in apparent good order”, on the U. S. bill of lading issued by the Texas-Mexican Railroad Company, which moved the freight car from Laredo, Texas, to Alice, Texas, discharged plaintiff’s burden of proving that the shipment of tile was in good order when delivered to the initial American carrier; (2) in failing to' give proper legal significance pursuant to 49 U.S.C.A. § 101 to the notation on the bill of lading, “SL&C”, which is an abbreviation for “Shipper’s load and count”, and holding that the shipper was exonerated from liability for damage to the inner portions of a cargo of brittle tile, especially when the damage was due allegedly to improper loading; and (3) in concluding as a matter of law that the damage to the tile was due to the negligence of the carrier rather than to improper loading by the shipper, after correctly concluding as a matter of fact that the damage resulted from overhead weight of the load.

The obligations of the carrier in this case are controlled by the provisions of the Interstate Commerce Act, Part I, Tit. 49, sec. 20(11) (49 U.S.C.A. sec. 20(11). The trial judge has stated in his written reasons for judgment that a consignee of goods shipped by common carrier makes out a prima facie case against the initial or delivering carrier for damage to1 goods in transit by showing: (1) receipt of goods by the initial carrier in good order and condition; (2) that the shipment arrived at its destination in a damaged condition; and (3) the amount of the loss.

The evidence is conclusive that the shipment of tile purchased by plaintiff from El Gallo, a Mexican building supplier in Monterrey, Mexico, and loaded by that company onto a freight car for shipment “in bond”, to Nueva Laredo> via the Mexican National Railway Company, arrived in Baton Rouge with approximately 6,000 broken tiles. The third condition for a prima facie showing, the amount of loss, is debatable only in regard to the loss of retail mark-up as an item of damage. It is only the first requirement, involving the condition of the goods transported, therefore, which is of principal concern herein.

Although the trial judge found that the plaintiff had sustained his burden of proving that the tile were delivered to the initial American carrier “in good condition”, basing his opinion particularly upon the bill of lading, we believe that he used the wrong standard for making out a prima facie case. We note in passing that counsel for defendant argued against the conclusiveness of the bill of lading which found the goods “in apparent good order”, using principles of law usually employed for the transit of perishables, which are often shipped in containers or are packed in such a way that it is impossible to in[83]*83spect them thoroughly. We think, however, this matter turns upon an interpretation of the Interstate Commerce Act, Part I, sec. 20(11), which obviates a necessity to determine whether or not the tile were in good condition, or whether or not tile may be analogized to perishables, with use of the principles pertaining thereto. In this regard we note the case of Reuther’s Seafood Co. v. Railway Express Agency, 71 So.2d 419, 420 (La.App.Orl.App.1954), in which it is stated that, in order to make out a prima facie case under the Interstate Commerce provision at issue, the plaintiff is called upon to show: “(1) that the shipment was delivered to the carrier in condition suitable to withstand the contemplated transportation. . . . ”

The tile were originally loaded by El Gallo Co. into a “D.F.” car, which is one with vertical dividers to keep the loads from shifting. There were no horizontal dividers, however, The tile were stacked lengthwise in layers at least six feet in height. The top layers of tile were not damaged. The broken tile appeared as they were unloaded from the top down, with the damage increasing toward the bottom of the load. The majority of the broken tile were in the lower half of the load. Mr. Elmore, Claims Supervisor for two years and an employee of defendants for twenty-six years, who inspected the damage, counted at least three rows deep of broken tile which he described as looking as though they had been “squashed”. It was his opinion that the damage was caused by overhead weight. He stated, also, that he saw no evidence of rough handling of the shipment.

Mr. S. D. Kimmel, an Import Inspector since 1952 for the Western Weighing and Inspection Bureau, which inspects all loads coming from Mexico, said on page 25 of his deposition:

“I’ve always told people that I had any contact with that each stack should be separated with fiberboard. Now, you take a solar screen tile, which is a wall tile, they must be in a container, or they must be within shelves; and this roofing tile here is more vulnerable to breakage than solar screen tile.
Q. Now, if somebody had asked you how to load these, this is the recommendations you would make to them? That they be separated by a piece of fiberboard ?
A. Yes, sir, between each layer, and also between each stack, and tile should be loaded on their edge lengthwise. If you’ve got an envelope, I’ll show you why, or a piece of paper is good enough.

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

Related

Reuther's Seafood Co. v. Railway Express Agency, Inc.
71 So. 2d 419 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1954)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 So. 2d 81, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fetzer-v-illinois-central-railroad-lactapp-1972.