Fish v. Chapman & Ross

2 Ga. 349
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 15, 1847
DocketNo. 53
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 2 Ga. 349 (Fish v. Chapman & Ross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fish v. Chapman & Ross, 2 Ga. 349 (Ga. 1847).

Opinion

By the Court

Nisbet, J.

delivering the opinion.

The plaintiff in error, William Fish, received at the then head of the Central Rail Road from the agent of transportation on that road, certain packages of goods belonging to the defendants in error, Chapman & Ross, which by a special contract he promised to deliver in good order and condition at Macon, unavoidable accidents only excepted. In attempting to cross a stream his wagon was upset and the goods damaged. Chapman and Ross brought suit against him to recover the loss sustained by the injury done to the goods. . A number of points are made in the assignment, and some of them of great practical importance in this community. They grow out of the construction which the Court below put upon the contract for the carrying of these goods above recited. I shall not consider each point separately, believing that all of them will he discussed and decided in those which I shall particularly notice.

[1.] The Court below decided that the plaintiff in error under his contract with Chapman & Ross was a common carrier, to which opinion he excepts. The evidence upon this point is the contract and nothing more. It does not appear that carrying was his habitual business; all that does appear from the record is, that he undertook upon a special contract, and upon this occasion, to haul on his own wagon for a compensation specified, the goods of the defendants from the then terminus of the Central Rail Road to the city of Macon. Does such an undertaking make him a common carrier? That is the question, and we are inclined to answer it in [2.] the negative. Kcommon carrier is one who undertakes to transport from place to place for hire, the goods of such persons as think fit to employ him. Such is a proprietor of wagons, barges, lighters, merchant ships, or other instruments for the public conveyance of goods. See Mr. Smith’s able commentary on the case of Coggs vs. Bernard, 1 Smith Leading Cases, 172; Forward vs. Pittard, 1 T. R. 27; Morse vs. Slew, 2 Lev. 69; 1 Vent. 190, 238; Rich vs. Kneeland, Cro. Jac. 330 ; Maving vs. Todd, 1 Stark, 72; [353]*353Brook vs. Pickwick, 1 Bing. R. 218. Rail-way companies are common carriers. Palmer vs. Grand Junction Canal Co, 4 M. & W. R. 749.

“ Common carriers (says Chancellor Kent,,) undertake generally wad, for all people indifferently, to convey goods and deliver them at a place appointed, for hire', and with or without a special! agreement as to> price:” 2 Kent, 598.

“It is-not (says Mr-. Justice Story,) every person who- undertakes toi carry goods for hire,, that is- deemed a common carrier. A private person may contract with another for the-carriage of his goods and incur no responsibility beyond that of an ordinary bailee- for hire, that is to say, the responsibility of ordinary diligence: To-bring a person under the description- of a common, carrier,. he-must exercise-it as- a public-employment; he must und'ért'alce to carry goods for-persons generally,, and he- must'hold himself out as ready to-engage in the transportation of goods for. hire,,as a) business and not as a casual occupation “pro-,hac vice’’ Story on Bail. sec. 495:

A common carrier is bound to- convey the goodh of' any person offering to pay his hire unless- his carriage be already, full, or the risk sought to be- imposed upon himt extraordinary,, on unless the goods be of a sort which he cannot convey, or is not in the-habit of conveying.)Jackson vs. Rogers, 2 Show. 327; Riley vs. Horne; 5 Bing. R. 217; Lane vs. Cotton, 1 Ld. Ray R. 646; Edwards vs. Sheratt, 1 East. R. 604; Batson vs. Donovan, 1 B. & A. R. 32 ; 2 Kent, 598; Elsee vs. Gatwood, 5 T. R. 143; 1 Pick. R. 50; 2 Sumner R. 221 ; Story on Bail. 322, 323; Dudley S. C. Law and Eq. R. 159.

It will, he- seen hereafter we- hold; that according to. the- common law as- of force- in this country in 1776, a common carrier cannot vary or limit his liability by notice or special acceptance, and shall advert to this subject again.. For the- present we state the proposition broadly,, that he is in the nature- of an insurer of the- goods entrusted to his care, and is responsible for every injury sustained by them- occasioned by any means whatever, except only the act of God and the King's enemies. 1 Inst. 89; Dale vs. Hall, 1 Wils. 281; Covington vs. Willan, Gow 115; Davis vs. Garrett, 6 Bing. 716; 2 Kent, 597 ; Coggs vs. Bernard, 2 Ld. Ray, 918; 1 T. R. 27; 3 Esp. R. 127 ; 5 Bing. R. 217.

It is from these definitions and from the two propositions statdd, that we are to determine what constitutes a person a common carrier. I infer then that the business of carrying must be habitual and not casual. An occasional undertaking to carry goods will not make a [354]*354person a common carrier; if it did, then it is hard to determine who, in a planting and commercial community like ours, is not one ; there are few planter's in our own State owning a wagon and team, who do not occasionally contract to carry goods. It would be contrary to reason, and excessively burdensome, nay, enormously oppressive, to subject a man to the responsibilities of a common carrier, who might onco a year of oftener at long intervals, contract to haul goods from one point in the State to another. Such a rule would be exceedingly inconvenient to the whole community, for if established, it might become difficult in certain districts of our State to procure transportation.

The undertaking must be general and for all people indifferently. Tho undertaking may be evidenced by the carrier’s own notice, or practically by a series of acts, by his known habitual continuance in- this line of business. He must thus assume to be the servant of tho public, he must undertake for all people. A special undertaking for one man does not make a wagoner, or any body else, a common carrier.' I am very well aware of the importance of holding wagoners in this couutry to a rigid accountability; they are from necessity greatly trusted, valuable interests are committed to them, and they are not always of the most careful, sober and responsible class of our citizens. Still the necessity of an inflexible adherence to general rules we cannot and wish not to escape from. «To guard this point therefore, we say, that he who follows wagoning for a lively-hood, or he who gives out to the world in any intelligible way that he will take goods or other things for transportation from place to place, whether for a year, a season, or less time, is a common carrier and subject to all his liabilities. \

One of the obligations of a common earner, as we have seen, is to cany tho goods of any person offering to pay his hire; with certain specific limitations this is the rule. 11f he refuse to carry, he is liable to be sued, and to respond in damages to the person aggrieved, and this is perhaps the safest test of his character, 'i By this test was Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Ga. 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fish-v-chapman-ross-ga-1847.