Florida East Coast Railway Co. v. Peters

73 So. 151, 72 Fla. 311
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedNovember 21, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 73 So. 151 (Florida East Coast Railway Co. v. Peters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Florida East Coast Railway Co. v. Peters, 73 So. 151, 72 Fla. 311 (Fla. 1916).

Opinion

Shackleford, J.,

J., (after stating the facts as above.) —Owing to the order in which the different assignments of errors are argued and the manner in which they are presented in the several briefs filed by the plaintiff in error, the defendant in the court below, we have found it difficult to determine just what asignments of error are insisted [333]*333upon and what assignments may be deemed to be abandoned for failure to argue them. It would seem that the defendant in its main brief has erroneously designated the numbers of some of the assignments which it urges before us, which is probably accounted for by the fact that several successive sets of pleas, amended pleas and additional pleas were filed to which demurrers were interposed and the rulings upon which form the basis for a number of the assignments. The defendant filed nine pleas to the second amended declaration, to all of which, with the exception of the first which was a plea of not guilty, a demurrer was interposed and sustained. Thereupon by leave of the Court the defendant filed its amended pleas numbered from two to nine, to all of which, with the exception of the eighth which we have copied in the foregoing statement, the plaintiff interposed a demurrer and also filed a motion to strike certain designated pleas. Before any ruling was made either on such demurrer or motion the defendant confessed the demurrer to the 2nd, 3rd and 4th amended pleas and by leave of court amended each of such pleas, with the understanding that the demurrer interposed to the first amended pleas should stand to these second amended pleas. This demurrer was sustained to all of the pleas, and afterwards by leave of the court the defendant filed additional pleas numbered eleven and twelve, to each of which a demurrer was interposed and sustained. The first two assignments are based upon the overruling of the demurrer to the second amended declaration and the overruling of the motion to strike certain specified portions thereof, neither of which assignments is argued, therefore must be treated as abandoned. Assignments numbered from three to twenty-five inclusive are based upon rulings sustaining demurrers to specified pleas and to motions to strike certain of them.

[334]*334In its main brief the defendant has a prefatory statement in which certain propositions of law are laid down which it is claimed are controlling and decisive of the case. The first of such propositions is “The plaintiff not being the owner of the crates in question at the time of the alleged delay in the transportation thereof cannot maintain this action.” The defendant begins its argument in its main brief as follows:

“i. We are confronted at the outset with the question of the right of the plaintiff to maintain this action. This question is presented in the second and third second amended pleas filed on .September 28th, 1914, (Tr. p. 118), to which pleas a demurrer was sustained, (Tr. p. 121) and by defendant’s additional plea numbered eleven, (Tr. p. 123) to which a demurrer was sustained (Tr. p. 127).

“The tenor of these pleas is that the several carloads of crates alleged to have been delayed in transportation by the fault and negligence of the defendant were not, at the time of the delivery to the defendant, nor thereafter, until the delivery of them by the defendant to the plaintiff, the property of the plaintiff, and that the defendant never at any time contracted with the plaintiff that it would carry and deliver said crates or any of them to him. These pleas, we submit, present a good defense to this action, for it is true that if Peters did not own the crates until after they were delivered to him (which delivery, of course, was not made until after the alleged negligent delay), then the authorities are to the effect that he cannot maintain the suit.”

The caption to this argument is “seventeenth, eighteenth and twenty-fourth assignments of error.” These assignments are as follows :

[335]*335“(17) The court erred in sustaining plaintiff’s demurrer to defendant’s second amended plea number two (2), filed September 28, 1914.”

“(18) The court erred in sustaining plaintiff’s demurrer to defendant’s second amended plea number three filed September 28, 1914.”

“(24) The court erred in sustaining plaintiff’s demurrer to defendant’s eleventh additional plea filed May 3> I9I5-”

The second amended pleas numbered two and three and the eleventh additional plea are as follows:

“2nd. And for an amended second plea to plaintiff’s second amended declaration, defendant says that it entered into a contract with the Cummer Lumber Company, a corporation, to carry and transport for it, from Jacksonville, Florida, to Peters Station, Florida, the said several cars of carrier crates in said second amended declaration alleged, and defendant says that it safely carried said several cars of carrier crates from Jacksonville, Florida, to Peters Station, and delivered the same in good order in compliance with instructions of the said Cummer Lumber Company, and defendant denies that it had any knowledge that the plaintiff would suffer any special damages whatever by reason of any delay in the delivery of said several cars of carrier crates, as alleged in said declaration.

“3rd. And for an amended third plea to plaintiff’s second amended declaration, defendant says that there was no privity of contract existing between the plaintiff and the defendant whereby the defendant owed the plaintiff any extraordinary or special duty in the transportation of the said several cars of carrier crates in said declaration alleged, and defendant says that during the [336]*336period covered by the several shipments alleged in said declaration, there existed upon plaintiff’s line of road between Jacksonville, Florida, and Peters Station, Florida, an unusual and extraordinary condition of congestion in the movement of freight, and beyond the control of this defendant, which resulted in a delay in all freight transportation upon defendant’s line of road, and defendant says that it transported and delivered to the plaintiff as rapidly as it could handle the congested traffic upon its said line of road, the said several cars of carrier crates, having due regard to the laws of the United States prohibiting the discrimination by the defendant between shippers on its line of road, or in the handling of traffic upon its said road, the defendant during all of said times being an interstate common carrier of freight and passengers by rail and subject to t-he laws of the United States; and defendant denies that it had any notice that the plaintiff would suffer the special damage alleged in plaintiff’s said second amended declaration, or any damage whatever, by reason of the delay in the delivery of the said several cars of carrier crates, as alleged-in said declaration.”

“n. That the said several carloads of crate material alleged in the said declaration to have been delayed by the fault and negligence of the defendant were not at the time of the delivery of them .to the defendant nor thereafter, until the delivery of them by defendant to plaintiff, the property of the plaintiff, and that the defendant never at any time contracted with the plaintiff that it would carry and deliver the same or any of them to him.”

These three assignments are the first assignments which are urged 'before us in the main brief and they are argued together, which argument is confined to- the lack [337]

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Bluebook (online)
73 So. 151, 72 Fla. 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florida-east-coast-railway-co-v-peters-fla-1916.