Ames, C.
This is an action to recover damages for injuries to a car-load of horses, alleged to have been suffered in the course of transportation from Harvard, in this state, to Belvidere,- New Jersey. On the 13th day of February, 1897, the plaintiff below, the Union State Bank, entered into a contract for the shipment of the horses, which was signed by an agent of the bank and an agent of the plaintiff in error, the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley Railroad Company, the terms of which, so far as they are pertinent to this controversy, are as follows: “Harvard, Nebraska Station, February 13, 1897. Hour: 3:10 p. m.: Received of Union State Bank, one car horses to be delivered to Nickel Plate Road for Belvidere, New Jersey, at Union Stock Yards Station, Chicago, Illinois. * * * And [161]*161in this case the railroad company upon whose road tin1 accident, loss, or damage shall occur, shall alone he liable therefor, and no suit shall be brought, or claim made, against any other company (forming a part of the route) for such loss or damage (it being expressly understood and agreed that the responsibility of these companies shall cease upon delivery of said property to their connecting line, unless otherwise agreed to in writing, and said written agreement signed by the respective parties hereto).” It is not disputed that the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley Railroad Company literally kept the stipulations, performance of which was imposed upon it by this contract; and it is not contended that the horses suffered any injuries, for which damages are recoverable, during their transit from Harvard to and until their delivery to the plaintiff in error the New York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad Company, commonly • called the “Nicked .Plate Road,” at the Union Stock Yards station in Chicago. The facts thus far stated are either admitted or proved without contradiction, and if this was all there is of the case, the record would present no matter of legal controversy, because there would be no question that the trial court erred in refusing to instruct the jury that the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley Railroad Company had incurred no liability.
Section 5 of article 1, chapter 72, of the Compiled Statutes,
At and before the making of this contract and the shipment of the horses, and subsequently, the plaintiff in error, the New York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad Company maintained an office at the City of Omaha, in this state, under the general charge of one Bernard E. Morgan, for the purpose of carrying on the business of securing freight and traffic to be carried on oyer its lines of road, extending eastward from Chicago and St. Louis. In the conduct of this business Morgan was authorized to employ and did employ subagents or solicitors, among whom was one A. L. Armstrong. Shortly before the date above mentioned Armstrong obtained through one Betzner, a traveling freight agent of the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley road, an introduction to the officers and agents of the plaintiff bank, and solicited from them the routing of the horses eastward from Chicago over the line of the corporation represented by him. As a result of this solicitation, and of negotiations and agreements growing out of it, the horses were on the day of the making of the above contract, and as a part of the same transaction, shipped on board the cars of the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley Company, at Harvard, and a bill of lading was issued therefor by the latter, naming N. B. Updike, an agent of the plaintiff bank, as both consignor and consignee, and Belvidere, New Jersey, as the place of destination, by way of the “Nickel Plate Road.” At the same time the total amount of freight charges from Harvard to Belvidere was paid to the agent of the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley Company, who alone signed the hill of lading. There was no written stipulation with respect to the lines over which the horses should he transported beyond the eastern terminus of the New York, Chicago & St. Louis Company, hut the evidence is practically without dispute that it was orally agreed between Updike, the agent of the hank, and Armstrong, [163]*163that they should be carried from Buffalo to Phillipsburg over the Lehigh Valley & Hudson River road and from the latter point to Belvidere over the Pennsylvania road, and that this agreement was an indispensable inducement to Updike to consent to their being delivered to the Hew York, Chicago & St. Louis Company. The shipment was diverted at Wilkesbarre to another railroad, upon which it is alleged that the animals suffered the injury for which damages are claimed, on account of the lack of facilities of the company for caring for them, and as a consequence of the negligence and Avrongful conduct of its agents and employees. The plaintiff beloAV recovered a verdict and judgment against both defendants jointly, and the railroad companies, having filed separate motions for a new trial, prosecute separate petitions in error to this court.
With respect to the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley Company, it is entirely clear that it was entitled to a peremptory instruction in its behalf, unless it is obligated in some manner not indicated by the above-quoted contract betAveen itself and Updike, the agent of the bank. It does not appear to us that it' Avas so obligated. The contract mentioned, the bill of lading, the conversations be-tAveen Updike and Armstrong, the agent of the Hickel-Plate, and the shipment of the horses, Avere all of the same date and parts of the same transaction. ' It can not reasonably be supposed that the way-bill and the receipt of the tariff charges by Kempster, the local freight agent of the company, Avere intended or supposed by the parties or any of them to have the effect of superseding and annulling the terms of the formal contract explicitly reciting and defining the duties of the company. They are more properly to be regarded as additional and supplemental thereto, and as having had for their main purpose the carrying out of the agreement between the shipper and Armstrong, the routing of the property from Chicago to its destination by Avay of the Hew York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad Company and the other lines mentioned, and the collecting for the last-named company of the charges for the transporta[164]*164tion beyond Obicago. To Ibis extent tbe case is analogous to that of a contract made in tbe name of one party for tbe benefit and in tbe bebalf of another. In such cases it is true that, as a general rule, both tbe party beneficially interested and the person by and in whose name the contract is made are liable for its breach.
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Ames, C.
This is an action to recover damages for injuries to a car-load of horses, alleged to have been suffered in the course of transportation from Harvard, in this state, to Belvidere,- New Jersey. On the 13th day of February, 1897, the plaintiff below, the Union State Bank, entered into a contract for the shipment of the horses, which was signed by an agent of the bank and an agent of the plaintiff in error, the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley Railroad Company, the terms of which, so far as they are pertinent to this controversy, are as follows: “Harvard, Nebraska Station, February 13, 1897. Hour: 3:10 p. m.: Received of Union State Bank, one car horses to be delivered to Nickel Plate Road for Belvidere, New Jersey, at Union Stock Yards Station, Chicago, Illinois. * * * And [161]*161in this case the railroad company upon whose road tin1 accident, loss, or damage shall occur, shall alone he liable therefor, and no suit shall be brought, or claim made, against any other company (forming a part of the route) for such loss or damage (it being expressly understood and agreed that the responsibility of these companies shall cease upon delivery of said property to their connecting line, unless otherwise agreed to in writing, and said written agreement signed by the respective parties hereto).” It is not disputed that the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley Railroad Company literally kept the stipulations, performance of which was imposed upon it by this contract; and it is not contended that the horses suffered any injuries, for which damages are recoverable, during their transit from Harvard to and until their delivery to the plaintiff in error the New York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad Company, commonly • called the “Nicked .Plate Road,” at the Union Stock Yards station in Chicago. The facts thus far stated are either admitted or proved without contradiction, and if this was all there is of the case, the record would present no matter of legal controversy, because there would be no question that the trial court erred in refusing to instruct the jury that the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley Railroad Company had incurred no liability.
Section 5 of article 1, chapter 72, of the Compiled Statutes,
At and before the making of this contract and the shipment of the horses, and subsequently, the plaintiff in error, the New York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad Company maintained an office at the City of Omaha, in this state, under the general charge of one Bernard E. Morgan, for the purpose of carrying on the business of securing freight and traffic to be carried on oyer its lines of road, extending eastward from Chicago and St. Louis. In the conduct of this business Morgan was authorized to employ and did employ subagents or solicitors, among whom was one A. L. Armstrong. Shortly before the date above mentioned Armstrong obtained through one Betzner, a traveling freight agent of the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley road, an introduction to the officers and agents of the plaintiff bank, and solicited from them the routing of the horses eastward from Chicago over the line of the corporation represented by him. As a result of this solicitation, and of negotiations and agreements growing out of it, the horses were on the day of the making of the above contract, and as a part of the same transaction, shipped on board the cars of the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley Company, at Harvard, and a bill of lading was issued therefor by the latter, naming N. B. Updike, an agent of the plaintiff bank, as both consignor and consignee, and Belvidere, New Jersey, as the place of destination, by way of the “Nickel Plate Road.” At the same time the total amount of freight charges from Harvard to Belvidere was paid to the agent of the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley Company, who alone signed the hill of lading. There was no written stipulation with respect to the lines over which the horses should he transported beyond the eastern terminus of the New York, Chicago & St. Louis Company, hut the evidence is practically without dispute that it was orally agreed between Updike, the agent of the hank, and Armstrong, [163]*163that they should be carried from Buffalo to Phillipsburg over the Lehigh Valley & Hudson River road and from the latter point to Belvidere over the Pennsylvania road, and that this agreement was an indispensable inducement to Updike to consent to their being delivered to the Hew York, Chicago & St. Louis Company. The shipment was diverted at Wilkesbarre to another railroad, upon which it is alleged that the animals suffered the injury for which damages are claimed, on account of the lack of facilities of the company for caring for them, and as a consequence of the negligence and Avrongful conduct of its agents and employees. The plaintiff beloAV recovered a verdict and judgment against both defendants jointly, and the railroad companies, having filed separate motions for a new trial, prosecute separate petitions in error to this court.
With respect to the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley Company, it is entirely clear that it was entitled to a peremptory instruction in its behalf, unless it is obligated in some manner not indicated by the above-quoted contract betAveen itself and Updike, the agent of the bank. It does not appear to us that it' Avas so obligated. The contract mentioned, the bill of lading, the conversations be-tAveen Updike and Armstrong, the agent of the Hickel-Plate, and the shipment of the horses, Avere all of the same date and parts of the same transaction. ' It can not reasonably be supposed that the way-bill and the receipt of the tariff charges by Kempster, the local freight agent of the company, Avere intended or supposed by the parties or any of them to have the effect of superseding and annulling the terms of the formal contract explicitly reciting and defining the duties of the company. They are more properly to be regarded as additional and supplemental thereto, and as having had for their main purpose the carrying out of the agreement between the shipper and Armstrong, the routing of the property from Chicago to its destination by Avay of the Hew York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad Company and the other lines mentioned, and the collecting for the last-named company of the charges for the transporta[164]*164tion beyond Obicago. To Ibis extent tbe case is analogous to that of a contract made in tbe name of one party for tbe benefit and in tbe bebalf of another. In such cases it is true that, as a general rule, both tbe party beneficially interested and the person by and in whose name the contract is made are liable for its breach. But we think that in tbe case at bar the agreement first above mentioned limited and qualified that created by tbe bill of lading and shipment, and is sufficient to overcome the presumption otherwise arising from these facts and the collection of the freight charges. By this construction the several agreements, oral and written, and the circumstances of the transaction, appear to be consistent with themselves and with each other, and such a construction is obligatory upon the courts in all cases in which,the relation of the parties and the subject-matter of the agréements and the attendant facts will permit of it. We are therefore of opinion that the decision of this court in St. Joseph & G. I. R. Co. v. Palmer,* 38 Nebr., 463, is not applicable to this feature of the case at bar. The sum paid by the shipper to the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Yalley Company was the aggregate of freight charges for the whole distance over which the animals were to be carried; and all the facts, taken together, disclose a joint contract on the part of the two companies to transport the property from Harvard, Nebraska, to Belvidere, New Jersey, but their respective liabilities were so distributed that that of the last-named company was restricted to safe delivery to the connecting line at Chicago. This restriction was not, under the circumstances, invalid, or a limitation of the common-law liability of the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Yalley Company, in violation of the constitution or statutes of this state, because, as is recognized in the opinion in the case above cited, a common carrier is not bound to accept goods for transportation beyond the end of- its own line, and it follows that, although it may bind itself jointly with another carrier for the safe delivery of the property to the latter at that point, it may, by express stipulation, relieve [165]*165itself of responsibilty with the connectipg line for tbe further carriage of it. That a railroad company is not, in the absence of an express or implied contract, bound for the transportation of property beyond' the terminus of its own road, was expressly ruled by this court in Fremont, E. & M. V. R. Co. v. Waters, 50 Nebr., 592, and such is the great weight of authority in this country. Myrick v. Michigan C. R. Co., 107 U. S., 102, 106. See, also, Mulligan v. Illinois C. R. Co., 36 Ia., 181, 186, 14 Am. Rep., 514; Detroit & M. R. Co. v. Farmers’ Bank, 20 Wis., *123; Berg v. Atchison, T. & S. F. R. Co., 30 Kan., 561, 2 Pac. Rep., 639; Taylor v. Little R., M. R. & T. R. Co., 32 Ark., 393; Central Railroad & Banking Co. v. Avant, 80 Ga., 195; Savannah, F. & W. R. Co. v. Harris, 26 Fla., 148; Goodman v. Oregon R. & N. Co., 22 Ore., 14, 28 Pac. Rep., 894; McCarn v. International & G. N. R. Co., 84 Tex., 452; Wichita V. R. Co. v. Swenson, 25 S. W. Rep. [Tex.], 47; Pendergast v. Adams Express Co., 101 Mass., 120; American Express Co. v. Second Nat. Bank, 69 Pa. St., 394; Jennings v. Grand T. R. Co., 127 N. Y., 438.
But it was held in St. Joseph & G. I. R. Co. v. Palmer, supra, that such a contract may be implied from the receipt of freight charges for the whole distance, and its existence is further established in this case by. the uncon-tradicted evidence of conversations between the shipper and Armstrong, the agent of the New York, Chicago & St. Louis Company, which established an agreement not contradictory, but supplemental, to that implied by the bill of lading and other circumstances above detailed, and which were, as has been said, a part of the same transaction. There is, therefore, no variance between the proof and the petition as respects the joint character of the contract on the part of the two railroad companies. It is undisputed that the horses were diverted from the route specified in the oral agreement, as alleged in the petition of the plaintiff, and that after their diversion they were injured while in the custody of the carrier. All of the foregoing matters are, therefore, to be disposed of as questions of law, and it [166]*166is unnecessary to discuss any of the instructions complained of, except the refusal to give a peremptory instruction for a verdict.
There was at the trial no question properly to be left to the jury, except that of the amount of damages, concerning their disposition of which there is no complaint in the briefs of the plaintiffs in error. But it is insisted that Armstrong, the solicitor of the New York, Chicago & St. Louis Company, had no authority to stipulate concerning the route of the shipment beyond the line of his employer, Or to contract a liability for carriage beyond that line, and that Morgan, upon whom service of summons Avas made in this case, was not a managing agent of the company Avithin the meaning of our statutes. Neither of these objections is well taken. Morgan Avas the manager of an agency maintained in this state for the express purpose of soliciting traffic for his corporation, Avhich was foreign to this state, and had no line of road entering its territory, and Armstrong Avas one of his employees in the business. Such persons, by the very nature of their employment; are represented to the public to have authority to do any act or enter into any contract for their principal pertaining to the business which they have in charge, and which has a tendency to promote its successful conduct. Obviously, one of the most frequently requisite of such acts Avould be the routing* of goods over the defendant’s line as an intermediate line to points of déstination. Without such routing* the shipment in question could not have been secured, and the case may be taken as fairly illustrative of the character of the business in Avhich the agency Avas engaged.
It is recommended that the judgment of the district court, in so far as it affects the plaintiff in error, the New York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad Company, be affirmed, and that in so far as it affects the plaintiff in error, the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley Railroad Company, it be reversed and a new trial granted. *
[167]*167Bj the Court: For reasons stated in tbe foregoing opinion, it is ordered that the judgment of the district court, in so far as it affects the plaintiff in error the New York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad Company, be affirmed, and that in so far as it affects the plaintiff in error the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley Railroad Company, it be reversed and a new trial granted.
Judgment accordingly.
Cobbey, Annotated Statutes, sec. 10045.