Galloway v. Erie Railroad

107 A.D. 210, 95 N.Y.S. 17
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 107 A.D. 210 (Galloway v. Erie Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Galloway v. Erie Railroad, 107 A.D. 210, 95 N.Y.S. 17 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinions

Hirschberg, P. J.:

The plaintiff, a shipper,, contracted with the defendant, a common carrier, for the transportation of twenty-three cows and a calf at reduced rates from East Buffalo in Erie county to Monroe, Orange, county. The cattle were placed in a car attached to a train at East. Buffalo at about three o’clock in the afternoon of November 25* 1901, and left East Buffalo at about six o’clock. The train reached Port Jervis, Orange county, within thirty-eight miles of the destination of the cattle, between four and five o’clock on the afternoon of November twenty-sixth. They were then in good condition, but. at that station the car containing them was detached from the train and left standing in the Port Jervis yard until eight o’clock, when, [212]*212it was attached to another train and carried to Monroe, stopping and switching at almost every station, and reaching Monroe at about two o’clock on the morning of November twenty-seventh. It appears to be undisputed that the cattle were confined in the car without unloading during the entire thirty-five hours, and it is also undisputed that on reaching Monroe one of them died and all the others were found to be injured from the continuous and protracted confinement. The plaintiff sued for the damages resulting from the injury to the cattle^ alleging that the defendant in violation of its contract “ did 'not safely and properly and promptly carry and deliver” them in proper condition, and the complaint was dismissed at the close of his case upon the ground that by the terms of the contract he had expressly, relieved the defendant from liability or had so limited the liability that there could be no recovery upon the proof given.

The provisions of the contract- which bear upon the' question are as follows : “ The said carrier or any connecting carrier shall not be liable for or on account of any injury sustained by said live stock, occasioned by any or either of the following causes to wit ^ Overloading, crowding one upon another, kicking Or goring, suffocating, fright, burning of hay or straw, or other material used for feeding or bedding, or by fire from any cause whatever, or by heat, cold, or by changes in weather, or for delay caused by stress of weather, by obstruction of tracks, by riots, strikes or stoppage of labor, or from causes beyond their control.

That in the event of any unusual delay or detention of said live stock, caused by the negligence of the said carrier, or its employees, or its connecting carriers, or their employees, or otherwise, the said shipper, agrees to accept as full compensation for all loss or damages sustained thereby, the amount actually expended by said shipper, in the purchase of food and water for the said stock, while so detained.”

No cause or excuse was presented upon the trial for the deliberate severing of the car containing the cattle from the train at Port Jervis, or for the delay in transportation from that place to Monroe, and it must accordingly be assumed on this appeal that the detention was caused by the defendant’s negligence. If under the terms of the contract the injury which resulted to- the cattle is to be [213]*213regarded as included within the expression contained in the 2d clause of the contract above quoted, viz., “ all loss or damages sustained thereby,” the plaintiff is clearly confined to a recovery of the expense incurred in the purchase of food and water. In a general sense it must be conceded that injury to the cattle necessarily involves loss or damage to the owner equally as would a fall in market values during a period of detention, of damage by reason of his failure to deliver the cattle to a purchaser pursuant to an agreement to do so. If the contract could be construed broadly and liberally in favor of the carrier, it would probably be necessary so to hold. But the law requires' that a contract should be construed strictly against a common carrier where its purpose is to limit the common-law.liability, and so construed there is nothing in this contract which expressly or in set terms limits the defendant’s liability for what has actually occurred, viz., injury to the live stock owing to delay or detention caused by the defendant’s negligence. The exemption provided by the contract relates solely to injury to the cattle from causes which it is conceded have not occurred, and the limit of liability provided for relates to a loss or damage ostentatiously dissociated from injury to the cattle as such.

In construing the contract strictly against the defendant some motive and purpose must be ascribed to the division of the hazards into two classes, differing in the results as well as in the extent of the exemption. The motive and purpose seem obvious. The first clause relates to the risks specifically enumerated and to delay caused not by the defendant’s negligence, but by events beyond the defendant’s control. If such risks or delay occasion injury to the cattle as a separate and distinct thing from loss or damage to the owner not incidental to such injury, the exemption is to be absolute. The second clause relates to loss or damage to the owner as a separate and distinct thing from injury to the cattle, and which may easily be occasioned without such injury. If this loss or damage, not •including injury to the cattle, is occasioned by delay due to the defendant’s negligence, the limit of liability is to be recompense for the cost of sustenance during the period of neglect. ^Neither clause, it will be seen, exempts the defendant in precise words from liability for its neglect resulting in injury to the cattle. In this, view the contract is reasonable and intelligible. In any other view [214]*214it is difficult to see why the exemption and limitation have been divided into two elaborate clauses, dependent upon differing results, if one is included in the other, when a single simple provision would have sufficed exempting the defendant from all liability for the specified causes and-delay beyond its control, and limiting such liability for delay through its own negligence. The defendant, in this view, is to pay nothing if it is not blamable, and to pay but little even for its own fault (nothing for Compensation, but only reimbursement of actual expenditure), with the reasonable proviso that the negligence has not been so gross or effective as to damage or destroy the plaintiff’s property. In other words, as I construe this contract, if there is injury to- the cattle from the specified causes, or from delay for which the defendant is not chargeable because of any fault on its part, the plaintiff is not to receive a cent, even although all his cattle are killed, but if there is a delay by reason of the defendant’s negligence, he is to be paid back the money he may have spent in caring for the cattle “ while so detained,” as full compensation for the loss or damage which he may suffer solely by the lapse of time in delivery, and on the assumption that he finally, although tardily, receives his property unimpaired. The view taken further avoids the absurdity of so construing the contract as to permit the defendant to sidetrack the cattle anywhere and to negligently leave them there until they should die from confinement and neglect, with the understanding that the owner would be reimbursed as full compensation on receiving the value of such food and water as he might manage to furnish them during the throes of dissolution.

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Related

Bates v. Weir
121 A.D. 275 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1907)
Galloway v. Erie Railroad
116 A.D. 777 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1907)

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Bluebook (online)
107 A.D. 210, 95 N.Y.S. 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galloway-v-erie-railroad-nyappdiv-1905.