Georgia, Southern & Florida Railway Co. v. Makeever

15 S.W.2d 293, 228 Ky. 492, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 576
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 22, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 15 S.W.2d 293 (Georgia, Southern & Florida Railway Co. v. Makeever) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Georgia, Southern & Florida Railway Co. v. Makeever, 15 S.W.2d 293, 228 Ky. 492, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 576 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Dietzman

Reversing.

On the 17th of February, 1922, D. K. Young & Co. shipped a carload of 145 stock pigs from Sparks, Ga., consigned to the appellee at Rensselaer, Ind. At that' time the country surrounding Sparks was known to be infected with hog cholera. Since there was no federal inspector at Sparks and no facilities there for inoculating the pigs, they were shipped under a permit which was issued by the Indiana authorities, and which authorized the shipment of the pigs on condition that they be promptly inoculated on their arrival at Rensselaer, Ind. The evidence shows that to all outward appearances these pigs were in a healthy condition when they were loaded on the railroad car at Sparks. Prior to being loaded, they had been kept in a public stockyard, and, as the record shows, any pigs which are kept together in any public pens are known as pigs which have been exposed to hog cholera. The loading of these pigs was completed at 7 p. m. on the day of February 17th. They moved over the appellants Georgia, Southern & Florida Railway Company and Southern Railway Company, to Atlanta, Ga., thence over the appellant the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company to Louisville, Ky., and thence over the appellant Chicago, Indianapolis & Louisville Railway, hereafter called the Monon, to Rensselaer, Ind. They did not arrive at Rensselaer until almost 6 o’clock on the evening of February 23d, which was Thursday, and were not unloaded until the following morning. In the course of their transit, the pigs were under the federal laws (45 USCA ¡sec. 71), requiring that stock after having been in transit for 36 hours be unloaded, watered, fed, and rested for at least 5 hours, unloaded at Atlanta, Ga., Lebanon, Ky,, and Cloverdale, Ind. When unloaded, fed, and *494 rested at Lebanon, the pigs were active, drank their water, ate their food with relish, and seemingly were in the best of.health. At Cloverdale, however, two of the pigs were found dead in the car, and the rest appeared to be sick. When delivered at Rensselaer, six more of the pigs were dead, and the rest were in a very weakened and gannt condition. The evidence overwhelmingly and without real dispute establishes that, when delivered at Rensselaer, these pigs were suffering from hog cholera, and, although the serum treatment was promptly administered to them on their arrival, yet within a few days after they reached Rensselaer 133 of them, including those which had died in transit, were dead. An autopsy performed on some of the pigs disclosed all of the symptoms of hog cholera. Averring that the shipment of these pigs from Sparks, Ga., to Rensselaer, Ind., had been unreasonably delayed by the appellants, and that such delay had resulted in the death of these pigs, appellee brought this suit to recover the value of these pigs, and on the trial secured a judgment for $1,463. Prom that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

The appellants first contend that they were entitled to a peremptory instruction. They base this contention on two grounds: (a) Because the evidence fails to show any unreasonable delay on their part in handling this shipment; and (b) because, even if there was any such delay, the evidence fails to show that it caused the death of these pigs. As to ground (a), it is admitted that these pigs were delivered to the appellant, Georgia, Southern & Florida Railway Company, at 7 o ’clock on the evening of February 17th, and were not delivered to the Louisville & Nashville at Atlanta until 5 o’clock on the evening of February 19, 1922. Although the running time between Valdosta, Ga./the point of departure for the freight train which picked up this carload of pigs at Sparks, Ga., (some 20 miles away from Valdosta) and Atlanta, was only 20 hours and 25 minutes, and, although a train was scheduled to leave Valdosta on the evening of the 17th at 6:05 p. m., and although the loading of the pigs was completed in ample time for this train to pick up as it did this car containing these pigs, and although it is admitted that the transfer in Atlanta from the Southern Railway to the Louisville & Nashville takes only about 4 hours, the admitted facts establish that, instead of taking the 20 hours and 25 minutes’ running time plus the 4 *495 hours’ transfer time to go from a point 20 miles beyond Sparks to Atlanta, this shipment took almost 46 hours from the time these pigs were delivered to the Georgia Southern at Sparks until they were delivered to the Louisville & Nashville at Atlanta. There is not a shadow of an explanation in this record why these pigs were delayed 20 hours or better from the time they left Sparks until they were delivered to the Louisville & Nashville. True it is that they were fed and watered at Atlanta, but-had they not been 7 hours late, as they were, in arriving at that point, there would have been no necessity for resting and feeding the pigs at this piont. The evidence also shows that, after the pigs had been given the statutory rest at Atlanta, they could have been delivered to the Louisville & Nashville in time to catch the manifest train leaving on the morning of February 19th. Instead, they were not delivered to the Louisville & Nashville until the evening of that day, and when there was no train scheduled to leave until 8:45 p. m.

Unquestionably it was for the jury to say whether, in the absence of any explanation for the delay of this shipment between Sparks and delivery to the Louisville & Nashville at Atlanta, such delay was unreasonable, especially in view of the evidence that shipments of live stock such as the one here in question go forward on what is known as “manifest freight,” which maintains a sched ule almost comparable to that of passenger traffic. Therefore, so far as the appellants Georgia, Southern Eailway and Southern Eailway are concerned, there is no merit in their contention that the evidence fails to show unreasonable delay on their part.

The Louisville & Nashville received, this shipment at 5 p. m. on February 19th, and it reached Louisville at 5:25 p. m. on February 21st, approximately 48 hours after its receipt by the Louisville & Nashville. The appellee’s own evidence discloses that the very best time: for live stock carriage over the Louisville & Nashville between Atlanta and Louisville is 36 hours, which, of course, means from the time the train leaves Atlanta until it reaches Louisville. But, when this shipment was delivered to the Louisville & Nashville at 5 o’clock on February 19th, there was no train then leaving Atlanta for Louisville, and the next train was not scheduled to leave until 8:45 p. m. Of course, the Louisville & Nashville could not control the delivery of the pigs to it, and *496 it is not shown that a failure to have a freight train scheduled for departure under approximately 4 hours after the delivery of the pigs to the carrier constituted any unreasonable delay in forwarding the shipment. The pigs- having been in its custody 4 hours, even though it be conceded that the running time to Louisville would consume 36 hours, it is obvious that a period of feeding, rest, and watering would have to take place somewhere between Atlanta and Louisville. In fact this was the feeding and rest of 5 hours which the pigs got at Lebanon.

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.W.2d 293, 228 Ky. 492, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgia-southern-florida-railway-co-v-makeever-kyctapphigh-1929.