Hale v. New-Jersey Steam Navigation Co.

15 Conn. 539
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 15, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 15 Conn. 539 (Hale v. New-Jersey Steam Navigation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hale v. New-Jersey Steam Navigation Co., 15 Conn. 539 (Colo. 1843).

Opinion

Williams, Ch. J.

The suit was brought for two carriages, shipped on board the Lexington, against the defendants, as common carriers, to be transported in said boat, for hire, from New-York to Boston or Providence. The boat and goods were destroyed by fire, in the Sound; and a verdict being given for the plaintiff, the defendants excepted to the charge, and claimed,

1. That they were not common carriers, or subject to the rules that govern common carriers. It was long since settled, that any man, undertaking for hire to carry the goods of all persons indifferently, from place to place, is a common carrier. Gisbourn v. Hurst, 1 Salk. 249. Common carriers, says judge Kent, consist of two distinct classes of men, viz. inland carriers by land or water, and carriers by sea; and in the aggregate body are included the owners of stage coaches, who carry goods, as well as passengers, for hire — wagoners, [544]*544teamsters, cartmen, the masters and owners of ships, vessels and all water craft, including steam vessels, and steam tow boats belonging to internal, as well as coasting and foreign navigation, lightermen and ferrymen. 2 Kent’s Com. 598. (2nd ed.) And there is no difference between a land and a water carrier. 3 Esp. Ca. 127. 10 Johns, li. 7. Story on Bailments 319. 323.

But it is said, the rule established is a harsh one, and ought not to be extended. Chancellor Kent takes a very different view of it. He speaks of it as a great principle of public policy, which has proved to be of eminent value to the morals and commerce of the nation ; (2nd vol. 602.) and with similar views, this court has said, we are not dissatisfied with the reasons which originated the responsibility of common carriers, and believe they apply, with peculiar force, at this day, and in this country, as it respects carriers by water, more especially upon which element a spirit of dangerous adventure has grown up, which disregards the safety, not of property merely, but of human life. Crosby v. Fitch, 12 Conn. R. 419. And while we are not called upon to extend the principle, we cannot yield to the argument that common carriers are not to be responsible, when the loss arises from the producing agent of the propelling power.

If the defendants are common carriers, the question must be merely what are the liabilities of common carriers? The answer is, for all losses, even inevitable accidents, except they arise from the act of God, or the public enemy. 2 Term Rep. 34. 2 Ld. Raym. 918. And by the act oí God is meant, something super-human, or something in opposition to the act of man. Forward v. Pittard, 1 Term Rep. 33. In all cases except of that description, the carriers warrant the safe delivery of the goods ; (per Kent, Ch. J. Elliot v. Bissell, 10 Johns. R. 7.) and masters and owners of vessels are liable as common carriers, as well at sea as in port. And the Ch. J. says, that the argument is not well supported, that this doctrine of the liability of carriers, is, by the common law7 of England, to be confined to transportations by water, without the jurisdiction of the realm. All the books and all the cases, winch touch the subject, lay down the rule generally, and apply it, as well to shipments to and from foreign ports, as to internal commerce. It is true, that in Aymar v. Astor, [545]*5456 Coioen 269. the then Ch. J., without citing a single authority, in giving the opinion of the court, says, the master of a vessel, I apprehend, is not responsible, as a common carrier, for all losses, except they happen by the act of God or the enemies r J 11 J of the country. That case has, it is believed, never been treated as law, in New-York or elsewhere. It is, indeed, repugnant to prior decisions, says Judge Story. It is not to be taken for sound law, says Judge Kent. 12 Conn. R. 414. And in McArthur v. Sears, 21 Wend. 190. this case is treated as a confessed anomaly, and disapproved as contrary to decisions in other states, and even in their own. And in a suit against the owners of a steam-boat on lake Erie, as common carriers, it was held, that nothing would excuse them, except inevitable accident, without the intervention of man, and the act of public enemies. Judge Cowen denies that this case tends to repeal the law of liability of common carriers, and treats it as turning on the exception in the bill of lading.

But it is said, there is no case where the liability is extended to fire on the high seas. If the principle covers such cases, then it is to be supposed the reason such cases are not to be found, is, that they have not occurred, or were not contested. If the carrier is subjected for the loss of goods burnt on land, where he was in no fault, we see no reason for exempting the carrier at sea, under similar circumstances. We apprehend a rule of policy, Lord Mansfield says, in the case alluded to, to prevent litigation, collusion and the necessity of going into circumstances impossible to be unravelled, the law presumes against the carriers. He is in the nature of an insurer. Every reason here given applies as well to the owners of a steam-boat, as to the wagoner, whose carriage was burnt without his fault, in the bam where he placed it — the same danger of collusion, of litigation, and the same difficulty in unravelling circumstances. If the policy of the law requires that the one shall be as an insurer, we think the same policy requires that the other should also be so treated. And if it be true, that trade will regulate itself, when the rule is understood, compensation will be made, not only in proportion to the labour, but to the risk. And in a recent case in New-York, steam-boat owners are treated as other common carriers. Powell & al. v. Myers, 26 Wend. 591.

It is stated, that by the laws of Louisiana, a different rale [546]*546prevails, in regard to steam-boats ; but as the laws of that - state are, in a great measure, founded upon the civil law, they can have but little influence here.

2. The defendants claim, in the next place, that they are not liable, because of the public notice which they gave, that they would not be responsible for losses other than what arose from the fault or negligence of their officers or servants ; and they claim, that by the common law, a common carrier may limit his responsibility, by express contract, or by public notice given of such intended limitation ; in support of which they cite many cases from the English books, where that doctrine, after some diversity of opinion, has been recognized and settled. On the part of the plaintiff, it is claimed, that these decisions are modern — all since we were separated from that country — after a diversity of opinion in the English courts, and now regretted by eminent judges, and not in accordance with the principles of the common law; and that they have been rejected in New-York, as not sound law ; and that, as this contract was made in New-York, its construction must be regulated by that law. It becomes necessary, therefore, to determine by what law this construction of the contract is to be governed.

It appears that this boat was in the business of transportation from New-York to Providence ;

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Bluebook (online)
15 Conn. 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hale-v-new-jersey-steam-navigation-co-conn-1843.