Hall v. Pennsylvania Railroad

1 F. 226, 1880 U.S. App. LEXIS 2346
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 23, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 F. 226 (Hall v. Pennsylvania Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Pennsylvania Railroad, 1 F. 226, 1880 U.S. App. LEXIS 2346 (circtwdpa 1880).

Opinion

McKennan, J.

This suit was brought to recover from the defendant the value of certain wool, delivered to it at Chicago for transportation to Philadelphia. A jury having been waived, the case was tried by the court upon the evidence submitted by the parties. The following facts are found as established by the evidence:

1. The value of the goods in controversy was, on the twenty-second day of July, 1877, at the point of shipment, $18,060.38, and at the point of destination, $20,972.97.

•2. “The said goods had, in course of transit from their place of shipment to their respective destinations, reached [227]*227the city of Pittsburgh at least 24 hours before the fire occurred in said city, on July 21 and 22, 1877, and were then in defendant’s custody in the cars in which they had been shipped, and the said cars and the said goods were burned in said fire.”

8. “Tlie defendant, about July 19,1877, found itself unable to maintain, against the force of a mob, entire possession and control of its own property, and the property in its custody, including that of the plaintiff, and to operate its road. It then called upon the proper authorities, including the sheriff of Allegheny county, for assistance and protection; a requisition was made by said sheriff upon the governor for the assistance of the military power of the commonwealth. In pursuance of such requisition, troops were ordered by the governor to aid said sheriff in retaking and redelivering to the •defendant entire possession and control of such property, and to enable it to operate its roads; and in endeavoring so to do said troops, on July 21, 1877, came into conflict with said mob and failed to dispossess the same, and immediately after said conflict and failure the property in question was destroyed by fire communicated by said mob.”

4. The goods in question were “received by the defendant on bills of lading of the form of the annexed receipt, being one of what is usually known as the ‘Bed Star Union Line fast freight’ receipts, with all and singular the conditions therein contained.” This bill of lading is numbered No. 2,856, and is thus identified and exhibited as part of the finding in this case.

The foregoing facts are found in pursuance of the written admission of the parties filed in the case.

It is further found:

•5. If the transit of the goods in question had not been interrupted at Pittsburgh, and had been continued in regular course, the train containing them would have boon at a considerable distance from Pittsburgh eastward before the time of the occurrence of the fire.

6. When the train containing said goods reached the depot of the defendant in Pittsburgh, on July 19th, the hands who [228]*228had conducted it there left it, and a “strike” of all the regular train hands of the defendant occurred on that day, in consequence of a refusal by the defendant to accede to their demand for an increase of wages.

7. On the nineteenth of July there were standing on the track in the depot yard at Pittsburgh a number of cars laden with petroleum, about 150 yards distant from the cars which contained the plaintiff’s goods. They were in the same relative position on the day when the fire occurred. The oil cars were kept in place by ordinary brakes. The grade of the road was descending towards the freight ears, so that the oil cars would run towards the former by their own gravity. At or before the occurrence of the fire the oil ears were caused to move down the grade until they,came in contact with the freight cars, and they were all burned up together.

8. On the nineteenth, twentieth and twenty-first of July, freight trains continued to be brought hito the depot yard of the defendant, at Pittsburgh, both from the east and west, in the regular course of transit, and were there stopped, so that there was an unusual accumulation of trains at that point.

The court is respectfully requested by plaintiff to find, as matters of law:

1. That defendant’s duty as common carriers was to carry plaintiff’s goods from the several points of shipment to * * Philadelphia, the point of delivery of all, without any unusual or avoidable delay, and, apart from the special conditions in the bill of lading, defendant is liable for loss from any cause save the acts of God or a public enemy.

2. That defendant did not cease to be common carriers by reason of the conditions in the bill of lading, but continued subject to all liabilities of common carriers, except for losses happening for causes enumerated in said conditions, without default or negligence on the part of defendant’s servants or employes, while defendant was actually discharging its duties . of carrying the goods from the point of shipment in the usual and proper manner.

3. That the interruption of the transit by reason of the refusal of the servants of the defendant, in charge of the [229]*229freight trains on which plaintiff’s goods were being carried, to perform their duty was a default on part of defendant.

8-]-. That the strike and refusal to perform duty on the part of the men docs not justify or excuse the interruption of the transit of plaintiff’s goods; and that defendant’s election not to pay the 10 per cent, additional wages demanded, and in lieu thereof to allow the goods to remain at Pittsburgh, wholly or partly in the control of persons who prevented defendant from “operating its road” and performing it's contract as common carriers, makes defendant liable for all the consequences, including the destruction and loss of said goods, during the period that the transit was thus interrupted, and the plaintiff’s property thus wrongfully controlled, without proof of any other negligence or misconduct on the part of defendant.

é. That allowing or suffering others than its own employes to take from defendant the possession or control, whether in whole or in part, of plaintiff’s goods, and to use that control, not for the purpose of furthering or continuing the transit, but for the purpose of suspending and preventing it, was a default on part of defendant.

5. That however proper it may have been for defendant to call on the public authorities for protection and assistance “in retaking and redelivering to defendant the entire possession and control of said property,” such act of propriety in no way justifies the previous default in suffering the possession and control thereof to pass out of its hands.

6. That the various risks enumerated in said conditions, which are assumed by plaintiff in relief of defendant’s general liability, and more especially the risk “of fire while in transit,” are limited to losses occurring while the defendant is engaged in carrying the goods, in the proper discharge of its duties under the contract, and do not include loss by fire occurring while the transit is suspended, and the goods in question have been suffered by defendant to pass into the possession and control of persons acting adversely to the duties defendant assumed to discharge.

7. That it was gross default and negligence on the part of defendant to allow freight trains to come into Pittsburgh on [230]*230the nineteénth, twentieth and twenty-first of July, under the circumstances in the seventh clause of the facts, which the court is requested by plaintiff to find, mentioned.

8.

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Bachman v. McCluer
63 F.2d 580 (Eighth Circuit, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
1 F. 226, 1880 U.S. App. LEXIS 2346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-pennsylvania-railroad-circtwdpa-1880.