Hanger & Maxfield v. Bloomington, Decatur & Champaign Railway Co.

193 Ill. App. 475, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 669
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 16, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 193 Ill. App. 475 (Hanger & Maxfield v. Bloomington, Decatur & Champaign Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanger & Maxfield v. Bloomington, Decatur & Champaign Railway Co., 193 Ill. App. 475, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 669 (Ill. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Eldredge

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellees sued appellant before a justice of the peace to recover damages for the loss of one barrel of kerosene. On an appeal to the Circuit Court of McLean county a trial was had before the court without a jury and judgment rendered against appellant for $12.60, the value of the kerosene.

The facts are either stipulated or substantially undisputed, and briefly stated are as follows: Appellees are oil merchants located at Bloomington, Illinois, and in January, 1912, received through one of their traveling salesmen a written order for the barrel of oil in controversy. This order reads as follows:

“January 3,1912. Sold to Ed. Stoll Ship to Bell Station, Central Received payment, German American Bank, Lincoln, Ills.”

It is conceded that the words “Ship to Bell Station, Central” are a direction to ship the oil to the consignee at Bell Station on the Illinois Central Railroad. Kate Maxfield, one of the partners in the firm of Hanger & Maxfield, appellees, and bookkeeper therefor, prepared' a bill of lading for the shipment of the oil to Bell Station on the Illinois Central Railroad and caused it to be delivered with the oil at the station of that company in Bloomington. The agent of the Illinois Central Railroad Company erroneously claimed that there was no such station on the line of that road and refused to receive the oil. Miss Maxfield then called up appellant company and after a conversation with appellant’s agent, through the telephone wrote out a new bill of lading for the shipment of the oil to Bell Station on appellant’s line and caused the same, together with the oil, to be delivered to appellant.

Appellant operates an interurban electric railway and stops its cars on signal at certain highway crossings along its line in the country in addition to the stops made in cities and villages. One of these highway crossing stops in the country was called Bell and is located south of Springfield. At Bell, and other country highway crossing stops, no agents, sheds, depots or warehouses are maintained, but only platforms, • erected for the convenience of loading and unloading passengers and freight.

The barrel was received by appellant for transportation and was carried and deposited by it on the platform at the highway crossing stop on its line called Bell. After several days, the consignee not having received the oil, an investigation disclosed that there was in fact a siding called Bell on the Illinois Central Bailroad, to which the oil should have been shipped as directed by the order. Appellee then requested appellant to return the oil, and when the latter attempted to do so, it found that the oil had disappeared from the platform and had evidently been stolen therefrom.

Miss Maxfield testified that she prepared the bill of lading in this case herself and that it was taken from a book of blank bills of lading which she kept for the purpose of shipping goods over appellant’s road and had used and filled out similar blanks for shipping goods over appellant’s railroad ever since it was built. The first part of the bill of lading reads as follows:

“Beceived subject to the classifications and tariffs in effect on the date of issue of this original bill of lading, at Bloomington, 111. Jan. 10, 1912, from H. & M. Ind. Oil Co., the property described below, in apparent good order, except as noted (contents and condition of contents of packages unknown), marked, consigned and destined as indicated below, which said company agrees to carry to its usual place of delivery at said destination, if on its road, otherwise to deliver to another carrier on the route to said destination. It is mutually agreed, as to each carrier of all or any of said property over all or any portion of said route to destination, and as to each party at any time interested in all or any of said property, that every service to be performed hereunder shall be subject to all the conditions, whether printed or written, herein contained (including conditions on back"hereof) and which are agreed to by the shipper and accepted for himself and his assigns.”

The words “Bloomington, 111. Jan. 10, 1912,” and “H & M. Ind. Oil Co.” were written in by Miss Max-field in the blank spaces left for that purpose. One of the conditions on the back of the bill of lading is as follows:

“Property destined to or taken from a station, wharf or landing at which there is no regularly appointed agent shall be entirely at the risk of the owner after unloaded from the cars or vessels or until loaded into cars or vessels and when received from or delivered on private or other sidings, wharves, or landings, shall be at owner’s risk until the cars are attached to and after they are detached from train.”

It is the contention of appellees that appellant, as a common carrier, having assumed the transportation of the oil, became an insurer against everything but the act of God, the public enemy or the inherent nature of the property itself; that this common-law liability cannot be eliminated by the carrier by notice without also the express assent of the shipper, and that the burden of proving such notice and assent is on the carrier. Counsel for appellant concede that such is the general rule of law in this state but claim: First, that an electric interurban railway company which receives nonperishable freight for shipment over its railway line, billed to a crossroad stop, where such interurban railway does not maintain an agent or warehouse, is not liable for the loss of such freight if it carries said freight safely and deposits the same on the platform at the place or destination marked thereon. Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Gilmer, 89 Ala. 534; South & North Alabama R. Co. v. Wood, 66 Ala. 167, 72 Ala. 451; Hill v. St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co., 67 Ark. 402; and second, that under the facts proven in this case, appellees not only had knowledge of the condition printed on the back of this bill of lading, but are also estopped from denying that they assented thereto.

The first proposition above advanced by appellant has never been passed upon by an Appellate tribunal in this State and it is unnecessary to pass upon it here. The second proposition, however, has been sustained under very similar facts to those shown by the record in this case. In the case of Field v. Chicago & R. I. R. Co., 71 Ill. 458, damages were sought for a delay of four months in the transportation and delivery of flour through the negligence of the railroad company. The plaintiff in that case, as in this, filled up the blanks in the bill of lading wherein was contained the provision that the responsibility of the company terminated on the delivery of the freight to the company whose line may be considered a part of the route to the place of destination. It appeared from the facts that the delay was caused by a connecting carrier. The plaintiff in that case denied knowledge of the conditions in the bill of lading and introduced evidence to that effect. The Supreme Court held:

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Bluebook (online)
193 Ill. App. 475, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanger-maxfield-v-bloomington-decatur-champaign-railway-co-illappct-1915.