Hardee-Glaspie Co. v. Wallace

5 La. App. 206, 1926 La. App. LEXIS 527
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 6, 1926
DocketNo. 2119
StatusPublished

This text of 5 La. App. 206 (Hardee-Glaspie Co. v. Wallace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hardee-Glaspie Co. v. Wallace, 5 La. App. 206, 1926 La. App. LEXIS 527 (La. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

Plaintiff sues for the value of cotton which was destroyed by fire while on defendants’ cotton platform at Pleasant Hill or Sodus, Louisiana.

Plaintiff alleged that the defendants, as receivers, operating the Texas & Pacific railroad, maintained a station for receiving and discharging freight and a duly authorized station agent at Pleasant Hill or Sodus, Louisiana, and that on October 5, 1922, it delivered to the defendants certain cotton to be shipped—

“* * * said delivery being effected by petitioner carrying said cotton to the station platform of the defendants at said Sodus station and depositing the same thereon, with the knowledge and consent of the said defendants, their agents and employees, all in accordance with the custom prevailing among the shippers at said station.”

.And, in paragraph seventh—

“That no objection was made by the said defendants, or their agents and employees in charge of their business at said station, to the depositing and placing of said cot-don on said platform; but on the contrary, the same was done with their consent and approval and in accordance with the custom previously prevailing, fostered and approved by the defendants, their agents and employees.”

It further alleged that on the night following the day on which the cotton was so deposited it was destroyed by fire.

Defendants especially deny, in answer, that they received the cotton for shipment as alleged by plaintiff, and especially allege that at 2:55 p. m., on the day previous to the day on which said cotton is alleged to have been so delivered there was an embargo laid on the shipment of cotton to Shreveport, Louisiana, where plaintiff alleged the cotton was to be shipped, and that plaintiff knew of said embargo at the time it alleges it deposited the cotton on the platform for shipment.

There was judgment in the District Court for plaintiff as prayed for and defendants have appealed.

OPINION.

It is well to observe that plaintiff does not seek to hold defendants liable as ware-housemen or as bailees but as common carriers.

The lower court, after reviewing the testimony, propounded this interrogatory—

“Had the relation of shipper and carrier begun at the time of the fire, so as to render the carrier liable for the loss sustained?”

And it says — :

[208]*208“The court is of opinion that, owing to the custom prevailing at the station, defendant company had received the cotton for shipment and is liable therefor.”

We make these observations to show that plaintiff contended in the lower court as in this that defendants are liable as common carriers.

The testimony shows that the defendants had erected and maintained a.' platform for the reception of cotton to be shipped over its lines of road, which platform was between the main line and a spur track about 35 or 40 yards from the depot or station; that there was no other cotton platform in the village where cotton could be stored pending shipment; that it had been the custom for 25 years for merchants and others who purchased cotton to have it unloaded from the wagons to said platform; that plaintiff, a merchant, bought cotton during the cotton season and followed that same custom, and that during the afternoon of each day it made out' a bill of lading with shipping instructions for the cotton which it had placed on the platform during the day and carried it to the station agent who immediately checked the cotton against the bill of lading and if found correct signed it and delivered it to the shipper.

The testimony further shows that about 2:55 p. m., on October 4, 1922, the station agent was notified by wire that an embargo had been laid upon shipment of cotton to Shreveport during the next 48 hours;-that a,t the time the message was received by the agent, Mr., Barrow, an employee of plaintiff, was then at the station getting a bill of lading for cotton which had been delivered on the platform up to that time and that the agent mentioned the fact of the embargo to him; and while the station agent testified that he told Mr. Barrow at that 'time that- -no more- cotton would be received for shipment on account of the embargo, Mr.- Barrow testified that something was then said about the embargo but he did not recall what it was.

But regardless of what the station agent told Mr. Barrow on the afternoon of’ the 4th, it is sho.wn that Mr. Hardee, president and general manager of the plaintiff company, knew on the afternoon of - the 4th, the day before the cotton destroyed was placed on the platform, that' an embargo was on and that no more cotton would ■ be received for shipment' by defendants until the embargo was lifted,. as shown by the following testimony given by Mr. Hardee.

“Q. You knew when you placed this cotton on that platform that the agent was not receiving cotton for transportation?

“A. I knew I was not going to get a bill of lading that date, yes, sir.

“Q. And notwithstanding your knowledge of that fact you left it there?

“A. Yes, sir.

“Q. Why did you leave it?

“A. I had no place to put it and I was going to ship it the next day.

“Q. You had no platform of your own?

“A. No, sir.

“Q. You left it for your own convenience?

“A. It was the custom; we put it there always.

“Q. You admit that you had knowledge of the embargo on the afternoon of the 4th?

“Q. And you say that when you talked to the agent on the 5th he told you that' he could not receive the cotton?

“A. He told me that on the evening of the 4th — yes, sir.”

On the 5th of October, the day following the day on which plaintiff was'notified [209]*209that defendants would receive no more cotton for shipment on account of the 48-hour embargo, the plaintiff placed on the platform the cotton which was destroyed by fire on the morning of the 6th and for which it claimed the defendants are liable as common carriers.

As to whether the station agent did in fact receive this particular cotton, he testified that he knew, in a general way, that cotton was being placed on the platform during that day but that he had no knowledge that plaintiff had placed its cotton there; that plaintiff gave him no notice that' it had deposited the cotton on the platform for shipment and gave him no shipping instructions.

Mr. Hardee, testifying in rebuttal, said:

“Well, I think, as Mr. Keene stated on the stand, he knew in a general routine way that the cotton was going on the platform; he did not check it. He knew that it was going on as a general routine proposition but to have known it absolutely, as he stated on the stand, he would have had to check it, but' in a general routine way he knew that the cotton was going •on the platform.’’

“Q. He could not help but know that?

“A. No, sir, but he hadn’t checked it, I am sure.”

There is no intimation that Mr. Hardee, representing the plaintiff, or any of the employees of the plaintiff company told the agent that the cotton was being placed on the platform or that the agent had any actual knowledge of the fa.ct. Mr. Hardee testified, in rebuttal, that he did not notify the agent and ask for a bill of lading because—

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Bluebook (online)
5 La. App. 206, 1926 La. App. LEXIS 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardee-glaspie-co-v-wallace-lactapp-1926.