Harrell v. Wilmington & Weldon Railroad

11 S.E. 286, 106 N.C. 258
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 11 S.E. 286 (Harrell v. Wilmington & Weldon Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrell v. Wilmington & Weldon Railroad, 11 S.E. 286, 106 N.C. 258 (N.C. 1890).

Opinion

Davis, J.:

“By consent, the only issue submitted to the jury was whether the cotton in controversy was delivered by plaintiff to defendant company on the 13th day of November, 1888.”

The defendant insists that there was no evidence sufficient to go to the jury, upon which the instructions of his Honor, *259 set out in the record, and excepted to, could be based, and the instructions were misleading.

As the sole questions presented for our consideration are involved in the single question as to whether there was any evidence to warrant the instruction given, we reproduce only so much of the case on appeal as relates to the charge of his Honor and the evidence relied on by the plaintiff to sustain it.

Chauncey Harrell, the plaintiff, was sworn in his own behalf, and testified that on the 13th day of November, 1888, he carried a bale of cotton to the defendant’s warehouse at Duplin Roads, and went to the office of the Railroad Company and saw in the office one Beall, the agent of the company, and also one Robinson; that witness said, “ Good morning,” and, without addressing his remarks to any particular one, said, “I wish to deposit a bale of cotton;’’ whereupon, Robinson went with witness and weighed the cotton, and gave witness a bill of lading therefor; that the office is about six feet by ten in size; that Beall and Robinson were in the office when witness went there; that witness does not know whether Beall heard his remark or not; ■when witness went back to the office, Robinson gave him the bill of lading, of which the following is a copy, to-wit:

“November 13, 1888.
“Received of Chauncey Harrell, D. Roads, N. C., one bale of cotton marked, numbered and weighed as below, to be transported at company’s convenience by the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad Company unto C. J. Southerland, of Wilmington.
No. Bales Marks Weight
1 C. H. 500
(Signed) “B. J. Beall,
“Per R.”

*260 Beall and Robinson were in the office; that the next time witness saw the cotton was the 24th of November; it was in the same warehouse, and he ordered it shipped that day, and it was shipped. No new bill of lading was given him that day. "Witness made complaint to Beall. He (Beall) cursed and abused Robinson, saying it was the third time he had done so that Fall.

Cross-examined, witness testified that the cotton was shipped the 24th of November; that on the 13th, when he called to deposit the cotton, Beall was at the telegraph instrument, but he did not think he was operating; that witness simply went to the door of the office, and after bidding them “good evening” said he wanted to deposit a bale of cotton for shipment; that he did not demand a bill of lading on the 24th, but had demanded it on the 13th; that Beall was abusing Robinson for carelessness; that witness did not hear Beall say that Robinson had no right to receive freight and give bills of lading, and never heard Beall say so.

Re-direct — Robinson and Beall were three or four feet apart at the time witness went to office on the 13th. Robinson had been staying there several months; witness had seen Robinson handling and delivering freight, and witness had heard that he was studying telegraphy there. Witness never saw Robinson give a bill of lading for freight before, but had seen him deliver freight to Malard and to Murphy Brothers. Witness cannot single out any other person to whom Robinson delivered freight. He saw Robinson open warehouse door and assist those parties to get goods out, but does not know whether the agent was there then or not; does not remember whether he saw him there or not. Witness has seen parties go to Robinson and tell him they had freight, and he would show them where to put it on the platform. Witness has seen a party take a coop of chickens to Robinson to ship, but at such time witness does not know *261 whether the agent was present or not; does not know how long this was before shipment of his own cotton — probably three or four months.

At the plaintiff’s request his Honor, in his charge, instructed the jury as follows, to-wit:

“ 1. That, while the agent Beall could not delegate his authority, he could employ a servant; and if the jury believe that said Beall employed Robinson to assist him in his office 'by the payment of money or by teaching him telegraphy for his services, and that it was within the scope of Robinson’s employment to receive freight and give bills of lading, and this was known to defendant company, and they assented to it, and that said Robinson, acting under such employment, received the bale of cotton and gave the bill of lading, the act of Robinson would be the act of Beall,, and the jury should, in such case, answer the issue in the affirmative.
“ 2. That the defendant company may have more than one agent at its several depots; and if the jury believe that Robinson was in the habit of- receiving freight and giving bills of lading, and doing other acts'for said company with its knowledge and acquiescence, and that said Robinson received the bale of cotton of the plaintiff and gave the bill of lading in evidence, the said company would be bound by the acts of said Robinson, and the jury should answer the issue Yes.
“ 3. [Being a modification of plaintiff’s third requested instruction.] If the defendant company knew that Robinson had been receiving freight, although he had not been employed by them, and they had permitted him to do this, and the plaintiff knew this; or, if knowing Robinson had been receiving freight, they so acted on his receipts as to induce the public to believe that he was théir authorized agent, they would be bound by his action, and the jury should answer the issue Yes.
*262 “ 4. [Being a modification of plaintiff’s fourth requested instruction.] That if said Robinson had no authority from Beall or the defendant company to receive the bale of cotton and give the bill'of lading, the said company would still be bound by the acts of Robinson if it ratified them; that said company could not ratify a part of his acts and repudiate a part, but must ratify the whole or repudiate the whole; that the fact that the defendant company shipped the bale of cotton on the bill of lading given by Robinson, and gave no new bill of lading, if the evidence satisfies the jury that the company, and not only Beall, knew it, is evidence from which the jury may infer that said company ratified the act of Robinson, and if the jury should find that the defendant company ratified the act of Robinson, they should answer ■the issue Yes, although they believe that Robinson had, in fact, no authority from Beall or the company.”

To these instructions the defendant excepts on the grounds—

“ 1. That there was no evidence that the defendant company had knowledge of, or assented to, or acquiesced in, any of the acts of Robinson in receiving freight and giving bills of lading for the same.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 S.E. 286, 106 N.C. 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrell-v-wilmington-weldon-railroad-nc-1890.