Harris v. Southern Railway Co.

85 S.E. 158, 100 S.C. 469, 1915 S.C. LEXIS 78
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 19, 1915
Docket9071
StatusPublished

This text of 85 S.E. 158 (Harris v. Southern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Southern Railway Co., 85 S.E. 158, 100 S.C. 469, 1915 S.C. LEXIS 78 (S.C. 1915).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justick GaGL.

*471 Action to recover $341.65, the value of a trunk and contents burned in the railroad baggage room at Edgefield, and $50.00 statutory penalty for deferred payment of the claim. The jury returned a verdict for the aggregate sum of $491.65. The defendant has appealed.

The plaintiff is a young lady. On 3d July, 1913, at Augusta, Georgia, she bought a ticket over the defendant’s line of road to procure for herself transportation therefrom to Edgefield, South Carolina,' and thereon she had checked her trunk for the same destination. She took the cars at Augusta and she arrived at Edgefield about 5 o’clock p. m. of the same day.

She went the same evening five miles into the country, which was the ultimate destination she set out to make.

She returned to Edgefield the next morning for her trunk. The depot had been destroyed by fire the night before, and with it the trunk.

The plaintiff sued the defendant both as carrier and as warehouseman.

The defendant plead that the plaintiff hád failed to exercise ordinary care when she left the trunk in the depot over night, and that such negligence by her caused the loss of the trunk.

The defendant also plead “that the journey from Augusta, Georgia, to Edgefield, South Carolina, was an interstate journey and was controlled by, and subject to, the Federal act to regulate commerce and the amendments thereto, and was subject to the rules and regulations governing passenger and baggage transportation filed by the defendant, Southern Railway Company, with, and approved and published by, the Interstate Commerce Commission, and said rules and regulations relating to transportation of passengers and baggage as published were on file in the ticket office of the defendants at Augusta, Georgia, for the use of the public, and certain portions of said rules and regulations were *472 printed on the ticket purchased by plaintiff at Augusta, Georgia, and the plaintiff is bound by the same.”

There are twenty-four exceptions; but the only question much argued at the bar was the defendant’s liability as a carrier betwixt the States; and we shall consider that issue alone; the case turns upon it.

A decision involves the application of the Federal statutes to regulate commerce between the States, as construed by the final arbitef of those statutes, the Supreme Court of the Union.

The exceptions which make the issue arise on, the charge of the Circuit Court; and the particular matters in the charge excepted to are these: That the Court was requested to charge, and ought to have instructed, the jury the following postulates: (1)' That when the defendant company filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission a schedule of rates and rules for the transportation of passengers and baggage, and when that commission approved the same, then such rates and rules became operative and governed the case, and that it was irrelevant whether the rates and rules were posted and published at the railroad station in Augusta or not; and that it was not necessary that the plaintiff should have actual knowledge of such rates and rules.

(2) That by such rates and rules the plaintiff is limited to a recovery of $100.00'for the value of her trunk, unless she shall have declared aforetime to the defendant at Augusta a greater value than that and paid to the defendant an excess rate thereon.

(3)'That by such rules and rates jewelry shouldn’t be put into checked baggage.

• (4) That by such rates and rules defendant was not liable for the trunk as common carrier when the same had arrived at the depot in Edgefield.

(5) That by such rules and rates-the defendant had the right to limit its liability for the trunk to $100.00 unless the *473 plaintiff had before and so declared and paid a greater value and a higher rate.

We shall not decide all these issues; it is not necessary.

There is no pretext that the plaintiff did aught at Augusta but purchase a ticket, check a trunk and board a train in the usual fashion. She did not declare for her trunk a greater value than one hundred dollars, and she, therefore, paid no “excess baggage.”

It is not gainsaid as fact that the Interstate Commerce Commission had before this transaction approved the rates and rules of the defendant for the transportation of passengers and trunks; nor is it denied as fact that the rates and rules required the plaintiff to declare if her baggage exceeded one hundred dollars in value, and if it did, she was obliged to pay excess thereon; nor is it denied as law that by such rates and rules the plaintiff had to make the aforesaid declaration and pay the aforesaid excess in order to claim now a greater value for her trunk than one hundred dollars. Boston & Maine R. Co. v. Hooker, 233 U. S. 97, 34 S. Ct. 526.

The Hooker case, supra, had not been decided when the case at bar was tried, so that the Circuit Court and the bar had no chance to know how the Court of last resort would determine such an issue.

1, 2 The plaintiff, while tacitly conceding that the Hooker case is decisive of those controversies where the rates and rules are duly posted, as they were there, and where the railroad company is sued as carrier, as it was there, contends in this case that the rates and rules were not, but ought to have been, posted in Augusta, and the trunk was not in actual transit, but had arrived at its destinatibn.

Considering in order these two suggested divergent features of the Hooker case and this case, we think the operation of the rates and rules arises out of their approval by the Interstate Commerce Commission, and that act alone *474 makes them the law of the case. It has been practically so held. Kansas City So. R. Co. v. Carle, 227 U. S. 639, 33 S. Ct. 391, and cases cited.

If a failure by the agent at Augusta to post the rates and rules there may abrogate an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission, for its approval amounts to an order, then the operation of that order would depend wholly upon the diligence of many local agents at many localities.

We are mindful of the possible embarrassment of the traveling public which may result from this conclusion.

A passenger boarding a train in Augusta to travel less than fifty miles to Edgefield must take notice of six printed pages of rules and regulations made up by the carrier for his government and filed at the city of Washington. Nor is the duty put upon the carrier, who made and knows the rules, to advise the passenger that such rules exist.

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Related

Rhodes v. Iowa
170 U.S. 412 (Supreme Court, 1898)
Heyman v. Southern Railway Co.
203 U.S. 270 (Supreme Court, 1906)
Kansas City Southern Railway Co. v. Carl
227 U.S. 639 (Supreme Court, 1913)
Boston & Maine Railroad v. Hooker
233 U.S. 97 (Supreme Court, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 S.E. 158, 100 S.C. 469, 1915 S.C. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-southern-railway-co-sc-1915.