Insurance Co. v. Railroad Co.

104 U.S. 146, 26 L. Ed. 679, 14 Otto 146, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 1982
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 14, 1881
Docket47
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 104 U.S. 146 (Insurance Co. v. Railroad Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Insurance Co. v. Railroad Co., 104 U.S. 146, 26 L. Ed. 679, 14 Otto 146, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 1982 (1881).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Harlan

delivered the opinion of the court.

The cotton, for the recovery of the value of which this action was brought against the St. Louis, Vandalia, Terre Haute, and Indianapolis Railroad Company, the- defendant in error, was, at the time of shipment, owned by Adolphus Meir & Co., of St. Louis, who, for a valuable consideration, have assigned to the St. ■ Louis Insurance Company, the- plaintiff in error, all their'claim on account of the said loss. The parties having, by. proper written stipulation, waived a jury, the case was tried by the court, and judgment given for the railroad company.

The facts set forth in a special finding, covering many pages of the printed transcript, so far as they are deemed essential to a clear understanding of the case, are as follows: —

*147 The Erie and Pacific Despatch Company, a Kansas corporation, having agencies in different eiti'es of the Union, and whose business it was to solicit and forward freights over trunk rail-road lines between St. Louis and New York, received the cotton in question from Meir & Co., under agreements for its ■transportation to Liverpool, for a through rate, expressed in English money. No direction was given as to the route over, which it should be carried to the seaboard, nor. were any bills of lading then executed.

The St. Louis Transfer Company, having received from the despatch company the warehouse receipts, and having been engaged by it for that .purpose, hauled the cotton to East St. Louis, and there delivered it, on Account of that company, to the defendant, taking receipts therefor. By the dray tickets of the transfer .company the cotton was consigned by the despatch company to C. G. Meir & Co., London. The defendant had not, on previous occasions, issued bills of lading for freight shipped over its line bv the despatch company, nor did it do so for any part of diese shipments. But, in accordance with its custom, it made a way-bill for the cotton to Indianapolis. The cotton was carried safely over the defendant’s road from East St. Louis to Indianapolis; thence, pursu-, ant to directions of the'despatch company,- and without change . of cars, over the Pittsburg, Cincinnati, and St. Louis Railroad to Urbana, Ohio, where it was put into other cars suitable ■ to the change of gauge at that point; and thence over the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad and the Erie Railway, to Jersey City.

The cotton was destroyed by an accidental fire which occurred in Jersey City on the 21st of March, 1873.

Within the usual time after the respective shipments from East St. Louis the despatch company executed and delivered to Meir & Co., of St. Louis, bills of lading for the cottbn. Each bill disclosed the quantity of cotton, its destination, the names of the consignors and consignees, the agreed rates in English money, and purported to be the “ Through bill of lading of the Erie and Pacific Despatch, and the Oceanic Steam Navigation Co, from St. Louis to Liverpool, calling at Queenstown.” With the last-named company, known as the White Star Line, *148 the-despatch company had an arrangement, by which it could contract for shipments from New York to Liverpool at rates given by the steamship line, the latter agreeing-.to receive the goods at its dock in Jersey City,- and transport them to Liverpool. But the despatch company had no power to bind the steamship line for any risks incurred in the inland transportation, nor did it receive from the line any commission or other compensation. Its remuneration came exclusively from certain arrangements with railroad companies, to which we shall presently refer. . ,

The bills of lading delivered to Meir & Co. contained, among other provisions, the following: —

“ That the said Erie and Pacific Despatch and its connections which receive said property shall not be liable . . . for loss or damage by . . . fire . . . nor for damage to perishable property of any kind occasioned by delays from any cause; . . . nor for loss or clamage on any article of property whatever by fire or other casualty while in transit, or while in deposit or in places of transshipment or at depots or landings at all points of delivery. . . .
■ “ It is further agreed that said Erie and Pacific Despatch and its connections shall not be held accountable for any damage or deficiency in packages after the same shall have been receipted for in good order by consignees, or their agents, at or by the next carrier beyond the point to which the bill of lading contracts. Consignees are to pay freight and charges upon the goods or merchandise in lots or parts of lots as they maybe delivered to them.
“ It is further stipulated and agreed, that in case of any loss, detriment, or damage-done to, or sustained by any of the property hetein receipted for during such transportation, whereby any legal liability or responsibility shall' or may be incurred, that company alone shall be held answerable therefor in whose actual custody the same may be at the time of the happening of such loss, detriment, or damage, and the carrier so liable shall' have the full benefit of any insurance that may have been effected upon or on account of said goods.
“ And it is further agreed,'that the amount of the loss or damage so accruing, so far as it shall fall upon' the carriers above described, shall be computed at the value or cost of said goods or property at the place and time of shipment under this bill of lading.
“ This contract is. executed and accomplished, and the liability *149 of the Erie and Pacific Despatch as common carriers thereunder terminates, on the delivery of the goods or property to the steam? ship at White Star wharf; Jersey City, when the liability of the steamship company commences, and'not before. .
* * # * * • # #
“ Notice. — In accepting this bill of lading the shipper, or other agent of the owner of the property carried, expressly accepts and agrees to all its- stipulations, exceptions, and conditions.”

The right of recovery in this ease against the defendant is rested by the plaintiff in error in part, if not altogether, upon certain business relations existing at and before the time of these shipments, as well between the despatch company'and the railroad companies over whose lines the cotton was carried, as between the railroad companies themselves. It is necessary, therefore, to ascertain what were the precise relations held by these several corporations to each other.

During the period covered by these' transactions, and' for some time prior thereto, the Erie _and Pacific Despatch Company had arrangements with sundry railroads having connections terminating in New York, under-which it was empowered to contract for the transportation of goods according to the tariff rates, or any special rates furnished by the respective railroad companies. It had a separate agreement with each of the railroad companies already named, in some cases oral, in others-written.

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Bluebook (online)
104 U.S. 146, 26 L. Ed. 679, 14 Otto 146, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 1982, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/insurance-co-v-railroad-co-scotus-1881.