Keeney v. Grand Trunk Railway Co.

59 Barb. 104, 1870 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 131
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 59 Barb. 104 (Keeney v. Grand Trunk Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keeney v. Grand Trunk Railway Co., 59 Barb. 104, 1870 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 131 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1870).

Opinion

Johnson, J.

It is quite difficult .to see how this detention of the train on the side track, for this length of time, can be regarded and held to be an act of negligence, in any degree. It was the deliberate, intentional act of the division freight superintendent of the defendant’s road. It is precisely of the character of the act of any Other party who, after he has undertaken the performance of a job, deliberately stops, and refuses to proceed until he -has-performed another job, subsequently undertaken. To call this negligence, or a [135]*135failure to perform by reason of negligence, would be a misnomer, and an abuse of legal terms. It is simply a deliberate, intentional breach, in no way arising from want of care and attention during performance, but solely from the will. of the defaulting party, claiming the right to perform whenever it should suit its interest or convenience to perform. The defendant refused to be bound, or to undertake upon the ordinary rules governing common carriers of such property, but-insisted upon a special contract, which should constitute the rule and regulate both the rights and liabilities of the respective parties. This special contract was entered into, and must control according to its true intent and meaning. What the meaning is, the court must determine. The defendant received the animals upon its cars, under this contract, and by its terms undertook to forward them to Buffalo, to the consignee, “subject to their tariff, and the conditions expressed.” The tariff" was, confessedly, paid, and all that remained to be done was for the defendant to forward the stock, according to their contract." The stock was started the same day it was received upon the cars, and taken a part of the way to Buffalo; and had the cars containing the stock been permitted to go on with the train, would have reached the place of destination the same night. Instead of this, the cars containing this property were, by a positive and peremptory order, when within sixty or seventy miles of the place of destination, detached from the train and placed upon a side track, where they were kept three or four days, and where several of the animals perished from hunger and the inclemency of the season, and others were greatly reduced in flesh, weakened, and otherwise injured. . They were detained at a place where they could neither be fed nor watered, and where they could not with, any safety be unloaded and taken out of the defendant’s custody.

The only question in the case, in my judgment, is [136]*136whether, according to the “ conditions expressed ” in the special undertaking, the defendant had the legal right to suspend the performance of the undertaking which they had commenced, in this manner, and for this length of time, without rendering itself liable to the plaintiffs for damages occasioned by such suspension. I am clearly of the opinion that it had not. Whatever may be said of these conditions, it certainly cannot be affirmed that they extend to a case of damage arising from the deliberate and intentional act of the defendant,»or its agents, in suspending performance after it had been commenced, and refusing to perform, or to allow performance, until after the property, or a portion thereof, had been destroyed, and other undertakings could be performed. In other words, the defendant did not reserve to itself the right to perform, or not, as it might afterwards elect, or to perform only as it might suit its interest, convenience or pleasure. Such an arrangement, had this been one of that character, could hardly be called a contract, as it would lack the essential ingredient of mutuality of obligation. e The defendant here did undertake to forward the property to a particular place, but by the limitation in the second condition, it did not undertake to forward it “by any particular train, or at any specified hour.” Bor did it undertake to become “responsible for the delivery of the animals within any certain time, or for any particular market.” But to hold that this limitation of duty and liability thus expressed, gave to the defendant the right to perform, or not, as it might choose, or to perform only when it might be for its interest, convenience or pleasure to do so, and suspend performance when once commenced, until all the animals should have perished and become worthless to the owners, would be simply monstrous. Bo court, in my opinion, can be found to give, or tolerate, such an interpretation of the defendant’s undertaking. It must have a reasonable interpretation.

[137]*137Where the object of a contract is to relieve a party undertaking to perform, from some of the obligations and liabilities which the law imposes upon him in the absence of any express stipulation, it is to be construed in reference to that object and purpose. G-eneral expressions exempting a party from liability on account of injuries to property committed to his charge, should never be held to apply to injuries arising from the wrongful acts of the party undertaking, unless it is expressly so stipulated. It cannot be supposed that the owner of property intends to give a party to whom he intrusts, for the time being, its care and custody, license to injure or destroy it wantonly, with impunity, unless it is so expressly “ nominated in the bond” or undertaking.' It is quite incredible that the law holds differently, either in Canada or elsewhere in civilized countries. Courts never construe contracts so as to favor criminal acts, or intentional misconduct, unless constrained to do so by the clearest and most apt terms of the instrument.

If I am right in supposing that this is not a case of an injury arising from negligence in any degree, but a case of an injury arising from a deliberate and intentional refusal to perform, for the time being, then it is quite clear that the act of Barnard, the superintendent, was the act-of the defendant, and the defendant is liable. In every case where a party who has engaged to perform certain labor or services, employs others to perform on his account, and such others, after commencing to perform, refuse to go on, or to allow the work to proceed, such refusal is the refusal of their employer, and if it amounts to a violation of the contract, it is the breach of the employer. Their misconduct, in such a case, is his misconduct, so far as it operates upon the contract- and causes non-performance.

The order of the superintendent, who had charge of the freight business on that portion of the road over which [138]*138the property in question was to be forwarded, was positive, to keep “back all stock, staves and lumber,” and the reason is assigned in the order. “ There will be no duty on stock.” The reciprocity treaty was about to expire, and other property on hand to be transported would become subject to the payment of a duty to our government if not forwarded forthwith. Therefore this agent of the defendant took it upon himself to discriminate in favor of .the owners of such property, to the prejudice of the plaintiffs. Their property which was then on its passage was stopped, deliberately, upon this consideration, and the préference given to other property, contrary to the ordinary course of business.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 Barb. 104, 1870 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keeney-v-grand-trunk-railway-co-nysupct-1870.