Knight v. Georgia Southwestern & Gulf Railway Co.
This text of 90 S.E. 81 (Knight v. Georgia Southwestern & Gulf Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinions
1. The dismissal of an action on demurrer to the petition' is a final judgment, and will support a writ of error.
2. Where a bill of exceptions recites the dismissal of an action on demurrer, and assigns error on the sustaining of the demurrer, and states that the plaintiff in error “presents this his bill of exceptions in order that the error complained of may be considered,” a motion to dismiss the writ of error, on the ground that there is no exception to the final judgment, is not well taken.
3. Prior to May 1, 1916, it was not unlawful in Georgia for common carriers to transport and deliver intoxicating liquors, even in large quantities. It is the duty of a common carrier to accept and carry all lawful freight, — a duty which, even as to intoxicating liquors, as the law stood in 1914, could be enforced by mandamus or other appropriate proceedings. L. & N. R. Co. v. F. W. Cook Brewing Co., 223 U. S. 70 (32 Sup. Ct. 189, 56 L. ed. 355); Adams Express Company v. Kentucky, 238 U. S. 190 (35 Sup. Ct. 824, 59 L. ed. 1267). Hence, in 1914, for a railroad company to, receive and transport intoxicating liquors, duly delivered to it and consigned to a person whose name appeared on the labels on the packages, did not entitle the consignee to maintain an action for libel against the railroad company, even though he had notified an agent of the company that his name was being improperly used in the shipments of liquor, and that the shipment of liquor in his name was against his express orders.
4. Though it is alleged that the railroad company knew that the whisky was not really consigned to the plaintiff, it is also alleged that the whisky was received by the railroad company as a freight shipment [540]*540addressed to one of that name in the city of Albany; and it then and there became the duty of the corporation, as a common carrier, to notify either by mail or personally, one of that name and address that such freight had been received. Until after a reasonable time expires after the arrival of freight, the railroad company is liable as a common carrier, but if the railroad company gives notice to one to whom the freight is addressed, the liability of the railroad company as a common carrier ceases, and that of a warehouseman begins. In any event it was the duty of the common carrier,.under the rules of the- railroad commission of Georgia, to give this notice. Rule 1-A of the storage rules of the railroad commission of' Georgia is as follows: “Upon the arrival at destination of any and all freights, the delivering line shall, within twenty-four hours thereafter, give to consignees thereof legal notice of such arrival, and the giving of such legal notice as hereinafter defined shall be a condition precedent to the collection by railroad companies of any storage charges upon any shipment, notice of arrival of which has not been thus served’upon the consignee, and no storage charges shall be assessed nor collected other than as authorized by these rules. Eor failure to give such legal notice of arrival the railroad company at fault shall, within thirty days after demand in writing is made therefor, pay to the consignee so offended the sum of one dollar per car per day on carload shipments, and one cent per hundred pounds per day on less than carload shipments, for each day during which the terms of this rule are not complied with.” Rule 2 reads as follows: “Legal notice, as herein understood and intended, may be either served by mail or personally; and the leaving of notice at the consignee’s residence, or usual place of doing business, shall also be considered personal notice. In ease of carload shipments such notice must show the contents, point of origin, the initials and number or numbers of the car or cars containing the same, and if the shipment has been transferred en routej the initials and numbers of the car or cars in which originally shipped and from which transferred. In case of less than carload shipments such notice must show the point of origin, the character of the freight in question, the weight, and the amount of charges due thereon.” It will be observed that in these rules a penalty is provided for failure on the part of the carrier to obey them, inuring to the benefit of the consignee; and it can not be held that the railroad company, in obeying the rules laid down by the railroad commission, as a public policy of the State, would subject itself to a suit of this character. This court holds that under these rules, though the railroad company had been notified through one of its agents that the plaintiff had not ordered any intoxicating -liquors and would not receive any, it was the duty of the railroad company to address a notice by mail to one of the name in which the freight came, or to notify him personally; and for so doing it could not in any way be held liable in damages.
5. Libel can not be predicated of a true statement. Hence, where liquor has been received at a railroad depot, consigned to a named person, a simple statement of this fact is not actionable as libel, even though the liquor was wrongfully shipped to the named person. Whether a person [541]*541to whom liquor is shipped against his protest, and for the purpose of humiliating him or subjecting him to hatred, contempt, or ridicule, might have some other form of action is not involved in this case, under the pleadings; and therefore is not decided.
6. Notwithstanding it may be a violation of law for a common carrier to deliver intoxicating liquors to a person using an assumed or fictitious name, even if it be the true name of another person, and though the receipt for the shipment be signed in the assumed or fictitious name, it does not give a right of action for libel against the carrier to the person whose name is thus assumed.
7. Where one person, in order to obtain liquor consigned in the name of another, forges the name of the consignee to an order for the liquor, it is not actionable for the carrier to retain in its files the forged order, even though' its files may be subject to the inspection of the company’s employees, and even though the carrier knows the document is a forgery. The carrier would have the right to keep the forged order as evidence, or for any other lawful purpose. And to allow its employees to inspect the paper when necessary in the transaction of the company’s business would not be a publication in such a sense as to render the company liable in an action for libel. There is no allegation in this case that the forged order was published otherwise; and there is no presumption that others saw it, in view of the statutory prohibition against such information being given out. See § 15 of the Interstate Commerce Act; Ezell v. Atlanta, 140 Ga. 197; s. c. 13 Ga. App. 95.
S. The court did not err in dismissing the action on demurrer.
Judgment affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
90 S.E. 81, 18 Ga. App. 539, 1916 Ga. App. LEXIS 1108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knight-v-georgia-southwestern-gulf-railway-co-gactapp-1916.