Leitch v. Union R. Transp.

15 F. Cas. 267, 7 Chi. Leg. News 291, 1875 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 182
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedMarch 29, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 15 F. Cas. 267 (Leitch v. Union R. Transp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leitch v. Union R. Transp., 15 F. Cas. 267, 7 Chi. Leg. News 291, 1875 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 182 (N.D. Ill. 1875).

Opinion

BLODGETT, District Judge

(charging jury). This is an'action to recover the value of fifty-one barrels of highwines, burned while in the hands of the defendant as a common carrier between this city and the city of New York. The admitted facts seem to be these: That on the 10th of March, 1871, the plaintiffs, who were distillers in this city, shipped by the defendant, who was a common carrier between this city and New York City, one hundred barrels of highwines consigned to New York City. They were loaded into cars; fifty barrels in each car, and when at a short distance from here, on the night of the shipment some part of the train containing said cars took fire and one of the cars containing plaintiffs’ wines was wholly destroyed with its contents and one barrel in the other car, so that the plaintiffs lost fifty-one barrels, making an aggregate of 3,294 s/ioo gallons, which were worth in this market at that time, eighty-six cents per gallon, as is shown by the plaintiffs’ proof, which is not contradicted. No special or gross negligence is shown or insisted upon, but the plaintiffs claim that the defendant is liable, as a common carrier, for this loss, and bring this suit to recover the value of the property so burned and destroyed.

The defendant insists by way of defense, that it assumed the transportation of said wines under a special contract, limiting its liability to twenty dollars per barrel in case of loss; and it is admitted that very soon after the loss, acting upon information that the contents of only one car had been burned, the defendant tendered to the plaintiffs one thousand dollars, which the plaintiffs refused to receive, and a few monuis since, the defendant has paid into this court one thousand and twenty dollars, being, as is claimed by the defendant, the value by express contract in case of loss of the fifty-one barrels of wines in controversy.

Where there is no express contract between a common carrier and shipper, the law imposes upon the carrier a very severe and strict responsibility, making the carrier liable for all loss or damage that property shall sustain while in the carrier’s hands as a carrier, except such loss or damage as shall occur by the act of God or the public enemy. It is, however, competent for a carrier to limit his responsibility by special contract with the shipper, and when he does so, the contract, and not the rule of law in the absence of a contract, is the measure of responsibility; that is, you must refer to the contract made between the parties to ascertain the carrier’s responsibility, and not to the law.

The defendant claims that the contract between itself and the plaintiffs was by a special bilí of lading, by the -express terms of which it was agreed that the value of said wines was 20 dollars per barrel; and the important inquiry is: first, whether such an express contract was made; second, whether, if made, it is binding on the plaintiffs, and fixes the measure of the defendant’s responsibility.

it is admitted that the wines in question were loaded at the stock yards, and what is called a dray ticket was given to the plaintiffs by the railroad agent who received and loaded the goods. This dray ticket was a simple memorandum showing the amount of property shipped, and the names of the shippers and consignees. It may or it may not have had upon it words indicating a limitation of liability to 20 dollars per'barrel. The proof is conflicting on that point. But that, I think, cuts no figure in the case, as it is admitted that by the course of business this ticket was to be presented at the proper city office of the defendant, where a bill of lading, which was the contract between the parties, was to be made out; and on the morning after this shipment was made, one of the plaintiffs presented this ticket at the defendant’s office, and a bill of lading was made out and given to one of the plaintiffs who took it away from the offiee without objection to its contents. So far the parties agree as to the main facts in regard to the shipment, the ticket and the bill of lading. The bill of lading itself has unfortunately been destroyed, and we are compelled to resort to parol evidence to ascertain its contents. The witnesses on the part of the defendant, two of them at least, swear positively that this bill of lading contained a clause fixing the value of the wines shipped at 20 dollars per barrel. This is positive and unequivocal testimony. While the plaintiff, Col. Townsend, who procured the bill of lading, says that he cannot state from his recollection whether the bill of lading contained the clause in question or not, but says that he did not notice it, that his attention was not called to it, and he did not know that the defendant had in any manner limited its liability. The defendant’s witnesses state that the bill of lading was substantially like the one offered in evidence in all its terms, and that the clause limiting the liability was written in this instrument as it is in the one before -you, instead of being printed in it.

The defendant has also introduced evidence [269]*269tending to show that there had been a usage for many years prior to this shipment by all railroad and transportation companies running east from Chicago, to ship highwines as fourth-class freight, with this limitation of liability in the contract, and that this usage was and had been for many years known to and acted upon by all 'shippers of high-wines from this city east, and that one of the ■plaintiffs had been for several years more or less connected with the manufacture and shipment of highwines here, and was familiar, to some extent, with the rates, if not with the forms of doing business. The testimony also tends to show that when high-wines were shipped without this limitation of liability, much higher rates were exacted, and that highwines could not at the time in question be profitably shipped to the Eastern market, except at the low fourth-class rate. The plaintiff, Colonel Townsend, also admits that at the time of this shipment the freight was about fifty cents per hundred pounds on his highwines, which was the fourth class rate. This testimony was allowed to go before you, because it tended to show the general course and manner of doing this kind of business, and thus in the absence of the contract itself tended to show what the bill of lading or contract probably contained, it being but fair to assume that the plaintiffs transacted their business with the defendant in substantially the same manner and on the same terms as others engaged in the same class of business; but this is only circumstantial testimony, and is only to be considered by you as such.

The plaintiffs state that they had no knowledge of the different classification of freight, and did not know whether their wines went as first, second, third or fourtli class freight, but this is not the material point in the case, the important question being, did they ship on the same terms that others did, and did their bill of lading contain this clause limiting the defendant's liability. Whether this bill of lading or contract contained this clause limiting the value to $20 per barrel, is a question of fact, to be determined by you from the proof. If you find that the contract did contain this clause, or in other words, if you are satisfied from the evidence by a fair preponderance that the bill introduced in evidence is a substantial copy of the one given by the defendant to the plaintiff for the wines in controversy, then the legal effect or construction to be given to the contract thus presented, is a question of law for the court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 F. Cas. 267, 7 Chi. Leg. News 291, 1875 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leitch-v-union-r-transp-ilnd-1875.