Lindley v. Richmond & Danville Railroad

88 N.C. 547
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 88 N.C. 547 (Lindley v. Richmond & Danville Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lindley v. Richmond & Danville Railroad, 88 N.C. 547 (N.C. 1883).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

The plaintiff, Lindley, on behalf of his firm, on October 28, 1880, directed the defendant’s agent at Greensboro, using for that purpose a printed form prepared by the company and addressed to “ the agent of the Richmond & Dan-ville railroad company” at that place, to transport three boxes of fruit trees, thence to Burnsville, Alabama, at the foot of which was a printed memorandum, “see conditions, other side.”

On the reverse page are numerous printed conditions of which that numbered 12 is in these words:

“This company will not receipt for or guaranty the transportation of any article of freight beyond the point to which bill of lading is given. Goods or property consigned to any place off the company’s line or road, or to any point or place beyond its termini, will be sent forward by a carrier or a freightman, when there are such, in the usual manner, the company acting for the purpose of delivering to such carrier, as the agent of the consignor or consignee, and not as carrier, they agreeing not to hold the company liable or responsible for any loss, damage or injury to the property, after the same shall have been sent from any warehouse or station of the company.”

Atthe same tithe,the said agent gave a receipt,in a printed form, bearing the heading, “Piedmont Air-Line Railway,” of the said goods, marked, “J. Van Lindley, Ala., via Selma, Rome & Dalton R. R.” as follows:

“Greensboro, Oct. 28th, 1880.

[No. 20.] Received from J. Van Lindley the following property in apparent good order, contents and value unknown, to be transported to Burnsville, Ala., upon the conditions endorsed *549 hereon,” describing the articles as stated. The conditions to which reference is made are the same as those on the preceding paper.

Thereupon, at the same place and date, a bill of lading was signed by the agent and delivered to Lindley, designated at the top as a “through bill of lading,” and with a similar marginal marking, as follows:

“Received of J. Van Lindley, in outward apparent good order, inward condition of contents unknown, and for which (viz.: condition of contents) this company or any of its connections to place of delivery shall not be responsible, —packages, value unknown, to be transported by the Richmond & Danville railroad company to Charlotte, thence by connecting lines to Burnsville, Ala., three boxes fruit trees, released and freight guaranteed, (the italics are in the bill) supposed to be marked and numbered, as per margin, to be transported as above specified and delivered to the agents of the connecting railroad companies or steamers, and by them to be delivered to the next connecting railroad company or steamer, until said goods or merchandise shall have reached the point named in the receipt. As the packages aforesaid must pass through the custody of several carriers, it is understood as a part of the consideration on which said packages are received, that the exceptions from liability made by such carriers respectively shall operate in the carriage of them respectively of said packages, as though inserted herein at length * * *. And it is expressly understood, that for all loss or damage occurring in the transit of said packages, the legal remedy shall be against the particular carrier in whose custody the said packages may actually be at the time of the happening thereof; it being understood that the Richmond & Danville railroad company, in receiving the said packages to be forwarded as aforesaid, assumes no other responsibility for their safety or safe carriage *550 than may be incurred on its own road, and it is expressly confined to the road and stations of the Richmond & Danville railroad company.”

The goods were forthwith, and without delay, conveyed on the train of the.next day to Charlotte, and on the 30th day of October were delivered to the Charlotte, Columbia & Augusta railroad, arriving at their destination on the 15th of November thereafter.

The Richmond & Danville, the North Carolina, and the Charlotte, Columbia & Augusta railroads, all under the control of the defendant company, constitute in their connections what is known as the Piedmont Air-Line Railway. There are three other lines of railroad to be traversed after leaving Augusta before the articles reach the place of final delivery to the consignee, and six days is the usual time required in transportation, and it was not shown on which of the roads, south of Charlotte, the default occurred. In consequence of the delay, the plaintiff’s numerous contracts of sale of the trees to persons at and near Burnsville, to whom those sent were delivered on the 9th day of November, were forfeited; to obviate the losses of which, they made strenuous efforts to dispose of them to others, and, as compared to the sums to be paid under the contracts, suffered a damage of several hundred dollars.

The defendant company, under the contract expressed in the bill of lading, specifically undertakes to carry the goods over its road from Greensboro to Charlotte, and then, acting as a forwarding agent of the plaintiff, to deliver them to the next carrier on the line of transportation to the point of ultimate destination in Alabama, and the like obligation is assumed for each of the successive' carriers.

This duty would in law result from an association of the companies, under a common arrangement among them to receive from each other and forward the goods on to the place of ultimate delivery, in the absence of a contract by the receiving company *551 itself to carry the goods over the whole route, using the succcessive lines as agencies of its own in fulfilling its stipulation. Indeed, it seems to have been doubted whether the contract for the entire transportation did not rest solely upon the receiving carrier; and, again, whether one corporation could contract to convey goods beyond the limits of the state which gave the company corporate existence. But it is now settled, in accordance with the necessities of commerce, that a receiving company may undertake to carry goods beyond the limits of its own road and of the state in which it is chartered, and assume all the responsibility incident to such undertaking; while in the absence of such contract, “it is only liable for the extent of its owm route and the safe storage and delivery to the next carrier.” 2 Redf. on Railways, §§ 162, 163, and notes; Phillips v. R. R. Co., 78 N. C., 294.

The terms of the defendant’s contract are plainly and distinctly defined in the words, “ to be transported as above specified, and delivered to the agents of the connecting railroad companies or steamers, and by them to be delivered to the next connecting railroad or steamer, until said goods or merchandise shall have reached the point named in the receipt.”

The obligation resting on each, attaches as the goods pass into its custody, and ceases only when safely carried and delivered to the successor. The defendant company, it is explicitly declared, “assumes no other responsibility for their safety or safe carriage than may be incurred on its own road, and it is expressly confined tothe roads and

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Bluebook (online)
88 N.C. 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindley-v-richmond-danville-railroad-nc-1883.