Marriner v. Baltimore Steam Packet Co.

1 Balt. C. Rep. 389
CourtBaltimore City Superior Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Balt. C. Rep. 389 (Marriner v. Baltimore Steam Packet Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marriner v. Baltimore Steam Packet Co., 1 Balt. C. Rep. 389 (Md. Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinion

RITCHIE, J.

A common carrier may reasonably limit its common law liability by contract and a contract that it shall not be liable for loss caused by fire is good; but such a contract will not protect the carrier from liability if the loss by fire results from its own negligence.

Under such a contract, the loss by fire being shown, the onus is on the plaintiff to show negligence.

The adoption after a fire of additional safeguards for the future is not an admission of responsibility for the past and the fact is not evidence of prior negligence.

Opinion of Judge Ritchie on the prayers.

The defendant in this case is a common carrier. The goods for the loss of which this suit is brought were delivered to it for transportation on the 14th day of June, 1892. With the exception of one package, they were destroyed by fire on the defendant’s wharf on the same day, and the defendant is sued for damages for their loss.

There being no evidence to show that the loss of these goods was due to the act of God or the public enemy, the defendant would, of course, be liable unless protected by some valid limitation on its common law liability. The contract of shipment, however, provides that the defendant is not to be liable for damages in case the goods in question should be lost by fire. There can be no doubt now that common carriers may make contracts reasonably limiting their liability, and a contract which exempts them from liability in case of loss by fire is held to be a reasonable one. The plaintiff has proved the failure to deliver these goods; the defendant replies by proof that they were lost by fire. This exemption from liability for loss by fire is not, however, as absolute as its terms import. It is well settled that such a contract will not protect the carrier if the loss be caused by its own negligence. Therefore when the defendant shows that the goods in question were lost by fire, the plaintiff in turn, alleges that they were so lost because of defendant’s own negligence. This brings the case down to the question of negligence vet non on the part of the defendant in the loss of these goods by the fire testified to. The onus of proving negligence, the loss by fire having been shown, is clearly upon the plaintiff, and in order to warrant the Court in submitting the case to the jury there must be evidence that tends to prove negligence; the plaintiff alleges negligence, he must show it. In the language adopted by the Court of Appeals in Eoy’s case, it is necessary, in order to meet the onus of showing negligence to produce evidence upon which the jury might reasonably conclude that there was negligence. However clear the general proposition may be that it is the duty of a defendant to use ordinary care and diligence, no case can properly be submitted to a jury simply upon the general proposition. To warrant the Court in letting any given case go to the jury in which the question of neg[390]*390ligence is involved, there must be evidence from which the jury might reasonably find negligence.

We now come to the consideration of the evidence offered in this case to show negligence; if there is any evidence upon which the jury might reasonably conclude that there was negligence, then of course the case must be submitted to the jury; if the plaintiff has failed to produce any evidence from which negligence might reasonably be inferred, then the Court is not at liberty to allow the case to go any further. Now with respect to the fire in question, there is no evidence of any negligent act of commission upon the part of the defendant, there is no evidence of a'ny affirmative negligence, so that if there is any evidence of negligence in the case, it must be found in some act of omission. First then with regard to the origin of the fire. There is no evidence whatever in the case that tells us how this fire originated. There is no presumption of negligence from the fact of the fire, and as there is nothing to show how this fire originated, it is clear that there is a failure of evidence to show negligence with respect to its origin, so that the question of negligence as connected with the origin of the fire is out of the case.

If there be any negligence in the case it must be referred then, to some failure of dirty upon the part of the defendant with respect to the spread of the fire; there must be evidence of some negligence in the failure of defendant to extinguish the fire.

As to the extinguishment of the fire, there is no evidence of any negligence in respect to the prompt and active use of such facilities as the defendant had upon its premises for such purpose. There being no evidence of negligence in respect to the origin of the fire, and no negligence in respect to the efforts of defendant, with such means and facilities as it had, to prevent its spread, the negligence, if any' exists must be found in the failure of the defendant to provide proper means and precautions for extinguishing the fire. It thus becomes necessary for the plaintiff to show that there was a failure to provide certain reasonable precautions for the extinguishment of fire, and that had such precautions been provided, the fire, in all probability, would not have extended and the goods would not have been lost.

The plaintiff sets up an alleged failure in two respects. One is as to the number of watchmen. He claims that there ought to have been more than one watchman during the day. One purpose of having a watchman, and the duty of a watchman, is discovery. I do hot think there is any evidence in the case to show that, no matter what number of watchmen the defendant might have had, the fire would have been discovered an instant sooner than it was discovered. The testimony shows tthat there were sixty stevedores and fourteen clerks in the employ of the defendant at the time of the fire in question; there were thus seventy-four employees of this company in and around the premises when the fire occurred; all had their various work, but, as was said during the argument, each one was practically a watchman; each one, of course, was ready to give an alarm if any indication of fire appeared. But, coming down a little closer, we find that the one watchman, who was on duty during the day, was in the immediate vicinity of the place where the fire started, and he testifies that he had been at the very place about one minute only before the fire was discovered; that he had not gone from there more than about a minute when he heard the alarm; and that when he was there he saw no evidence whatever of the existence of any fire. Now, then, however many watchmen there might have been, they would not have gone around in couples; they would have been scattered around the premises and only one at any given point. But the evidence shows that while there was but one day watchman, that one was on the very spot where it was important for him to be within about one minute of the discoverey of the fire. Not only did this watchman happen to be at this part of the wharf at the time, but there were three other men who were working on the very pile of cotton where and when the fire appeared, Jones, Stanley and Brown, and they had been working therefor some time. The fire was first discovered by Brown; he instantly called the attention of Jones and Stanley to the fire, and then immediately ran up the wharf and gave the alarm. This is the evidence [391]

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Related

Columbia & Puget Sound Railroad v. Hawthorne
144 U.S. 202 (Supreme Court, 1892)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Balt. C. Rep. 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriner-v-baltimore-steam-packet-co-mdsuperctbalt-1893.