Michigan Central Railroad v. Harville

136 Ill. App. 243, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 612
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 3, 1907
DocketGen. No. 13,389
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 136 Ill. App. 243 (Michigan Central Railroad v. Harville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michigan Central Railroad v. Harville, 136 Ill. App. 243, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 612 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Cook county, in favor of the appellees against the appellant for $386. The facts are simple and almost undisputed.

The appellees were produce and fruit commission men doing business on South Water street in Chicago. During the apple season of the year 1899, and for eight years previous, they shipped several cars of apples a day into Chicago from outside points. They had warehouses at different places in Michigan where they bought fruit and from which they shipped it into Chicago. One was at Mears, a station on the Chicago and West Michigan Railway about 225 miles from Chicago by a rail route from Mears to ¡New Buffalo by the Chicago & West Michigan Road, and from ¡New Buffalo to Chicago by the Michigan Central Road.

There was competition for fruit freights from Michigan to Chicago between railroads running into Chicago. The appellees, as stated, were considerable shippers from Mears and other Michigan points to Chicago, and within a week or two of October 16, 1899, a solicitor of freight for the Michigan Central Railroad Company, previously known as such by the appellees, came to Mr. Jones, one of the partners, and complained that he had been informed by the agent of the Michigan Central at Allegan that the appellees were shipping from Michigan via the Lake Shore Road instead of by way of the Michigan Central. He solicited the business for his road. Jones replied that the Michigan Central v’as a more convenient road for his goods to arrive by, because its delivery point was close by South Water street, but that the Chicago & West Michigan was not furnishing them cars. The agent asked, “If we can make some arrangements to furnish cars from here, can we have the traffic ?” and received a favorable answer. He then announced his intention of taking the matter up, and from that date on the appellees found no trouble in getting cars from the West Michigan.

On Saturday, the 14th of October, 1899, the loading of Chicago & West Michigan car Ho. 1884 with winter apples for cold storage in Chicago began at Mears. A Mr. Post in the employ of appellees represented them in Mears, but the appellee Jones himself was in Mears and saw the loading of the car begun on Saturday. The packing was completed under Mr. Post’s direction on Monday the 16th. The car was of the ordinary box construction, but as it was used for carrying fruit it had both wooden and screen doors. The purpose of equipping fruit cars with screen doors is to allow ventilation in weather which is warm enough to injure the fruit if it is enclosed in closed cars. In such case the wooden doors are run back and the screen doors put forward to take their place.

The fruit was packed in barrels and the barrels placed in tiers according to the approved methods of fruit packers, allowing ventilation around them. The apples were in excellent condition when placed in the car. The wooden doors of the car were not closed on Sunday, nor until after Mr. Post had finished the loading of the car and received a shipping receipt or bill of lading from the station agent of the Chicago & West Michigan Railway on Monday. Post then went back to the orchard in which he was packing apples, and the agent took charge of and sealed the car, evidently shutting the wooden doors. The temperature was then and there not above sixty degrees Fahrenheit. The .car was dispatched by the railroad agent to Hew Buffalo en route to Chicago in the regular course of business on Monday, October 16th, and the shipping receipt with a manifest describing the contents of the car was sent by mail by Mr. Post to Harville & Jones. They received it Wednesday, October 18th. It was dated at Hears, was from the Chicago & West Michigan Railway Company, and the note of destination was “Harville and Jones, Chicago, Ill., via M. C.,” M. C. meaning Michigan Central. Mr. Jones took the receipt on that day, Wednesday the 18th, to the local freight office of the Michigan Central Railroad Company in Chicago, and interviewed the chief clerk about the car. By comparison of the testimony of this chief clerk, E. E. Tebbits, and that of James J. McGrath, the “reconsigning clerk” of the Michigan Central at the same office, it appears that at other seasons and in ordinary times the car, routed as - it was, would have gone to the Michigan Central team tracks at the foot of South Water street and Randolph street in Chicago for delivery, but at that time, because, as McGrath testifies, “They were getting so many apples” (it being the height of the apple shipping season), and because “the apples that were coming in were being ordered all around the city to the different warehouses,” it would have been held at the yards of the Michigan Central at Kensington, where the Belt Railroad connects with the Michigan Central, “until it was ordered some place,” or until the lapse of several days cleared the team tracks at South Water street of the cars ahead, when it would have eventually been carried there. This car, however, was “ordered some place.” Mr. Jones showed the chief clerk the receipt and was referred to the “car clerk,” whom he told that he wanted that car delivered to Drucker’s Cold Storage Warehouse. The clerk said “All right,” but requested a written order to that effect, which Jones gave him. It read:

“Deliver car 1884 C. W. M. from Hears, Mich., consigned to Harville & Jones, to Drucker’s Cold Storage, Canal and Lake, St. Paul R. R. Co.
“Harville & Jones.”

The clerk took the order and pasted it in a book of such orders.

Drucker’s Cold Storage Warehouse was an establishment of which John Drucker was the proprietor, well known to the fruit trade and evidently to the railroads, as Drucker’s Warehouse or Drucker’s Cold Storage. Instructions to the Michigan Central for deliveries of similar shipments to Drucker’s Cold Storage had often been given by Jones & Harville and the goods had been delivered at the proper place without any trouble or mistake.

Car 1884 on leaving Mears had nailed on the outside a card as follows:

“Chicago & West Michigan Railway.
“From Mears
“To Chicago, Ill.
■■ “Via. M. C.
“Laden with apples.
“Ho. car C. W. M. 1884.
“Unload at-■”

It arrived at Hew Buffalo and was transferred to the Michigan Central Road there early in the morning on October 18th and left there at 7:50 a. m. of that day. It arrived at the Kensington yards of the Michigan Central at 6:50 p. m. of the 18th. On the next day, Thursday, the 19th, Mr. Jones was called on the telephone by Mr. Tebbits and told that the billing was at the office and the car was in Kensington, and that Jones should send the freight charges.

A numbered check of Harville & Jones dated October 19, 1899, was at once sent to the order of the Michigan Central Railroad for $38.48 to pay said charges, and a receipted bill for the freight charges was afterward handed appellees by the collector of the railroad company.

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Bluebook (online)
136 Ill. App. 243, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michigan-central-railroad-v-harville-illappct-1907.