Missouri Pacific Railroad v. Reynolds-Davis Grocery Co.

257 S.W. 70, 161 Ark. 579, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 568
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 24, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 257 S.W. 70 (Missouri Pacific Railroad v. Reynolds-Davis Grocery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri Pacific Railroad v. Reynolds-Davis Grocery Co., 257 S.W. 70, 161 Ark. 579, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 568 (Ark. 1923).

Opinion

Wood, J.

This action was instituted by the appellee against the appellant to recover the sum of $1,026.66, damages alleged to have been incurred by.the appellee on account of the loss of sugar out of a car shipped from Eaceland, La., to Fort Smith, Ark., under a bill of lading dated April 7, 1920, issued by Morgan’s Louisiana & Texas Eailroad & Steamship Company in Louisiana. The non-agency station was called Mathews. It was five miles from the agency station of Eaceland. The sugar was routed, as shown by the bill of lading,- over the lines of the appellant from its connection with the Southern Pacific lines to Fort Smith, its destination on appellant’s line. The appellant had no track of its own at Fort Smith to the warehouse of the appellee, where the appellee wished the ear delivered. The St. Louis-San Francisco Eailroad Company had a, track connecting with the track of the appellant, and, by a switching arrangement between them, the appellant delivered the car to the Frisco to be delivered to the warehouse of the consignee. The Frisco did not handle the car under the bill of lading and did not share in the distribution of the freight charges. The appellant paid the Frisco the sum of $6.30, its switching fee, for the service in switching 'the car to the warehouse of the appellee. This switching fee charg-e was covered by the tariff on file with the Interstate Commerce Commission. The bill of lading*was surrendered by the appellee to the appellant, and the appellant delivered the car to the appellee through the Frisco railroad, as above indicated.

The loading of the car at Raceland, Louisiana, was done by the shipper’s general superintendent, who had been in its employ for thirty-six years. He checked and counted the sacks. There were 500 sacks, weighing 100 lb. each. After counting and checking the sacks, he applied the seals to the car. The bill of lading shows that there was a total weight of sugar, including the sacks, of 50,250 lh. The car arrived at Fort Smith on April 19, and on that day was delivered by the appellant to the Frisco Railroad in good order, with the seals unbroken. The appellant took a receipt from the Frisco Railroad showing that the car was in good order when delivered to the latter company. When the car was delivered by the latter company to the appellee’s warehouse the original seals had been broken, and had been replaced by a Frisco seal. When the car was opened by appellee’s receiving clerk it was discovered that a large number of sacks of sugar had been removed from the center of the car. Upon checking and counting the sacks it was found that there were 60 sacks short of the number included in the-shipper’s invoice and in the hill of lading. It was also found that the other sacks had been mutilated and 106 lb. of sugar taken therefrom. The value of the sugar lost was $992.22.

. The cause was sent to the jury upon substantially the above facts, and it returned a verdict in favor of the appellee against the appellant for the above sum. Judgment was entered accordingly, from which is this appeal.

1. The action by the appellee against the appellant was.predicated upon the theory that the appellant was liable, under the bill of lading, as the delivering carrier. The appellant contends that it was neither the initial nor the delivering carrier, and that the undisputed testimony showed that the loss did not occur on its lines, and that therefore it was not liable.

The appellee, on the other hand, contends that the appellant, under the bill of lading, was the delivering carrier, and that the Frisco railroad, in delivering the car to appellee’s warehouse in Fort Smith, was merely acting as the agent of the appellant.

The appellant prayed the court to instruct the jury in accordance with its contention, which the court refused, but, over the objections of appellant, gave prayers according to the appellee’s contention. The instructions of the court were correct.

This was an interstate commerce shipment, and the well settled rule concerning such shipments is that “in the absence of statute, or special contract,” each connecting carrier on a through route is bound only to safely carry over its own line and' safelv deliver to the next connecting carrier, and the liability of the connecting carrier for the safety of property delivered to it for transportation commences when it is received, and is discharged by its deliverv to and acceptance bv a succeeding carrier, or its authorized agent.” Oregon-Washington Rd. & Nav. Co. v. McGinn, 258 U. S. 409-413. and other cases cited in the opinion.

This doctrine is not applicable to the facts of this record, for the reason that the carload of sugar was shipped under a special contract under which the appellant was the delivering carrier. The bill of lading, evidencing the special contract under which the shipment in controversy was made, shows that the appellant was the last connecting carrier operating under that bill of lading. This was a through bill of lading from the nonagencv station at Mathews, La., to Fort Smith, Arkansas, in which the appellant undertook to make the delivery to the consignee at Fort Smith. The Frisco Bailroad Company was not named in this bill of lading ás a connecting carrier, and the services it performed in the premises, under its switching arrangements with the appellant, were not as a connecting carrier, but purely and simply at the instance, and as the agent, of appellant. The terms of the bill of lading control here. Under those terms the appellant is undoubtedly the terminal carrier and bound itself, under the terms of the contract, to make the delivery, and it cannot shift its liability upon the shoulders of some other carrier or agency which was not in the contemplation of the parties to the contract. The Frisco Railroad would not be any more liable under this contract than would some transfer company in the city of Fort Smith whom the appellant had employed to deliver the sugar to appellee’s warehouse after the car arrived at Fort Smith, its destination. In other words, if the appellee had sued the Frisco Railroad for its loss, instead of the appellant, the Frisco Railroad Company would not be liable to the appellee, for the simple reason that, under the contract of shipment, the bill of lading, the Frisco Railroad Company had not contracted with the appellee to deliver its carload of sugar to appellee’s warehouse in Fort Smith. This was a service which, under the bill of lading, the appellant had contracted with the appellee to perform, and it undertook the performance thereof through its agent, the Frisco Railroad Company. The following cases sustain the above conclusion: Western Atlantic Ry. Co. v. Exposition Cotton Mills (Ga.), 2 L. R. A. 102; 7 S. E. 916; Sapiro v. Boston & Maine Ry. Co., 213 Mass. 70, 99 N. E. 459; St. Louis S. W. Ry. Co. v. A. A. Jackson & Co., 118 S. W. 853; Atlanta National Bank v. So. Ry. Co., 106 Fed. 623.

Learned counsel for appellant contend that these were cases from State courts, and that they had no application to an interstate shipment of freight, which is controlled by the interstate commerce act, and that, inasmuch as the published tariff of the interstate commerce act provided the rate which the Frisco Railroad should receive for removing cars from the connection of the appellant with the Missouri Pacific Railway Company in Fort Smith, the Frisco Company and not the appellant was the delivering carrier.

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Bluebook (online)
257 S.W. 70, 161 Ark. 579, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-pacific-railroad-v-reynolds-davis-grocery-co-ark-1923.