Mitchell v. . R. R.

32 S.E. 671, 124 N.C. 236, 1899 N.C. LEXIS 46
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 21, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 32 S.E. 671 (Mitchell v. . R. R.) 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
Mitchell v. . R. R., 32 S.E. 671, 124 N.C. 236, 1899 N.C. LEXIS 46 (N.C. 1899).

Opinion

The animals were transported by connecting lines from Nashville, Tenn., to New Bern, N.C. under a bill of lading limiting the common-law liability of common carriers, in consideration of reduced rates. In the transit one of the animals, a mule, died on the (237) cattle car of the defendant.

His Honor charged the jury that, notwithstanding the contract, the defendant was liable for the exercise of proper care in handling and transporting the stock over its line; that the burden was upon the plaintiff to show want of ordinary and proper care, and that upon the whole evidence there was no evidence that the defendant was negligent in handling and transporting this stock. The plaintiff excepted to that portion of the charge relating to the burden of proof, submitted to judgment of nonsuit, and appealed. We cannot assent to the proposition that in cases of limited liability the burden of proof rests upon the plaintiff to show primarily the negligence of the defendant. In the case before us the plaintiff brought suit for the value of a mule which was shipped to him from Nashville, Tenn., in a car with other horses and mules. When the car reached New Bern the mule was missing. The plaintiff has no means of knowing what became of it, except information furnished by the defendant, who says that it died en route. This may be true, and we presume it is, from the testimony for the defendant, but it has neither been admitted by the plaintiff nor found as a fact by the jury.

Uncontradicted testimony is never equivalent to an admitted fact, as the jury may not believe it, and this is especially so where the alleged facts are peculiarly within the knowledge of the witness. Here, the plaintiff simply knew that the defendant received his mule under a contract to deliver it to him at New Bern, which it has failed (238) to do. He simply asks for his mule or its value, neither of which does he obtain. "The defendant says that the shippers, implied agents of the plaintiff, signed a bill of lading releasing the defendant from all risk of loss or damage from any cause whatever not resulting from the negligence of its agents, and that the burden rests upon the plaintiff of proving affirmatively not only the shipment and the loss, but that the loss occurred through the negligence of the defendant, when, in fact, he neither has not could have any knowledge as to how it occurred. It is *Page 178 true, the defendant introduced testimony to show the death of the mule from natural causes, but it did so purely as a matter of supererogation, with the burden of proving nothing. If its contentions are correct, it need not have said a word. It made no difference how the loss occurred, provided the plaintiff could not prove that it occurred through its negligence. The entire carload of stock might have been safely stolen through the gross negligence or actual connivance of its agents, if done without the knowledge of the plaintiff, or of any one, by whom he might prove it. If this is the law, what protections is there for the shipper? If a resident of Raleigh ships freight to New York under so-called "released" bill of lading, he cannot be excepted to go with it and watch it, day and night; and yet, if he did not, how could he know the facts connected with its possible loss? The carrier could stand upon the word "released," and, without one word of explanation as to the nondelivery of the freight, simply say to the plaintiff, "Prove your case."

It is too will settled to need any citation of authority that common carriers cannot exempt themselves by contract from the results of their own negligence. This principle is recognized in the bill of lading (239) before us, yet we are asked to establish a rule of evidence that will destroy its vital principle and subvert its beneficial purposes. It makes no difference to the plaintiff whether you deny his right or simply deprive him of the only remedy by which it can be obtained, and it is equally beneficial to the defendant whether you relieve it from all liability or only place it beyond the possibility of proof.

It seems to us that the error lies in a misapprehension of the true nature of the bill of lading. It is not an agreement primarily intended to release the common-law liability of the carrier, but, as said in Pollard v.Vinton, 105 U.S. 7, "It is at once a receipt and a contract. In the former character it is an acknowledgment of the receipt of property on board his vessel by the owner of the vessel; in the latter, it is acontract to carry safely and deliver." The safe carriage and delivery are the essential objects of the contract, and it is the duty of every party to a contract to comply with his agreement to show such facts as will excuse his nonperformance. This is especially so where the contract is made in the performance of a public duty.

It is the duty of a common carrier, irrespective of contract, but subject to reasonable regulations, to accept, safely carry and deliver all goods entrusted to it. If the goods are lost, it must show what became of them, and if they are damaged it must prove affirmatively that they were damaged in some way that would relieve it from responsibility. The plaintiff has a prima facie case when he shows the receipt of goods by the carrier, and their nondelivery or delivery in a damaged condition. Any further defense is in the nature of confession and avoidance. If *Page 179 the defendant pleads exemption by virtue of a special contract, it must prove the contract and show that the loss or damage comes within some one of the exceptions. It must appear to the court as matter of law that the contract is reasonable in all of its essential features, and that the exemptions are not contrary to public policy. All such exemptions, being in derogation of common law, should be strictly (240) construed.

So far, we think the principles herein laid down are properly deducible from all the authorities; but we now come to an irreconcilable conflict of decisions as to the subsequent burden of proof. The courts of Alabama, Georgia, Iowa, Minnesota, Mississippi, Ohio, South Carolina, Texas, Tennessee, and West Virginia, and perhaps one or two others, hold that the burden still rests upon the carrier of showing that the loss was not due to its own negligence. This view is clearly laid down in an able opinion byJudge Cooper in R. R. v. Moss, 60 Miss. 1003, where he says: "To us it also seems that public policy forbids the further relaxation of the principles of the common law governing common carriers. It is no uncommon thing in this age to see under one management a line of railroads extending from the lakes of the North to the Gulf of Mexico, or from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean. To hold that a shipper in New York or Chicago shall be required to establish the negligence of the carrier by proof of the circumstances of a fire in California or New Orleans would in a great number of cases results in a verdict for the carrier, even though there was in fact negligence. In a large majority of cases the facts rest exclusively in the knowledge of the employees, whose names and places of residence are unknown to the shipper. In many cases the witnesses are the employees whose negligence has caused the loss, and if known to the shipper it may be dangerous for him to rest his case upon their testimony, since the natural impulses of mankind would sway them in narrating the circumstances to palliate their fault by stating the occurrence in the most favorable light to themselves.

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.E. 671, 124 N.C. 236, 1899 N.C. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-r-r-nc-1899.