Montgomery & Eufaula Railway Co. v. Kolb

73 Ala. 396
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 73 Ala. 396 (Montgomery & Eufaula Railway Co. v. Kolb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montgomery & Eufaula Railway Co. v. Kolb, 73 Ala. 396 (Ala. 1882).

Opinion

STONE, J.

— When the law has declared certain express rules for the government of men, or when persons enter into express stipulations, expressing the terms on which they enter into contracts, it is a reasonable rule, subject only to a few exceptions, that neither custom nor usage will be allowefi to dispense with.such legal requirements, nor such express stipulations. — Barlow v. Lambert, 28 Ala. 704. “Where by local custom or usage provincialisms and technicalities of science and commerce, and perhaps some others, have acquired a known, fixed and definite meaning, different from their ordinary import; or where such technicalities, unexplained, are susceptible of two or more plain and reasonable constructions, it is certainly competent to prove the existence of such custom, as a means of- showing the sense in which the contracting parties intended to be understood.” — lb. See also the many authorities referred to on the briefs of counsel. Speaking of usage of trade, Mr. Greenleaf, Ev., vol. 2, § 251, says: “It is sufficient if it be established, known, certain, uniform, reasonable, and not contrary to law. . . Their true office is to interpret the otherwise indeterminate intentions of parties, and to ascertain the nature and extent of their contracts, arising not from express stipulation, but from mere implications and presumptions, and acts of a doubtful and equivocal character; and to fix and explain the meaning of words and expressions of doubtful or various senses. On this principle, the usage or habit of trade or conduct of an individual, which is known to the person who deals with him, may be given in evidence to prove what was the contract between them.” This latter principle may be illustrated by a familiar incident in every-day life. A customer is in the habit of dealing with his merchant, and having his purchases sent home, and his bills run from one to two months, [402]*402before payment is demanded or expected; and this, too, at cash rates. lie selects a given article of merchandise, and orders a given number of yards to be measured off. In this there is not a word said about price, about delivery, or about the time of payment. Yet, there is implied in these few simple and indeterminate words and acts, that'the goods are sold at their customary cash market value, that they will be delivered at the purchaser’s residence without undue delay, and that payment will not be expected, until the end of the customary indulgence. So, in Boon v. Steamboat Belfast, 40 Ala. 184, quoting from Judge Story, this court said : “ The true and appropriate office of a usage or custom is, to interpret the otherwise indeterminate intentions of parties, and to ascertain the nature and extent of their contracts, arising not from express stipulations, but from mere implications and presumptions, and acts of a doubtful or equivocal character.”

In September, 1877, Eaoul,' superintendent of the South Western Eailroad Co. of Georgia — which company was also operating the appellant railroad company — issued a circular, headed “Notice to cotton shippers and instructions to agents.” This notice or circular was again issued at the opening of the season of 1880-1881, and was forwarded to, and received by the agent at Eufaula, and a copy was furnished to the appellees, Kolb & Hardaway. KoU) & Hardaway were cotton buyers at Eufaula, did a considerable business, and made many shipments of cotton by the appellant railroad co'mpany. This suit was brought to recover the value of nine bales of cotton, alleged to have been delivered to the railroad company at Eufaula, to be transported to, and delivered at Montgomery, and never delivered: The case turned on the question of delivery to the railroad company at Eufaula; for it is not pretended the railroad company forwarded the cotton, or'delivered it at Montgomery. In fact, neither the railroad company nor its agent at Eufaula gave any receipt for the cotton alleged to have been lost. There was no express contract fixing the terms. .

We have carefully examined the circular, made apart of the bill of exceptions, and we thinli its regulations and directions are reasonable. They are alike beneficial to the shipper and carrier. They commend themselves by their wise and systematic provisions, intended to secure prompt shipment, to prevent confusion of goods, and to render disputes about delivery for shipment almost impossible.

It is not pretended that those regulations were conformed to in this case. The claim is, that the railroad company departed from its own regulations, and thus established a usage different from them, which was conformed to in this case. The bill of exceptions recites that, “ the evidence further tended to show that [403]*403shortly after the printed ‘notice to cotton shippers and instructions to agents5 were issued, they were disregarded by both shippers and defendant’s agent at Eufaula, and'that it became a general custom and usage to deliver and receive cotton at the depot in Eufaula, in disregard of such printed notice and instructions. The'evidence on this subject was very conflicting, the agent himself testifying that he never received cotton for shipment in non-compliance with said instructions, except in a few instances made necessary by what he thought an exigency, and as a matter of accommodation to the shipper.” In another place the bill of exceptions states: “ The proof further showed that some of the cotton brought to the cotton-yard of defendant by the plaintiffs'for delivery to the defendant for shipment, was not placed by plaintiffs on a certain plank platform of defendant, upon which defendant required all cotton bales to be placed before it would receive and receipt for them, but was placed in a street running along the side of such platform; but testimony was introduced by said plaintiffs, going to show that the station agent did take cotton bales from this street and receipt for them.” In another place, in setting out testimony, it is said, “ that plaintiffs frequently and persistently violated these rules and regulations of the defendant company as contained in such ‘ notice to cotton shippers and instructions to agents,’ against the-protest of the station agent at Eufaula.” It is nowhere shown that the station agent ever did refuse to receive and ship cotton that was delivered for shipment, because not delivered in conformity with the printed rules and regulations.

It i's contended for appellant that inasmuch as the station agent had positive instructions from the superintendent not to receive or receipt for cotton to be shipped, unless delivered in accordance with the printed directions, and inasmuch as the shippers in this case had notice of these regulations, 'by receiving a copy thereof, then, not having received the agent’s receipt for the cotton, they have shown no legal delivery to the railroad, and can not-recover. Such is undoubtedly the law, if the testimony stopped here. Against this, it is replied for appellees, that the railroad company7, through its agent at Eufaula, has permitted a usage to grow up, which dispenses with the regulations prescribed in the circular, and constitutes the act done in this case a legal delivery to the railway company7. To this it is rejoined, that no knowledge of such violation of the regulations is traced to Naoul, the superintendent, and hence the railroad company is not bound by such usage, if proven to have been established.

We think this is too narrow a view of the question. Nail-roads usually7 have extended lines, and along those lines are many, depots, or stations, at which the business of receiving and [404]

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Bluebook (online)
73 Ala. 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-eufaula-railway-co-v-kolb-ala-1882.