Myrick v. Michigan Cent. R. Co.

17 F. Cas. 1131, 9 Biss. 44

This text of 17 F. Cas. 1131 (Myrick v. Michigan Cent. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illnois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Myrick v. Michigan Cent. R. Co., 17 F. Cas. 1131, 9 Biss. 44 (circtndil 1879).

Opinion

BLODGETT, District Judge

(charging Jury). This suit is brought to recover damages for a breach of two contracts which the plaintiff claims he made with the defendant, as common carrier, one on the 7th, and the other on the 14th of November, 1877, for the transportation of beef cattle from Chicago to .Philadelphia. The allegation on the part of the plaintiff is that on the 7th of November, 1S77, he delivered to the defendant at the stock yards in this city, and the defendant there accepted, two hundred and two head of beef cattle to be transported by the defendant as a common carrier from this city to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and there delivered to the plaintiff or his order; that plaintiff received from the defendant a bill of lading or receipt for said cattle, and that he duly indorsed the same, to the Commercial National Bank, as security for a loan of money advanced by said lank to the plaintiff to pay for said cattle, and thereby the defendant became bound to safely transport said cattle to Philadelphia, and there deliver them to said bank or its proper agents; that the defendant failed to perform its contract and neglected and failed to deliver the cattle to the bank or its agent, whereby the cattle were wholly lost to the plaintiff and said bank.

It is also alleged that a similar contract in ■all respects was made by the plaintiff with the defendant on the 14th of November, for. the transportation of another lot of two hundred and two head of beef cattle, and that the defendant has failed to perform said contract in the same manner it failed to perform the first. The defendant contends:

First That it owns and operates a railroad from Chicago to Detroit and no further, and while it received the cattle and carried them -on its own line as far as Detroit, it . did not undertake to transport them beyond that point, and that the obligation to the plaintiff was fully performed when it delivered the cattle to the connecting carrier at Detroit, for their place of destination.

Second. That even if the contract.-with the plaintiff was for the transportation. of the cattle in question from Chicago to. Philadelphia, it fully performed its undertaking in that behalf by the delivery of the cattle to the North Philadelphia Drove Yard Company, and that the loss to the plaintiff, occurred through the neglect of said drove yard company, for which defendant is not' responsible.

It is conceded that the plaintiff did ship by the defendant’s road, the two lots of cattle in question; that the cattle passed over the defendant’s railroad to Detroit and from there over connecting railroad lines to Philadelphia, reaching the latter place by what is known as the North Penn. Railroad, and that the North Penn. Railroad Company delivered the cattle to the North Philadelphia Drove Yard Company, a corporation or firm owning and managing certain cattle yards in the vicinity of Philadelphia, fitted up with conveniences for receiving and yarding live stock; that the first lot of said stock arrived at the drove yards on the 11th of November, and the last on the 18th of November, and that the officers or managers of the drove yards delivered the cattle to J. and W. Blaker, without the surrender of the receipt or bill of lading which the defendant had issued to Myrick, and which Myrick had indorsed to the bank, and without the order of Myrick. The following is a copy of one of the shipping receipts given by defendant to plaintiff, the other being like it except as to date:

“(M.chigan Central Railroad Company, Chicago Station, Nov. 7, 1877.)
“Received from Paris Myrick, in apparent good order, consigned to order Paris Myrick. Notify J. and W. Blaker. Philadelphia, Pa.
Articles. Marked. Weight and Measure. Two hundred and two (202). Cattle. 240,OOu.
“Advanced charges, $1,200, marked and described as above (contents and value otherwise unknown) for transportation by the Michigan Central Railroad Company, to the warehouse at -.
“This receipt can be exchanged for a through bill of lading.
“Notice. — See rules of transportation on the back hereof. Signed,
“Wm. Geagan, B. Agent.
“Indorsed, Paris Myrick.”

The only rule on the back of the receipt which affects this question, is rule 11, which is as follows:

“Goods or property, consigned to any place off the company’s line of road, or to any point or place beyond its termini, will be sent forward by a carrier or freightman, when there are such, in the usual manner, the company acting, for the purpose of delivery to such carrier, as the agent of the consignor or consignee, and not as carriers. The company will not be liable or responsible for any loss, damage or injury to the property, after the same shall have been sent from any ■warehouse or station of the company.”

It is claimed by the plaintiff, that by the terms of the shipment it became the duty of the defendant as a common carrier, to notify J. and W. Blaker, of the arrival of said cattle at the place of destination, and that no rightful delivery could be made, except upon the order of Myrick and the surrender of the bill of lading, but that withoat the order of Myrick the cattle were wrongfully delivered to tlie Blakers, who sold them and converted the proceeds to their own use, whereby the cattle were wholly lost to the plaintiff and the bank which had advanced money on them

The first question is,. did the defendants make a contract to transport these cattle from here to Philadelphia? It was competent for [1133]*1133the defendant as a common carrier, to contract for the transportation of these cattle beyond its own terminus, and to Philadelphia. If such a contract was in fact made, the carriers beyond the defendant’s terminus, that is. beyond Detroit to the place of destination, became the agents of the defendant to complete the contract, and the defendant is liable for any breach of it whereby the plaintiff sustained damage. Considerable discussion has been had before the court upon the questions of law raised, whether these receipts are, or are not, a through contract or bill of lading. At first I was inclined to submit this as a question of fact to the jury; that is, to submit all the testimony, including the shipping receipts, and allow the jury to say, as a question of fact, whether the defendants did contract to transport these cattle through to Philadelphia, or not, but upon further reflection, I have concluded that this is solely a question of law for the court.

In construing a written contract, courts have the right to hear, to a certain extent, parol evidence as to the circumstances under which a contract was made, for the purpose of putting themselves in the place of the contracting parties, and determining the purport and effect of the language used; that is, the court has the right to ascertain what the surrounding circumstances and facts were, in order to determine the intention of the parties, and the full legal purport of the contract made. Perhaps the rule asserting the right of the court to look into the surrounding facts connected with the making of a contract, for the purpose of determining its meaning has never been more lucidly stated than by Hr. Justice Catón, of the supreme court of the state of Illinois, in the case of Doyle v. Teas, 4 Scam.

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Bluebook (online)
17 F. Cas. 1131, 9 Biss. 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myrick-v-michigan-cent-r-co-circtndil-1879.