Railway Express Agency, Inc. v. H. Rouw Co.

127 S.W.2d 251, 197 Ark. 1142, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 352
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 3, 1939
Docket4-5367
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 127 S.W.2d 251 (Railway Express Agency, Inc. v. H. Rouw 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
Railway Express Agency, Inc. v. H. Rouw Co., 127 S.W.2d 251, 197 Ark. 1142, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 352 (Ark. 1939).

Opinion

Holt, J.

This action was commenced by the appel-lee against appellant in the Crawford circuit court on October 18,1937, to recover '$2,957.96 alleged damages on ten separate shipments of strawberries in carload lots. These cars were shipped' from Judsonia, Arkansas', to Pittsburg, Pennsylvania; Judsonia, Arkansas, to Buffalo, New York; McRae, Arkansas, to Cincinnati, Ohio; Bald Knob, Arkansas, to Denver, Colorado; Bald Knob, Arkansas, to Buffalo, New York; Judsonia, Arkansas, to Buffalo, New York; Russell, Arkansas, to Cleveland, Ohio; Judsonia, Arkansas, to Cleveland,'Ohio'; Exeter, Missouri, to Cleveland, Ohio; Ward, Arkansas, to Syracuse, New York. All of these shipments were made dur-^ ing May of 1936. Appellee recovered a verdict in the sum of $2,957.96,' the total sum sued for.

The complaint contained ten separate causes joined in separate counts. The allegations in each count are identical except the date of shipment, car number, origin of shipment, destination, and amount of damage alleged. It will be necessary, therefore, to copy the material allegations in the first count of the complaint only, which are: That appellant “then and there received and accepted said strawberries for transportation and issued and delivered to the appellee its original express receipt contract, and for a valuable consideration thereinafter to be paid it agreed to carry and transport said strawberries under the provisions of said contract and its duty as a common carrier of freight and merchandise . . .” Copy of express receipt contract is hereto attached marked Exhibit “A” and made a part of this complaint. Appellee further alleges that the appellant violated its express receipt contract, and also its duty to the appel-lee as a common carrier by delivering the said strawberries at destination in a soft, wet, rotten and otherwise deteriorated condition, etc.

Thereafter on April 4, 1938, appellant filed its demurrer and answer. The demurrer was overruled. Appellánt specifically denied each and every' material allegation in the complaint, and pleaded specially that by the terms of the shipping contract it was provided that, unless caused in whole or in part by its own negligence or that of its agents, appellant should not be liable for loss, damage or delay caused by the act or default of the shipper or owner, or the nature of the property, or the inherent vice therein, or improper or'insufficient packing, securing, or addressing, or the act of God; that if any loss, damage, or delay occurred in said shipments, or either of them, which appellant denied, it occurred while said cars and each of them were stopped and held in transit or after reaching destination upon request of the shipper or owner, or resulted from one of the excepted causes set forth in said shipping contract, and each of them; that appellant was not an insurer of the safe transportation of said perishable shipments respectively, and that it performed its full duty under the terms and provisions of said respective contracts of shipment.

The evidence on these ten different shipments is so voluminous, the record containing some 2,500 pages, that it cannot he set out within the compass of this opinion; however, we have carefully considered it and shall set out that which we deem controlling as follows:

The uniform express receipt contract referred to in-the complaint and introduced in evidence contains the following provisions: “Paragraph !. The provisions of this receipt shall inure to the benefit of and be binding upon the consignor, the consignee and all carriers handling this shipment and shall apply to any reconsignment, or return thereof . . . Paragraph 4. Unless in whole or in part by its own negligence, or that of its agents, the company shall not he liable for loss, damage or delay caused by: (a) The act or default of the shipper or owner, (b) The nature of the property, or .defect or inherent vice therein, (c) Improper or insufficient packing, securing, or addressing.” Paragraph 18 from Classification 24, Packing Requirements, provides: “All shipments must be so prepared or packed as to insure safe transportation with ordinary care on the part of the express company.” Section 28 of Classification 24, Refrigeration — Carload Shipments of Perishable Commodities, provided in substance that the express company has arranged for a limited number of refrigerator cars, and, to the extent available, these cars will be furnished on application of shippers; that cars will be handled only by trains designated 'by the railroad companies; that consignor is required to deliver to express agent written memorandum of load in car, commodity, weight, name of consignee, destination, and any such operation instructions as requesting ice bunkers to be left open, proportion of salt to ice when car re-iced, loading and unloading in transit, etc. That refrigeration being a separate and distinct service of transportation, and not included in express rate, cost of ice and salt must be assumed by owner in addition to charge for transporta ti on.

The record further reflects that the express refrigerator cars used in nine of these shipments were first iced to bunker capacity, from 12,000 to 14,000 pounds of ice being placed in each car, by appellant in North Little Rock,- Arkansas, and they were then delivered at the points of origin of the shipments in either Judsonia, McRae, Bald Knob, Russell, Rogers or "Ward, Arkansas. In count IX the initial icing to bunker capacity of 13,900 pounds took place at Rogers, Arkansas, and the car then delivered to Exeter, Missouri, for loading by the shipper. Each one of these cars was re-iced to capacity at these shipping points, the cars thoroughly inspected, accepted by the agent, or agents, of the shipper and in each instance was loaded by and under the supervision of ap-pellee, the shipper. When the berries were loaded into each of these cars for shipment they appeared to be in good condition. At the time each of these cars started from the original shipping point their final destination was unknown. In most instances the consignee was the shipper, appellee. These shipments either went first to ,St. Louis, Missouri, to what is known as the Eastern Grateway, or to Kansas 'City, Missouri, the Western Gateway, where diversion orders were given by the shipper.

Delays in the movement of nine of these shipments of from three to ninety hours were caused solely by the shipper in giving diversion orders to appellant of the various cars. In one of the shipments, wherein a delay of approximately thirty hours occurred, six hours of this delay, the evidence shows, was the fault of appellant in changing car wheels in St. Louis.

The record further reflects that a sufficient number of icing stations was provided by appellant along the line of each shipment, and that all of these cars were re-iced to bunker capacity at each of these stations, that the temperature inside these cars, for the safe transportation of the berries might range from 49 degrees at the top do 42 degrees at the bottom of each car, and that this temperature was maintained in each one of these shipments.

The coihmodity temperature at destination of car in Count I was 44 over 43% (meaning 44 degrees at the top and 43% degrees at the bottom); in Count II 47 over 42; in 'Count III 45 over 41 at Cincinnati and 42 over 40 at Louisville; in Count IY 48 over 44 at Kansas City and 45.

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Bluebook (online)
127 S.W.2d 251, 197 Ark. 1142, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/railway-express-agency-inc-v-h-rouw-co-ark-1939.