Reichard Co. v. Lehigh Valley Railroad

1 Pa. D. & C. 774, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 149
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lehigh County
DecidedMay 15, 1922
DocketNo. 67
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Pa. D. & C. 774 (Reichard Co. v. Lehigh Valley Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lehigh County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reichard Co. v. Lehigh Valley Railroad, 1 Pa. D. & C. 774, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 149 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Reno, J.,

On July 28, 1917, George E. Mosser, hereinafter called the shipper, delivered to the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company, herein[775]*775after called the carrier, at its depot in Allentown, Pa., a consignment of hides for shipment to himself at Newark, N. J. The carrier issued an order bill of lading, wherein it recited that the goods were “consigned to the order of George E. Mosser: destination, Newark, N. J.: Notify Reichard Hide and Tallow Company at Ashland, State of Pa.” At the same time the shipper instructed the carrier to hold the goods at Allentown until such time as he gave orders for forwarding them to Newark. Of this order a notation was made upon the shipping order (which seems to be a copy of the bill of lading retained by the carrier), but none upon the bill of lading delivered to the shipper. Thereafter the shipper endorsed the bill of lading in blank, attached a sight draft to it, placed it in a bank for collection, and on Aug. 6, 1917, the draft was taken up and paid by the Reichard Hide and Tallow Company, plaintiff, and hereinafter called the holder, and to it the bill of lading was delivered. On Aug. 11, 1917, the shipper instructed the carrier to transport the goods to, and the goods were started to their destination on Aug. 12th and arrived at Newark on Aug. 13, 1917. Prior thereto, on Aug. 7, 1917, the holder, or some one on his behalf, had presented the bill of lading to the carrier at Newark and demanded delivery of the goods, but they had not then arrived and did not arrive until the date stated. The time generally and ordinarily necessary to ship goods from Allentown to Newark is two or three days. The claim is for shrinkage in the weight and value of the hides, caused, it is alleged, by the failure of the carrier to transport the goods immediately upon delivery to it.

These facts were developed upon the trial of the case before the late judge, Hon. Milton C. Henninger. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case, the defendant submitted no evidence, but presented a number of points to the court. The court, holding “that the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company cannot be held for this delay because of that order not to ship,” directed a verdict for the carrier. We are now asked to order a new trial or to enter judgment for plaintiff n. o. v.

The transcript of the evidence does not contain all of the bill of lading. Only that portion of the bill of lading which is printed upon the face of the bill has been transcribed. The conditions printed on the reverse side are omitted from the record. However, we assume that the points presented by the defendant substantially stated these conditions, and for the'purpose of this opinion we assume that upon the back of the bill were printed the following conditions: “(a) No carrier or party in possession of the property herein described shall be liable for any loss thereof or damage thereto or delay caused by the act of God, the public enemy, quarantine, the authority of law, or the act or default of the shipper or owner, or for differences in the weights of grain, seed or other commodities, caused by natural shrinkage or discrepancies in elevator weight.” “(b) The carrier shall not be liable for loss, damage or delay occurring while the property is stopped and held in transit upon request of the shipper, owner or party entitled to make such request.”

The bill having been issued for the transportation of goods from “a place in one state to a place in another state,” after Jan. 1, 1917, is to be interpreted under the Act of Congress approved Aug. 29, 1916, chap. 415, 39 Stat. at L. 538. The bill is an order bill of lading within the meaning of that act, and is, therefore, negotiable. The bill was in fact negotiated, and the whole controversy revolves about the effect to be given to the quality of negotiability of the bill in the form in which it was written.

Plaintiff contends that when a carrier issues an order bill of lading, it must immediately transport the goods, that it may not recognize the shipper’s [776]*776instructions to hold the goods subject to the shipper’s order to transport, and that if it does recognize such order, the terms of the bill will not protect it in an action by the holder. In other words, he contends that, as against the carrier, the holder has greater rights than the shipper, and that these rights accrue to him because of the negotiable character of the bill. The defendant, of course, contends that the holder is bound equally with the shipper to the terms of the bill, and that these terms are sufficient to defeat recovery.

It is manifest that the provisions of the bill quoted would be sufficient to prevent recovery by the shipper. The loss, damage or delay occurred while the property was stopped or held upon request of the shipper. The loss or damage or delay was caused by the act of the shipper. It was shipper’s order to hold that was directly responsible for the delay and the loss thereby entailed. Hence, if plaintiff can recover, it will be because he is not bound by the terms of the bill, and because the holder’s rights against the carrier are greater than those of the shipper. Thus, he can recover only if he shows that in an order bill of lading there inheres a quality of negotiability that gives him greater rights against the carrier than those expressed by the tenor of the bill. This he endeavors to do by an argument based largely, if not entirely, upon the construction to be given to the provisions of the Act of Congress.

In a recent case it is said that the purpose of certain sections of the Act of Congress “is to give bills of lading attributes of commercial paper:” Pere Marquette Ry. Co. v. J. F. French & Co., 254 U. S. 538; s. c., 41 Supreme Court Repr. 195. But the attributes thereby to be given are undoubtedly only those expressly conferred by the text of the act, and the word “negotiable,” as therein used, does not enlarge the quality of their negotiable character beyond the plain words of the act. Unaffected by statute, the effect of a transfer of a bill of lading was to pass title to the goods represented by it as effectually as though the goods themselves were delivered: 10 Corpus Juris, § 265, page 201. No statute is to be construed as altering the common law further than its words import: Shaw v. Merchants’ National Bank, 101 U. S. 557; s. c., 25 Law. Ed., 892; Lis’s Estate, 139 N. W. Repr. 300. If, therefore, greater effect is to be given to the act of transferring or negotiating a bill of lading, either order or straight, the party claiming such greater effect must establish it by the terms of the act.

It is argued that the 8th section does so provide. That section provides that a carrier, in the absence of a lawful excuse, is bound to deliver the goods to the holder of an order bill. But is it not a lawful excuse that the carrier was restrained by the act of the shipper, in view of the stipulation to that effect upon the bill of lading? To our mind, a lawful excuse, within the meaning of the act, is an act which the original parties to the bill have stipulated shall excuse the carrier. If the holder is not bound by the provision exempting the carrier from damages caused by the act of the shipper, neither is he bound by other provisions, and then it would follow that, as against the holder, a carrier could not defend against damages “caused by the act of God or the public enemy.”

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Related

Shaw v. Railroad Co.
101 U.S. 557 (Supreme Court, 1880)
Pere Marquette Railway Co. v. J. F. French & Co.
254 U.S. 538 (Supreme Court, 1921)
Miles's Estate
116 A. 300 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Pa. D. & C. 774, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reichard-co-v-lehigh-valley-railroad-pactcompllehigh-1922.