Richmond & Danville Railroad v. White & Co.

15 S.E. 802, 88 Ga. 805, 1892 Ga. LEXIS 105
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 1, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 15 S.E. 802 (Richmond & Danville Railroad v. White & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richmond & Danville Railroad v. White & Co., 15 S.E. 802, 88 Ga. 805, 1892 Ga. LEXIS 105 (Ga. 1892).

Opinion

Bleckley, Chief Justice.

1. It may be couceded that the weight of authority elsewhere is to the effect that the degree of diligence due from a common carrier in guarding goods against injury by the act of God is not extraordinary but only ordinary. Hutch. on Car. (2d. ed.) §§201, 202; Schouler on Bail. & Car. (2d ed.) §§436, 437. But for us the question is settled by statute. The code, section 2066, reads as follows: “One who pursues the business constantly or continuously for any period of time, or any distance of transpoi'tation, is a common carrier, and as such, is bound to use extraordinary diligence. In cases of loss the presumption of law is against him, and no excuse avails him unless it was occasioned by the act of God or the public enemies of the State.” A correct interpretation of this language requires us to hold that no degree of diligence whatever will excuse a common carrier of goods if the loss happens by anything except the act of God or the public enemies of the State. This being so, it is only when the loss is alleged to have been occasioned by one of these causes that the diligence of the carrier has to be tested. It follows, that if the rale of extraordinary diligence here prescribed by statute is [811]*811not applicable in such cases, it could never be applied at all.

It may also be conceded that by the weight of authority elsewhere, as soon as the carrier proves that the loss happened from the immediate agency of the act of God, a presumption arises that he, the carrier, was duly diligent; and consequently, that the burden of proof is at once shifted to the opposite party. Hutch. on Car., supra, §§202a, 766, 767; Schouler on Bail. & Car., supra, §439. The code, however, in the section just quoted, says that in case of loss the presumption of law is against the carrier, and this affirmation occurs immediately after the duty of extraordinary diligence is enunciated. What, then, is the content of the presumption referred to ? Obviously that the carrier has not been duly diligent, and that the loss in whole or in part is attributable to his negligence. This presumption is not met or removed by showing merely that the act of God was the ultimate occasion of the loss; that is, that it was the final and chief factor from which the loss resulted. To silence the presumption altogether, it is necessary to go further and show that the act of God was the sole cause, and that the loss happened in spite of the use of due diligence'by the carrier to prevent it. This, at least, must be the general rule, and the one applicable to every case in which the circumstances attending the calamity are such as to suggest the probability that the loss might have been avoided had extraordinary diligence been exercised. The present case is one of this character. While the evidence does not show -positively that the use of such diligence would have been effectual, it does show indubitably that the occasion was one which called for some diligence and afforded time and opportunity for exercising it, and that previous to actual trial there was a fair degree of probability of saving the goods from damage by the freshet. [812]*812Other persons in the same city who had goods similarly exposed protected them, in whole or in part, by elevating them sufficiently high to prevent the water from reaching them. It was manifestly incumbent upon the carrier to protect these goods in the same way, or by some other means, if it could be done by the exercise of extraordinary diligence. The burdeu of showing that this duty was recognized and its performance attempted, and what acts were done in prosecuting the attempt, rested, we think, under the provisions of our code, upon the carrier. We think, moreover, that this is where the burden ought to rest, for in its nature the defence of loss by the act of God involves a due accounting by the carrier for his own diligence, so as to make it appear that the loss was occasioned by the act of God solely, unmixed with contributory negligence on the part of the carrier. Doubtless where the carrier is in no previous default, and the providential act is so sudden and of such a nature as to leave no interval of time within which preventive measures against its effects could bo taken, the mere proof of the act alone, and of the consequent loss, would establish the defence. This would be reasonable. But where the circumstances make a plain case,for the exercise of some diligence, and time for its exercise intervenes after the peril has become apparent, the burden of showing that the requisite diligence was actually exercised ought to rest upon the carrier. The inquiry relates to his conduct, and he, his servants or agents, must know what that conduct was, and they of all persons have the best means, and not infrequently-the only means, of proving it. It seems reasonable to hold the carrier to the rule of extraordinary diligence, both to avoid needlessly exposing the goods to injury or destruction by an unforeseen act of God, and to the use of measures for the protection and preservation of the goods after the peril [813]*813has become apparent. And whenever any question as to his diligence is fairly involved in the facts and circumstances of the case, it is equally reasonable that he should be required to make his diligence manifest rather than that his adversary should bear the burden ot successfully attacking it in the first instance by such evidence as may chance to be in his power. Indeed, the code applies the presumption of default after proof of loss, not only to common carriers, but to all bailees, section 2064 declaring that “ In all cases of bailments after proof of loss, the burden of proof is on the bailee to show proper diligence.” The word “ loss ” in this section has been construed to mean injury or damage to the goods as well as their destruction or disappearance. Hawkins v. Haynes, 71 Ga. 40. There can be no question that the word has a like meaning in section 2066, as applied to common carriers. -Perhaps no case heretofore decided by this court is directly in point as an authority decisive of the.present, either upon the measure of diligence or the burden of proof; but the construction of the code upon both of these elements which we have arrived at harmonizes with the trend of judicial thought as indicated in several cases which the court has dealt with: Berry v. Cooper, 28 Ga. 543; Wallace v. Clayton, 42 Ga. 443; Central Line of Boats v. Lowe, 50 Ga. 509; Richmond & D. R. R. Co. v. Benson & Co., 86 Ga. 203. It may be said, too, that from the cases holding that the burden of proof as to diligence is upon the cai’rier where the loss happens from an excepted risk (that is, a risk expressly excepted by contract), the inference is a necessary one that a like burden rests upon him when he seeks to avail himself of the defence that the loss was occasioned by the act of God. One of the eases of exception by contract, namely, Columbus & Western Ry. Co. v. Kennedy, 78 Ga. 646, follows (without citing it) Berry v. Cooper, supra. [814]*814In tlie body of the opinion, however, and in the 3d head-note, the rule of diligence is put too low, being that prescribed in section 3033 of the code, which is applicable to injuries committed by railroad companies generally, instead of to injuries to goods which these companies have in their possession- as common carriers. The proper reference to the code would have been to section 2066, which exacts extraordinary, and not merely ordinary, diligence.

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.E. 802, 88 Ga. 805, 1892 Ga. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richmond-danville-railroad-v-white-co-ga-1892.