Ross v. Maine Central Railroad

96 A. 223, 114 Me. 287, 1915 Me. LEXIS 69
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 28, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 96 A. 223 (Ross v. Maine Central Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ross v. Maine Central Railroad, 96 A. 223, 114 Me. 287, 1915 Me. LEXIS 69 (Me. 1915).

Opinion

Hanson, J.

Action of assumpsit against the defendant for damages to three car loads of potatoes, caused by freezing. The potatoes were shipped from East Corinth and Charleston over the Bangor Railway and Electric Company’s line to Bangor, consigned to the plaintiff, and the cars were then turned over to the defendant which issued its bills of lading from that point over its own and connecting roads to their destination at Hoboken, New Jersey.

In addition to the general contract of affreightment, the plaintiff and defendant entered into another and special contract, in which for a consideration to be ¡paid therefor by the plaintiff, the defendant agreed to heat the cars in question on their passage from Bangor to Hoboken, and upon the last named contract this suit was brought. 1'he case was heard before as in 112 Maine, 63. On the first hearing a nonsuit was ordered. In the second trial the jury returned á verdict for the plaintiff for $1,114.91, and the case is now before the court on the defendant’s exceptions to the admission of certain testimony offered by the plaintiff, to the exclusion of two questions in cross examination by the defendant’s counsel, to the charge of the presiding Justice, and the refusal to instruct except as given in the charge. The same line of defence was adopted as in the first case, that the defendant was not the initial carrier and therefore not liable under the Carmack Amendment to the Interstate Commerce Act of February 24, 1887, and further because the deféndant was acting as the agent of the Eastman Heater Car Company. Certain new evidence was introduced, its purpose being to establish the claim that the Bangor Railway and Electric Company is-engaged in interstate business, and in this case was the initial carrier. Inasmuch as the former case holds that as to the contract of affreightment that railroad was an interstate carrier as well as the initial carrier, such new evidence is not material in the present consideration of the case.

Exceptions No. 1 and 3 and the requested instructions 1 to 6 inclusive relate entirely to the claims asserted under the provisions of the Carmack Amendment. The rights and liabilities of the parties in respect to such claim having been determined in the former case the defendant can take nothing by these exceptions. In Exception [290]*290No. 2, the defendant opposed the admission of the plaintiff’s testimony that he received the potatoes at Bangor and billed the same from Bangor to Hoboken. The objection related to the alleged incompetency and irrelevancy of the testimony. It is manifest that if the contention is true, the defendant could not be prejudiced by the ruling, for the same information was before the jury in the several' bills of lading and other evidence in the case, and therefore, but cumulative at best.

Exceptions No. 4 to 8 inclusive relate to the admission of testi.mony: 1. As to the meaning of heater charges; 2. The market price of potatoes at Bangor on the days of shipment; 3. The condition and value of the potatoes in Hoboken; 4. The meaning of the term “lighterage free” and the exact point of delivery by its local designation as “Palmers dock.”

The reasons for the objection stated are the same as in the foregoing, — that such testimony was incompetent and irrelevant. We fail to see where the defendant is prejudiced by the admission of the. testimony objected to, but whether prejudiced or not the testimony was admissible under well known rules. These exceptions are, therefore, overruled.

The measure of damages in cases where the shipment is made in performance of a special contract, known to the carrier will be the difference between the contract price at destination and market value at the place of shipment, less the freight. 6 Cyc., 526. Whether the loss occurred on the Bangor Railway and Electric Company’s line or on the defendant’s road was a jury question.

In New York & B. Transp. Line et al. v. Baer & Co., 84 Atl., 251, where, in an action for loss of wool in transit neither of the defendants was the initial carrier, and one of the defendants was not the terminal carrier in any of the shipments, it was held that “their liability could not be predicated on the Carmack Amendment, and they are subject only to the liability imposed by the common law.”

The last named case emphasizes the rule that each road, confining itself to its common law liability, is only bound, in the absence of special contract, to safely carry over its own road and safely deliver to the next connecting carrier.” And this is true as to an intermediate carrier that accepts property for carriage directed to a place beyond the terminus of its route.

[291]*291Where it is shown that the goods were delivered to the initial carrier in good condition, and they are subsequently delivered to the consignee by the connecting and terminal carrier in bad condition, the presumption of law is, when such last named carrier is made defendant, that the goods were received by such defendant in the same condition that they were delivered to the initial carrier and the burden is upon the defendant carrier of proving that such goods came to its possession in damaged condition. And it is proper to show knowledge by the parties to a written contract for transportation of goods, of the circumstances on the basis of which it was made, for the purpose of showing what was within the contemplation of the parties in making the contract, where such knowledge is material in fixing the damages. 4 R. C. L., 913, Weston v. B. & Me. R. R. Co., 190 Mass., 298.

Exception No. 10, relates to one of the alleged rules of the Eastman Car Company. Testimony as to such rules was excluded because the same question had been asked by counsel the day before, and answered to the satisfaction of counsel. The objection cannot be sustained. The admission or refusal to admit the testimony was within the discretion of the presiding Justice, and his ruling thereon is not open to exception.

As to the charge of the presiding Justice. The defendant objected to that part of the charge where it is stated: 1. “That the damages must be computed as of Bangor, and that the place of shipment, so far as the question of the determination of damages is concerned, was Bangor;” and 2. “That by accepting the heater charges the defendant undertook that these cars should be properly heated in their transit from Bangor to their destination.”

The defendant can take nothing by these exceptions. The language used was substantially but a repetition of the words used by the defendant in its own bills of lading, and contract to heat the cars, and it does not appear nor is it urged in argument that the defendant was aggrieved by the charge in this respect.

There remains to be considered but one item from the number of requested instructions, viz: No. 7, which reads, “If the plaintiffs, or either oF the. plaintiffs, knew that the Maine Central Railroad .' onup v.rr acting as agent for the Eastman Car Company, when it accepted the heater charges, then the plaintiffs cannot recover.”

[292]*292We think the objection without merit for the reason that the request was too broad in its scope, and was not warranted by the pleadings or any evidence in the case on either side. It was not confined to this case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 A. 223, 114 Me. 287, 1915 Me. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-maine-central-railroad-me-1915.