Smith Bros. v. New Orleans & Northeastern Railroad

106 La. 11
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 15, 1901
DocketNo. 13,593
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 106 La. 11 (Smith Bros. v. New Orleans & Northeastern Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith Bros. v. New Orleans & Northeastern Railroad, 106 La. 11 (La. 1901).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Breaux, J.

Plaintiff claims damages in the sum of two thousand one hundred and eighty-two 66-100 dollars, growing out of defendants’ [12]*12failure to carry a consignment of rice in bond. Plaintiff avers, substantially, that 218,260 pounds of rice were shipped to it from Hamburg on tbe steamship Dalmetia, due to arrive in Charleston, South Carolina, in May, 1898; that through their agents, the defendant railroads applied to plaintiff for the transportation of the consignment over their line of railroads from the port above named to New Orleans; that plaindff made known to these agents that it wanted the rice carried in bond, as sanctioned by a statute of the United States (without custom duty), and that for that reason they were not willing to pay the custom duty of two per cent, per pound at the port of Charleston; that after having been informed of plaintiff’s desire, the defendants’ agents advised it of their willingness and ability to transport this rice on the conditions before stated; that on receiving this information, plaintiff delivered its bill of lading to the agents of the Northeastern Railroad Company, who promised to make all needful arrangements with the steamship before named and with the customhouse authorities at Charleston and with other connecting railroads for the transportation of the rice through to New Orleans in bond, without payment of custom duties; that the said railroad company bound itself to deliver this rice in bond to plaintiff in New Orleans for twenty-five cents per hundred pounds for all charges.

The invoice, dated May 10th, 1898, issued in Hamburg for the 1000 bags of rice in question which, in due time, was placed in the hands of the “Plant Railroad system,” after the arrival of the steamship Dalmetia at Charleston, among other statements, contained the following, “to be shipped per Str. Dalmetia to Charleston in bond for New Orleans.” On May 25th, the agent here wrote to the representative of the “Elaiit System,” inclosing the invoice to which we have just referred. The letter contained the following, among other statements: “As I understand it, the Plant System is a bonded line, and there will be no difficulty in handling the business to New Orleans. All customhouse duties to be paid here by Smith Bros. & Co., Limited.”

A member of the plaintiff firm testified that when he delivered the bill of lading to the agent in New Orleans, in the presence of the agent of the “Plant System” who was here at that time, he stated to them that it was necessary for the rice to come in bond. lie also stated as a witness that he declined to turn over his rice to a rival system of rnilrcads to be hauled for the same rate, as he was led to believe dial the “Plant System” was a bonded road.

[13]*13As relates to the “Plant System/’ its eo-defendant, the New Orleans and Northeastern Railroad Company, charges that the former agent of the “Plant System” falsely represented that their system was a bonded line and also represented that they could bring the rice from Charleston to New Orleans without the payment of duty and that they paid the duty, although well aware that they ought not to have paid it. This defendant avers that the judgment of the lower court released the New Orleans and Northeastern Railroad Company from all liability and held its co-defendant, the “Plant’System,” for the damages, because it had not committed the breach of contract of which plaintiff complained; that it was pretended by the officers of the “Plant System” that their officials had been misled by a letter of instructions sent by the agent of the New Orleans and Northeastern Railroad Company, a position not sustained in the District Court;,that the officers of the “Plant System” always understood that the rice in question was to be shipped in bond; that they were informed by the customs officials in Charleston that their line was not a bonded road and, instead of notifying plaintiff, they purposely withheld the information until June 2nd, and after they paid the duties, and that this was done only in order to cover the freight upon the haul.

It appears that about June the rice arrived in New Orleans, but not in bond, in violation of the agreement to which we have just referred. The New Orleans and Northeastern Railroad Company refused to deliver the rice to plaintiff without payment to it of the custom charges, amounting to four thousand three hundred and sixty1two 12-100 dollars, and the freight charges of twenty-five cents per hundred pounds. To prevent loss and to avoid a forced sale, plaintiff paid these amounts under protest and reserved all of his rights to sue for and recover the amount thus paid to this railroad.

Plaintiff in its petition sets out at some length the loss it incurred in consequence of defendants’ disregard and violation of the agreement as stated, growing out of the fact, it avers in substance, that the rice could have been more profitably handled and sold here in bond than with the custom duties paid, for the reason that if it had been in bond it could have been exported to foreign markets or it could have been sold to the United States government, which, at the time, was buying large quantities of such food for its armies, and further that plaintiff could not profitably handle so large a quantity of rice not in bond, owing to the limited sales of rice in the local market at the time; plaintiff charges that all these facts were well known to the defendants when they promised to transport the rice in bond.

[14]*14Plaintiff avers that it had to sell this rice in the local market for less than it cost, and that if the defendant had complied with their contract as a common carrier, instead of losing, it would have made a profit. It claimed from the defendants m solido the amount of loss it alleges it has sustained and the profits it would have made. The final balance of the exhibit annexed to the petition reads: “Actual loss per pound, $.0156.”

The defendants filed separate answers. The New Orleans and Northeastern Railroad Company admits that a consignment of rice was made to the plaintiff as alleged, and especially avers that it was agreed by its agent with the agent of the “Plant System” that the rice was to come from Charleston to New Orleans over the “Plant System” and this defendant’s road in bond, and that it was understood that the customs duty of two cents per pound should not be paid in the port of Charleston.

This defendant avers that it was in no wise responsible for the failure of the “Plant System” of railroads to carry out the instructions received or to fulfill the undertaking it had assumed, and that if any payment of the duty in question made by the “Plant System” has violated any contract with plaintiff, this defendant is not responsible for its violation.

The other defendant, the “Plant System,” alleges, in- substance, in its answer, that if any damage has been suffered, plaintiff alone was at fault in communicating its instructions and purposes to the agent of the New Orleans and Northeastern Railroad Company, or in the misleading instructions given to the representative of the “Plant System” by the agent of the New Orleans and Northeastern Railroad Company.

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Related

Smedes Bros. v. Morgan's Louisiana & T. R. & S. S. Co.
110 So. 425 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1926)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 La. 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-bros-v-new-orleans-northeastern-railroad-la-1901.