Sperry Flour Co. v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad

189 S.E. 278, 54 Ga. App. 725, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 740
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedDecember 3, 1936
Docket25748
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 189 S.E. 278 (Sperry Flour Co. v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sperry Flour Co. v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, 189 S.E. 278, 54 Ga. App. 725, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 740 (Ga. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Broyles, C. J.

This suit was brought to the superior court of Fulton county, Georgia, and the original petition (formal parts omitted) was as follows: “The petition of the Sperry Flour Company, of Tacoma, State of Washington, respectfully shows: 1. That the defendant hereto is the Atlantic Coast Line Eailroad Company, a corporation of the State of "Virginia, and a common carrier. 2. That said defendant railway company, as a common carrier, has injured and damaged your petitioner in the sum of $1500, for the recovery of which petitioner brings this suit in tort. 3. - That your petitioner shipped 700 sacks of its flour from Tacoma, Washington, to Atlanta, Georgia, in January, 1935. 4. That said flour amounted to 98,000 pounds in sacks containing 140 pounds each; a total equivalent of 500 barrels of flour of 196 pounds each. 5. That said flour was delivered by petitioner, as shipper, in good order and condition on or about January 15, [726]*7261935, to the initial common carrier, the Ameriean-Hawaiian Steamship Company, at Tacoma, Washington. 6. That petitioner prepaid the freight on said flour, amounting to $583.10 to the Steamship Company. Such freight charges included the freight on said shipment to Atlanta, Georgia. 7. That said flour duly arrived at Charleston, South Carolina, on or about February 17, 1935, and was there unloaded from the ship. 8. That among the lines of railroads which the defendant owns and operates is a railroad .line extending from the City of Charleston, South Carolina, to the City or town of Waycross, in the State of Georgia. 9. That the defendant railroad company then furnished two of its cars needed for the transportation of said flour over its railroad line from Charleston to Waycross, and thence to Atlanta. 10. That the said flour was then loaded into said cars, 350 sacks in each car, said cars being lettered and numbered Atlantic Coast Line 48228 and Atlantic Coast Line 50169. 11. That when said flour was so loaded into said cars it was in good order and condition. 12. That the defendant issued its way-bills at Charleston, South Carolina, covering these cars, car ACL 50169, being covered by Charleston to Atlanta way-bill 51748, February 18, 1935, and car ACL 48228 covered by Charleston to Atlanta way-bill 51749, February 19, 1935. 13. That the defendant railroad company then carried said two ears of flour in its trains over its railroad line, from Charleston, South Carolina, to Waycross, Georgia. 14. That at Waycross, Georgia, said railroad line of the defendant railroad company connects with the railroad line of the Atlanta, Birmingham and Coast Bailroad Company. 15. At Waycross, Georgia, said defendant then delivered said two loaded cars of flour, closed and locked under seal, to the Atlanta, Birmingham and Coast Bail-road Company, the next connecting common carrier. 16. That the railroad line of the Atlanta, Birmingham and Coast Bailroad Company extends from Waycross, Georgia, to the City of Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia. 17. That said flour had been contracted to be sold to the Atlanta Flour and Grain Company, f.o.b. cars, Atlanta, Georgia, for $2925 cash, or at the rate of $5.85 for each 196 pounds of flour.- 18. That said two cars of flour were then carried by the Atlanta, Birmingham and Coast Bailroad Company over its railroad from Waycross to Atlanta and into the side-tracks in the place of business of the Atlanta Flour and Grain Company, [727]*727locked and sealed exactly as delivered by the defendant railroad company to said Atlanta, Birmingham and Coast Bailroad Company at Waycross, Georgia. 19. The Atlanta Flour & Grain Company then opened said two cars of flour, car 48228 on February 22, 1935, and car 50169 on February 23, 1935, and found said cars filled with fumes from some kind or kinds of chemicals; and that such chemicals and such fumes had tainted the flour to such an extent as to materially damage same; whereupon and by reason thereof said Atlanta Flour and Grain Company, as buyer, refused to accept and pay for said flour. 20. That thereupon and thereafter your petitioner, in order to protect its interest, spent $23.85 telegraphing and telephoning concerning this rejected shipment and its disposition, and $38.88 cost of expert and chemical examinations thereof, in order to ascertain the condition of the flour and to determine what disposition to make of it. 21. That said defendant railroad company’s said two cars so furnished contained noxious chemicals of some sort, of a kind and character unknown to petitioner; and which produced noxious fumes; said chemicals and fumes being highly injurious to said flour shipped in said cars, during the days and nights consumed in the transportation and delivery of said cars when loaded into same, as aforesaid. 22. That your petitioner finally sold said flour at the best price petitioner could get therefor in the market, to wit, $2075, a sum that was $850 less than the purchase-price at which petitioner had said flour sold. The original purchase by and sale to the Atlanta Flour & Grain Company would have been consummated and payment had of the agreed price, $2925, on February 23, 1935, if defendant had not damaged said flour. 23. That the defendant railroad company was careless and negligent as follows: (a)In not furnishing ears in which said flour could have moved over the defendant’s railroad, and to final destination in good condition and without damage to said flour, (b) In furnishing cars in which said flour moved over defendant’s railroad and to final destination, which cars contained noxious chemicals of some sort, of a kind unknown to petitioner, which produced noxious fumes, which chemicals and fumes tainted said flour therein while so in transit to Atlanta, (c) In not further protecting said flour from chemicals and fumes thereof as far as possible, by covering in .the interiors of said cars, both the floors and the ends and sides as high [728]*728up as the flour was stacked, with heavy paper or similar covering substance; and in not covering the tops of the stacks and the exposed sides thereof with such paper or similar protective substance, (d) In transporting said flour, as a common carrier, over its railroad line in noxious cars. 24. That by reason of such carelessness and negligence of the defendant railroad company, petitioner has sustained damages in the sum of $1500, as aforesaid, for which your petitioner prays judgment against said defendant railroad company accordingly. 25. That said defendant railroad company has an office and place of business in the City of Atlanta, in said State and county, in charge for it of Oscar J. English, as general agent of the Atlantic Coast Line Eailroad Company; defendant company being a colessee, with the Louisville and Nashville Eailroad, of the Georgia Eailroad, the termini of which railroad are Atlanta, Georgia, and Augusta, Georgia, and which said railroad is operated by said lessees thereof.”

The defendant interposed the following demurrer (formal parts omitted) : "1. Defendant demurs specially to paragraph 9 of said petition, on the ground that it is not alleged in said paragraph or elsewhere in said petition, to whom the defendant furnished the two cars mentioned therein, and defendant shows that this is a material allegation which should appear in said paragraph or elsewhere in said petition. 2. Defendant demurs specially to paragraph 12 of said petition, on the ground that said paragraph is irrelevant and immaterial in so far as it alleges that this defendant issued way-bills covering the movement of the two cars therein specified from Charleston to Atlanta. Because of the irrelevancy and immateriality of said allegations, this defendant shows that the same should be stricken.

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Bluebook (online)
189 S.E. 278, 54 Ga. App. 725, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sperry-flour-co-v-atlantic-coast-line-railroad-gactapp-1936.