St. Joseph & Grand Island Railroad v. Palmer

56 N.W. 957, 38 Neb. 463, 1893 Neb. LEXIS 340
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1893
DocketNo. 4644
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 56 N.W. 957 (St. Joseph & Grand Island Railroad v. Palmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Joseph & Grand Island Railroad v. Palmer, 56 N.W. 957, 38 Neb. 463, 1893 Neb. LEXIS 340 (Neb. 1893).

Opinion

Irvine, C.

The plaintiff in error was a railroad company operating a line of railroad between St. Joseph, Missouri, and Grand, Island, Nebraska, and passing through the city of Hastings,. Nebraska. In December, 1889, certain goods were loaded into a ear at Hastings for shipment to Grant’s Pass, Oregon. These goods consisted of furniture, wearing apparel, and household goods belonging partly to one Pardee and partly to one Hart, and of a stock of drugs and drug store-fixtures belonging to the defendant in error, Palmer. The-goods were carried to Grand Island by the plaintiff in error,, and there turned over to the Union Pacific Railway Company, on the line of whose road the car was wrecked and no part of the goods was ever delivered at Grant’s Pass. Pardee and Hart assigned their claim to Palmer, who brought this suit in the district court of Adams county to-recover damages for the loss of the goods.

The petition of the plaintiff below, in addition to the foregoing facts, which are undisputed, pleads, among other-things, that Palmer, Pardee, and Hart entered into a verbal contract with the defendant to transport said goods and property to Grant’s Pass’and there safely deliver them in, ten days in consideration of the sum of $200, and that after the goods were loaded into the car a paper was presented to Pardee for signature, and he signed it, believing it. to be a receipt and in ignorance of certain clauses therein contained; that after the goods were turned over to the railroad company for shipment, and the freight of $200 paid,, the railroad company’s agent stated to the owners that the-$200 might not be enough to pay the freight and extorted from the owners a promise that in case the freight should exceed $200, they would pay the excess; that the paper referred to was not the contract of shipment, but that the-contract was as first stated, and that the contents and limitations of the paper were fraudulently concealed from- the-[468]*468owners of the goods. The paper referred to was in fact a bill of lading, and the clauses in regard to which fraud was •alleged were two: The first was that the railroad company assumed no liability beyond the end of its own line; that is, at Grand Island, Nebraska. The other is as follows: “One car emigrant outfit O. R. Rel’d val. of $5 per cwt. in case of total loss. S. L. & C.”

The answer, so far as it is material, may be analyzed as follows: First — That the railroad was engaged in the business of interstate commerce, and that this was an interstate shipment and not within the jurisdiction of the state courts. Second — That the bill of lading constituted the contract between the parties; that the first provision quoted exempted the defendant beyond the end of its own line, and that there was no fraud or concealment. Further, that the somewhat cabalistic letters and words quoted from the bill of lading meant and were understood to mean owner’s risk released to the value of $5 per cwt. in case • of total loss, and that the shippers were to load and count the goods. Third — That the contract between the parties contemplated merely the shipmeut of an emigrant outfit, which was understood to mean household goods alone, and that the stock of drugs was fraudulently loaded into the car; the established rate on a car containing drugs being very much greater than the established rate on an emigrant outfit. Fourth — That under the interstate commerce law false representations as to the contents of the package, with the consent and connivance of the carrier or its agent, are constituted a misdemeanor and bar the plaintiff from relief.

The evidence upon the part of the plaintiff tends to show that Pardee and Hart went to the agent of the company at Hastings, stating to him that they wished to ship their household goods and stock of drugs, and asked him for the rate to Grant’s Pass upon the ear load; that the agent informed them that the rate would be $200, and that there would be nothing to pay at the other end of the [469]*469line; that thereupon the goods were loaded upon a car furnished by the railroad company for that purpose; that after the loading was complete, Pardee and Palmer went to the agent for the bill of lading; that the agent then told them that inasmuch as the drugs had been loaded upon the car, he was not sure that $200 would pay the freight, but that he would mark upon the bill of lading a receipt for the $200, to apply on the freight, and if there was more to pay it must be paid at the other end; that they consented to this, because there was no other course left open to them; that the bill of lading was then handed to them, and Pardee signed it, none of the owners reading its conditions or having his attention called thereto.

Upon the part of the railroad company the testimony tends to show that at the first interview nothing was said about the stock of drugs, but that when Pardee came for the bill of lading the agent told him that he would not give him a clear bill of lading for he had reason to believe that “ there was other stuff in the car besides household goods,” but would accept $200, to be applied, the owners to pay the difference at the other end; that Palmer then handed him $200, and Pardee signed the bill of lading in duplicate.

The case was submitted to the jury under long instructions, the general effect of which was to submit the question as to whether the oral agreement pleaded or the bill of lading constituted the contract between the parties; further, to instruct the jury that under the laws of this state no limitations upon the liability of a common carrier could be imposed except upon proof that such limitations had been called to the attention of the shipper and by him expressly assented to, and submitting to the jury whether or not attention had been called to the limitations and assent obtained. There was a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $5,461.53.

1. The question of jurisdiction was first raised by de[470]*470murrer to the petition and then by answer. The theory of the railroad company in this regard seems to be that the shipment being from one state to another, it became subject solely to the laws of the United States. If that were so, it would not oust the court of jurisdiction. It would only determine upon what principles of law the rights of the parties would depend. The record shows that an attempt was made to remove the case to the federal court; that the •court refused to order the removal. Nevertheless, it would appear that an order of removal must have been obtained from some source, for there is in the record an order of the federal court remanding the case to the district court of Adams county.. These proceedings are a part of the law •of the case and conclusively determine the question of jurisdiction in favor of the plaintiff.

2. The questions of law in regard to the transaction are discussed in the briefs under a number of heads relating to objections to the evidence and to the instructions of the court. To state each in its order would consume much space, and a detailed consideration is unnecessary, for the reason that all these exceptions and assignments of error relate to a very few main questions. Great stress is laid upon the point that the bill of lading must be treated as the conclusive evidence of the contract between the parties, and that parol evidence was not admissible to show a prior verbal contract contrary to the terms of the bill of lading. In this connection it is also urged very strenuously that the court erred in submitting the question raised by this evidence to the jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 N.W. 957, 38 Neb. 463, 1893 Neb. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-joseph-grand-island-railroad-v-palmer-neb-1893.