Thomas v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad

16 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 194
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedJuly 28, 1914
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 194 (Thomas v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 16 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 194 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

Foran, J.

October 11, 1912, the plaintiff, Arion L. Thomas, filed a statement of claim against the defendant, the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, in the municipal court of the city of Cleveland, Ohio, alleging that the defendant is a corporation doing business in Ohio, and is a common carrier; that on February 1, 1912, he shipped over the defendant’s road twenty-one horses, and while said horses were in possession and control of the defendant the back of one of the horses, and which was sound and in good condition when placed on the car, was broken through the carelessness and negligence of the defendant company, to [195]*195his damage in the sum of $100. The case was tried to the court and judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff for said sum of $100. The defendant filed a motion for new trial, which was overruled, to which action of the court in overruling the said motion, the defendant excepted and prosecutes error to this court to reverse said judgment of the municipal court. The parties will be treated here in the same relation in which they stood in the court below. It does not appear that the defendant filed a statement of defense. In the petition in error the defendant states seven grounds of error. The fifth that “the judgment of the court is contrary to the weight of the evidence and contrary to law” will only be considered. From the record it appears that the plaintiff’s evidence was confined solely to his own testimony — no other witness in his behalf being called. Substantially the plaintiff’s evidence is to the effect that he purchased the horses from the Riverside Plorse & Mule Company of Pittsburgh, Pa., for the Cleveland market; on or about February 1, 1912, he helped to load the horses on a stock car of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company; that there were twenty-one horses so loaded and shipped to Cleveland, Ohio; that when the car containing these horses reached Cleveland one of the horses was injured; that its back was broken and it had to be killed; that the value of the horse so injured and killed wás $100, and further that he had employed no one to accompany the horses to Cleveland and did not do so himself. Although the plaintiff in his statement of claim alleges that the horse had his back broken through the carelessness and negligence of the defendant, he tendered no evidence in support of this claim. He relied wholly upon the implied contract of indemnity arising from the common law doctrine of the carrier’s engagement to the public.

It is undoubtedly well settled that at common law a common carrier is bound to deliver the goods that have been entrusted to him, or their value; and he can only justify or excuse a default where a loss occurred by an act of God, by public enemies, the conduct of the shipper, by the inherent nature of [196]*196the goods, or unless special exemption has been agreed upon by contract, the terms of which are not against public policy. This is not strictly speaking a common law doctrine, for the law that makes a common carrier an insurer, and his engagement to the public a contract of indemnity, is founded on the Praetorian edict of the civil law found in the ninth title of the fourth book of the Pandict. This rule, sweeping away all secondary questions as to the conditions of culpability on part of the carrier, through or under which loss or damage may have occurred, has necessarily undergone considerable modification by reason of changing conditions in modes of transportation and the character of things or goods transported.

At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s testimony the defendant interposed a motion for judgment for the defendant, which motion the court overruled. This ruling of the court was proper as a prima facie ease had been presented. The allegation of the plaintiff that the loss was due to the carelessness and negligence of the defendant might properly be treated as mere surplusage. The burden is upon the defendant to show, under the general rule, that that loss was due to an act of God, public enemies, conduct of the shipper, or that exemption had been agreed upon by contract between the parties. The question whether the burden was upon the defendant to show' that the loss was due to te inherent nature or character of the shipment is not so well established.

The testimony of the defendant, as disclosed by the record, conclusively establishes: first, that the horses were shipped on the 31st day of January. 1912, at the Alleghanjq Pa., station of the defendant by the Riverside Horse & Mule Co. as shipper or consignor, consigned to E. L. Thomas, Cleveland, Ohio, as consignee second, that on the day of the shipment the consignor, ihe Riverside Plorse & Mule Company, and the defendant carrier, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, entered into a contract for this shipment, and signed, by its duly authorized agent, a usual standard uniform live stock contract, which was also signed by the Riverside Horse & Mule Company, by its agent, [197]*197one Samuel West, in the presence of and witnessed by one W. L. Dawson, an agent of the defendant; third, that the consignor, the Riverside Horse & Mule Company, sent with the horses, as caretaker thereof, one Edward Jones; that on the back of the contract appears this- stipulation:

“Release for man or men in charge.
‘ ‘ In consideration of the carriage of the undersigned upon a freight train of the carrier or carriers named in the within contract without charge, other than the sum paid or to be paid' for the carriage upon said freight train of the live stock mentioned in the said contract,, of which live stock I am in charge, the undersigned does hereby voluntarily assume all risk of accident or damage to my person or property, and does hereby release and discharge the-said carrier or carriers from every and all claims, liabilities and demands of every kind, nature and description for or on account of any personal injury or damage of any kind sustained by the undersigned so in charge of said stock, whether the same be caused by the negligence of the said carrier or carriers or any of its or their employes or other-wise.
“ (Signed) Edward L. Jones,
Signature of man in charge. “(Signed) W. L. Dawson, Witness.”

The plaintiff claims he had no knowledge of the fact that Edward Jones accompanied the horses to Cleveland, Ohio, but that the said Jones did so, and that he performed the usual duties pertaining to caretaker of the horses, clearly appears from the defendant’s evidence. The plaintiff did testify that he helped load these horses at Alleghany, Pa.; and while it is true that title to the goods passes to the purchaser upon delivery to the carrier (State v. Mullen, 78 O. S., 358), yet it is undoubtedly true that the Riverside Horse & Mule Company, from whom the plaintiff purchased the horses, was the agent of the plaintiff in making this shipment and signing the contract. Either this, or the plaintiff, as a matter of convenience, had the Riverside' Horse & Mule Company act as consignor in order to avoid appearing as both consignor and consignee himself. In any event it will be held that the plaintiff having admitted he was present [198]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-baltimore-ohio-railroad-ohctcomplcuyaho-1914.