Truax v. Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad

8 Del. 233
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 1, 1866
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Del. 233 (Truax v. Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Truax v. Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad, 8 Del. 233 (Del. Ct. App. 1866).

Opinion

The Court, Gilpin C. J., charged the Jury.

This is an action of assumpsit brought by the plaintiff, John Truax, against the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company, to recover from them compensation, by way of damages, for certain alleged grievances and defaults on its part, which are both generally and specially described and set forth, in the plaintiff’s declaration of complaint. These grievances and defaults are variously stated in the many different counts of the plaintiff’s declaration, but it is hardly necessary for your enlightenment, or for a proper understanding of the case, that I should go into a particular examination or analysis of the pleadings on the record. It will suffice for all the purposes of the case to state to you briefly and in general terms, the ground upon which the plaintiff claims to be entitled to recover. In the first place he grounds his right to recover upon a special contract, which he alleges the defendant made with him in the latter part of May or the first of June, in the year 1864, through the agency of a committee of the peach-growers convention, to transport his peaches, during the peach season of that year, over the P. W. & B. Railroad, from Smyrna, Brentford and Moreton stations, on the [238]*238Delaware railroad, to Washington street wharf in the city of Philadelphia, within certain definite and specified times. And secondly, he founds his right to recover upon the ground of the general responsibility of the defendant as a common carrier for hire, aside from and independently of any special contract whatever. The first thing, therefore, to be considered, is the question of a special contract. Was there such a contract between the parties? How, if no special contract has been proved, and more especially, if it has been shown that no such contract existed, it is the duty of the Court to say so, and thus to disembarrass the case of what does not properly belong to it. How, in order to make the subject intelligible to your minds so that it may be fairly disposed of, I am compelled to advert to the testimony somewhat in detail. If I mistake or misstate the facts, I beg of you to correct me. It appears from the evidence that the peach growers of Delaware, anticipating a large crop, and considering the perishable nature of the fruit, and knowing from past experience, how very important it was for their interest, to have the crop carried to market in due season, and in good condition of preservation, met at Dover in convention, in the month of May, 1864, for mutual consultation in regard to their interests as peach growers; and especially, for the purpose of making, if possible, some suitable arrangement for the safe and speedy transportation of the large crop then anticipated, over the line of the P. W. & B. Railroad, so as to connect with the Camden and Amboy road, and thus to place the fruit in the Hew York market without unnecessary delay. And with a view to the attainment of an end so desirable, the convention appointed a committee of intelligent gentlemen, extensively engaged in growing peaches, and in the purchase and sale of peaches, with authority to proceed to Philadelphia, to confer with Mr. Felton, the President of the company, on the subject, and to ascertain from him, whether, and to what extent, and upon what terms, an arrangement such as they desired, to transport the crop, could, or could not, be made with the [239]*239P. W. & B. Railroad Company; and if it could, then to make some suitable arrangement for carrying the crop of the season, or such portion of it, as they might desire to send to the Hew York market. The interview between the committee and Mr. Felton took place on the last of May or first of June. The views and wishes of the convention were fully presented by the committee, and the conference seems to have been entirely satisfactory to all parties. Mr. Felton, according to the evidence of members of the committee, appears to have manifested an earnest desire to meet their views, and to afford them all reasonable facilities and accommodations for the safe and speedy transportation of the crop. He, in fact, assured them, he would do all in his power to accommodate the business. He told them that in case the committee could make a satisfactory arrangement with the Camden and Amboy road, the P. W. & B. road would engage to perform its part. He suggested to them the necessity of their having a conference with proper agents of the Camden and Amboy Company, for the purpose of ascertaining whether any and what engagement they would be willing to make in furtherance of the common object, namely, the safe and speedy delivery of the peaches at Jersey City. They therefore, sought and obtained an interview with agents of the Camden and Amboy Company; and upon their return, they informed Mr. Felton, that that company would engage to carry the peaches, or other fruit, over their road from Washington street wharf, Philadelphia, to Hew York, [Jersey City] provided that, at least ten fully loaded cars were or should be delivered to them daily at Washington street wharf, by half past nine o’clock in the evening. Mr. Felton then told the committee, in substance, that in case the Camden and Amboy Company would furnish its proportion of cars, according to the number of miles to be run through from the stations in Delaware, to Hew York, he would undertake to put on an extra daily train of sixty cars, to run between the stations on the Delaware road, and Washington street wharf Philadelphia,—to leave the [240]*240several stations on the Delaware road at certain specified times, and to arrive at Washington street wharf at half past nine o’clock in the evening, so as to connect with the Camden and Amboy train, to leave there about that time for Hew York. As to the number, or rather the proportion of cars, to be furnished by the companies respectively, Mr. Felton said that that should be a matter of private arrangement between the1 companies. In conclusion he assured the committee the arrangement should be. carried out.

During these conversations, the committee gave Mr. Felton their estimate of the magnitude of the crop of the then approaching season, and of the number of baskets to be carried over the road. The number of baskets in 1863 was three hundred and sixteen thousand, and they estimated the number for 1864 at fully double that,—say, at seven hundred and fifty thousand baskets. It was remarked by one member of the committee, that some persons estimated it much higher, even as high as a million of baskets. Mr. Felton thought it would require, in all, one hundred and twenty cars to do the business—forty cars down the ro^d taking in peaches, forty cars on their way to Hew York, and forty cars returning from Hew York. According to the testimony of Mr. Todd, on his cross examination, Mr. Felton did not agree to furnish this number of cars, but merely said it would require that number to do the business ; and that his road would furnish its proportion, if the Camden and Amboy would furnish their proportion, and that these respective proportions should be settled by private agreement between them. Doctor Hidgley’s version of the conversation is that Mr. Felton said he would put on a special train of sixty cars; but this, he said, Mr. Felton promised to do, upon the expressed condition that the Camden and Amboy road should supply its proper proportion of the cars necessary to accommodate the business, assuming the whole number necessary to be put on, to be one hundred and twenty cars; but that the proportion to be supplied, by each company should be matter of private ar[241]*241rangement.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Del. 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/truax-v-philadelphia-wilmington-baltimore-railroad-delsuperct-1866.