Wayne Knitting Mills v. Delta Motor Lines

372 S.W.2d 419, 52 Tenn. App. 164, 1962 Tenn. App. LEXIS 133
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 25, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 372 S.W.2d 419 (Wayne Knitting Mills v. Delta Motor Lines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wayne Knitting Mills v. Delta Motor Lines, 372 S.W.2d 419, 52 Tenn. App. 164, 1962 Tenn. App. LEXIS 133 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinions

CARNEY, J.

The plaintiff below, Wayne Knitting Mills, brought suit for $3,000.00 against the defendants, Delta Motor Lines, Inc. and L. A. Tucker Truck Lines, Inc., for damages to thirty knitting machines which were shipped from plaintiff’s plant in Jackson, Missouri, to the plaintiff’s plant which was just beginning operations in Kosciusko, Mississippi.

Plaintiff’s declaration averred that the machines were delivered to the defendant, L. A. Tucker Truck Lines, Inc., as a common carrier in good and undamaged condition at Jackson, Missouri; that the defendant, L. A. Tucker Truck Lines, Inc., accepted the machines for shipment to Kosciusko under a bill of lading issued therefor; that said machines were transported by L. A. Tucker Truck Lines to Memphis, Tennessee, and from there to Kosciusko, Mississippi, by the defendant, Delta Motor Lines, Inc.

Plaintiff further alleged that the machines were in a damaged condition when received by the plaintiff at Kosciusko.

Plaintiff also filed a second count in its declaration averring that under Title 49, Sections 20, paragraph (11), and 319 of the U. S. Code relating to the liability of common carriers that the plaintiff was entitled to recover from both defendants regardless of which defendant was guilty of the negligence resulting in damage to the plaintiff’s property.

Each defendant denied liability and denied that it was guilty of any act of negligence resulting in damages to the plaintiff’s property and insisted further that the damage to the plaintiff’s knitting machines was the direct and proximate result of plaintiff’s own negligence in [167]*167improperly bracing and loading tire lmitting machines in the trailer in which they were shipped.

Also by special plea the defendant, Delta Motor Lines, Inc., relied upon Title 49, Section 101 of U. S. Code Annotated which is as follows:

“Loading by shipper; contents of bill; ascertainment of hind and quantity on request
“When package freight or bulk freight is loaded by a shipper and the goods are described in a bill of lading merely by a statement of marks or labels npon them or upon packages containing them, or by a statement that the goods are said to be goods of a certain kind or quantity, or in a certain condition, or it is stated in the bill of lading that packages are said to contain goods of a certain kind or quantity or in a certain condition, or that the contents or condition of the contents of packages are unknown, or words of like purport are contained in the bill of lading, such statements, if true, shall not make liable the carrier issuing the bill.of lading, although the goods are not of the kind or quantity or in the condition which the marks or labels upon them indicate, or of the kind or quantity or in the condition they were said to be by the consignor. The carrier may also by inserting in the bill of lading the words ‘Shipper’s weight, load, and count,’ or other words of like purport, indicate that the goods were loaded by the shipper and the description of them made by him and if such statement be true, the carrier shall not be liable for damages caused by the improper loading or by the nonreceipt or by the misdescription of the goods descripted in the bill of lading; Pro[168]*168vided, however, Where the shipper of bulk freight installs and maintains adequate facilities for weighing shell freight, and the same are available to the carrier, then the carrier, upon written request of such shipper and when given a reasonable opportunity so to do, shall ascertain the kind and quantity of bulk freight within a reasonable time after such written request, and the carriers shall not in such cases insert in the bill of lading the words ‘Shipper’s weight,’ or other words of like purport, and if so inserted contrary to the provisions of this section, said words shall be treated as null and void and as if not inserted therein. Aug. 29, 1916, c. 415, sec. 21, 39 Stat. 541.”

His Honor the Trial Judge sitting without a jury found the issues in favor of the defendants that the plaintiff’s damages were the result of the improper loading and bracing of the machines in the trailer and rendered judgment in favor of each defendant and against the plaintiff. Plaintiff, Wayne Knitting Mills, has perfected its appeal therefrom and assigned error in this court.

On this appeal it is the insistence of the plaintiff-appellant, Wayne Knitting Mills, first, that the preponderance of the evidence shows that the plaintiff did properly load and brace the machines in the trailer and that second, the defendants accepted said machines as loaded by the plaintiff for shipment and are therefore liable for the damages resulting therefrom even though plaintiff may have improperly braced and loaded said machines.

[169]*169As stated above the plaintiff, Wayne Knitting Mills, already was operating a plant at Jackson, Missouri, and was in the process of opening a new plant at Kosciusko, Mississippi. Prior to the date in question the plaintiff had already shipped in its own trucks some 270 of its knitting machines from Jackson, Missouri, to Kosciusko, Mississippi; these machines usually being shipped in lots of eight and ten on each truck.

The thirty knitting machines involved in this litigation were new machines purchased from a manufacturer in New Hampshire. They were shipped in cardboard crates on wooden pallets approximately 34 inches square to the plaintiff’s plant in Jackson, Missouri. There the crates were removed. Certain adjustments and settings were made on the machines for the desired type of hosiery to be made in Kosciusko, Mississippi.

The plaintiff, Wayne Knitting Mills, made request of the defendant, L. A. Tucker Truck Lines, for the use of a trailer in which it might load all thirty of the machines for shipment to Mississippi. The defendant, L. A. Tucker Truck Lines, furnished, accordingly, a Delta Motor Lines trailer because the L. A. Tucker Truck Lines stopped in Memphis, Tennessee, and it would be necessary that the goods be transferred over to the defendant, Delta Motor Lines, for shipment from Memphis, Tennessee, to Kosciusko, Mississippi.

After the trailer was placed on the plaintiff’s premises in Jackson, Missouri, the plaintiff’s employees took full charge of loading' and bracing the thirty machines in the defendant’s trailer. The machines were not recrated but they were placed in the trailer on the original wooden pallets. The machines were fastened down to [170]*170the wooden pallets by metal screws and metal strips across the four legs of each machine.

The proof shows that these knitting machines are somewhat top-heavy being approximately 5 feet high, about 2 feet or 2% feet square and weighing from five to six hunderd pounds each. The inside of the trailer was approximately 32 feet long and 7% feet wide. The machines were placed in the trailer in ten rows of three each. Thus it appears that practically all of the floor of the inside of the trailer was taken up with the wooden pallets on which were affixed the knitting machines.

The machines were braced on the floor of the trailer by nailing wooden 2 x 4’s about 2 feet long from each one of the wooden pallets to each of the adjoining wooden pallets. Then 2 x 4’s were nailed across the floor at each end of the trailer. Apparently none of the wooden pallets were nailed or screwed into the floor.

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Related

Beaty Chevrolet, Inc. v. Complete Auto Transit, Inc.
586 S.W.2d 122 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
372 S.W.2d 419, 52 Tenn. App. 164, 1962 Tenn. App. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wayne-knitting-mills-v-delta-motor-lines-tennctapp-1962.