Western Transportation Co. v. Newhall

24 Ill. 466
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 24 Ill. 466 (Western Transportation Co. v. Newhall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Transportation Co. v. Newhall, 24 Ill. 466 (Ill. 1860).

Opinion

Breese, J.

This case depends, for the most part, upon the evidence, which is preserved, and which we have examined with care. It is a case of bailment, the defendants being declared against as common carriers, on their undertaking to carry safely certain kegs and packages of powder, from Albany to Chicago, by water, and there deliver them to the consignee at Chicago. A bill of lading, or receipt, of the powder, was delivered by the defendants’ agent, to the consignors, upon which the first point made by the defendants arises.

They contend'that the qualifications and conditions, appearing • on the back of the receipt, were a part of the contract, no matter on what part of the paper they were printed. Being stipulations beneficial to the defendants, and appearing on the contract, which is the foundation of the suit, they must be regarded as constituting the contract of the parties, as much so as any other part of the paper.

Very many decisions are referred to as sustaining this view, one of which, Barnard v. Cushing, 4 Metcalf, 233, is said, in the defendants’ brief, to be a review of most of the cases referred to on the point. We have looked into that case, and find that it is substantially this : Where the payee of a note, at the time it was signed by the maker, and as a part of the same transaction, indorsed thereon a promise not to compel payment thereof, but to receive the amount when convenient for the maker to pay it, it was held that the indorsement must be taken as part of the instrument, and that the payee could not maintain an action upon it. This was very correctly held, and for the plain reason, that the stipulation indorsed on the note left the contract without the essential elements of a legal obligation, capable of being enforced at law. It is a mere honorary obligation, upon which no action could be maintained. It does not seem to touch this case. But the important question in this case, is raised by the second point made by the defendants, that the conditions and exceptions on the back of the bill of lading, being parts of the contract, must go to qualify and affect the liability of the defendants, and they, therefore, should have been noticed in the declaration ; and the omission to do so, constituted a fatal variance between the contract described in the declaration, and the contract proved in evidence.

The conditions and exceptions here spoken of, are contained in a certain clause printed on the back of the bill of lading, or receipt for the powder, under the head of “ Conditions and Rules.” It is as follows: “ The companies will not hold themselves liable at all for injuries to any articles of freight during the course of transportation, occasioned by the weather, or accidental delays, or natural tendency to decay.” The objection made by the defendants, to the omission of this clause from the declaration, brings up the questions, Was it a part of the contract ? Can a common carrier limit his common law liability, \ by a notice of this kind, even if brought home to the knowledge /' of the owner, or only by a special contract with the owner of the goods ?

We believe the rule to be now well settled, that the common law liability of a common carrier cannot be so restricted, for notwithstanding the notice, the owner has a right to insist that the carrier shall receive and carry the goods, subject to all the incidents of his employment, and there can be no presumption, when they are delivered to, and received by the carrier, that the owner intended to abandon any of his legal rights, or yield to the wishes of the carrier. Where a private carrier of goods, having the absolute right to impose his own conditions, and under no legal obligation to carry, receives goods to carry, the presumption would fairly obtain, that they were delivered to him on his term?. The common carrier is bound to receive and convey the goods safely, or answer for the loss.

All the cases referred to by defendants’ counsel, on this point, of which the case in Metcalf, before cited, is said to be a review, are, all of them, cases where the indorsements were referred to in the body of the contract, and the contract by its terms made subject to the indorsement, or the contract is referred to in the indorsement; and they are' cases, too, of ordinary contracts, where the party in whose favor the indorsement is made, is under no legal obligation to render the service or do the act required, and has the right to impose his own terms. On a delivery of goods to such carrier, the presumption is fair, that they were delivered on his terms.

The duties of a common carrier grow out of the relation in which he stands towards the public, and he is obliged to render the service demanded of him for a reasonable reward to be paid to him, and the owner of goods employing him, is not exposed to the presumption that he waived the performance of any of them. Such waiver can be effected only by a special contract between the owner and carrier. As early as Southcote’s Case, 4 Coke’s Rep. 83, it was determined that any bailee might stipulate for an increased or diminished degree of responsibility from that which the law imposed upon his general undertaking, and it has been so held in England ever since. This court has ruled the same way, in the case of Ill. Central R. R. Co. v. Morrison and Crabtree, 19 Ill. R. 141, and so have many, if not all, the courts of this country. A notice like this, if brought home to the knowledge of the owner of the goods, at the time of the delivery of the goods or before, and no objection made to it, would have, according to the rulings of the English courts, the force of a special contract. In most of the courts of this country, it is not so regarded. It is well settled here, that a common carrier cannot, by a general notice, even if brought home to the owner of the goods, limit," restrict, or avoid the liability imposed on him by the common law. The case of the New Jersey Steam Navigation Co. v. The Merchants’ Bank, reported in 6 Howard Sup. Court U. S. 381, is, we conceive, a fair exposition of the law, as it is in this country. That was the case of the burning of the steamboat Lexington, on Long Island Sound, in January, 1840, on which the Merchants’ Bank had, in charge of Hamden’s Express, some twenty thousand dollars, in gold and silver, to be carried from. New York to Boston. The special agreement under which this specie was shipped, provided that it should be conveyed at the risk of Harnden, and that the Navigation Company were not to be accountable to him or to his employers, in any event, for loss or damage. This was the agreement with Harnden and the Navigation Company, but which, the court held, did not exonerate the company from their liability to others as common carriers. The court say: “ But, admitting the right of a party to restrict his liability by express stipulation, it by no means follows that he can do so by any act of his own, that is, by a general notice. The common carrier is in the exercise of a sort of public office, and has public duties to perform, from which he should not be permitted to exonerate himself, without the assent of the parties concerned. And this is not to be implied or inferred from a general notice to the public, limiting his obligation, which may or may not be assented to. He is bound to receive and carry all the goods offered for transportation, subject to all the responsibilities incident to his employment, and is liable to an action in case of refusal. And we agree with , the court, in the case of Hollister v.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Ill. 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-transportation-co-v-newhall-ill-1860.