Case Name: Georgia Coast & Piedmont Railroad Company v. Durrence & Sands
Court: Court of Appeals of Georgia
Jurisdiction: Georgia
Decision Date: 1909-09-30
Citations: 6 Ga. App. 615
Docket Number: 1456
Parties: Georgia Coast & Piedmont Railroad Company v. Durrence & Sands.
Judges: 
Reporter: Georgia Appeals Reports
Volume: 6
Pages: 615–616

Head Matter:
1456.
Georgia Coast & Piedmont Railroad Company v. Durrence & Sands.
Action for damages, from city court of Eeidsville — Judge Morgan. September 16, 1908.

Opinion:
Powell, J.
1. A petition which shows that the plaintiffs were lumber manufacturers, with their plant located on the line of the defendant railroad company; that they sold a bill of lumber to one of their customers at a destination beyond the defendant's line, but on a connecting line; that the defendant had been accustomed to receive ears to that destination and promised to furnish cars for this shipment, but, after the lumber' had been placed on the side-track, arbitrarily and in bad faith refused to furnish them, whereby the plaintiff' suffered a loss by reason of the-lack of a local market and the absence of other shipping facilities, sets forth a valid cause of action. Chatta. So. R. Co., v. Thompson, 133 Ga. 127 (65 S. E. 285); Durden v. So. Ry. Co., 2 Ga. App. 66 (58 S. E. 299).
2. In a case of the kind indicated in the previous headnote, where the original petition proceeded on the theory that there had been a total loss of the lumber by reason of its being left at an inaccessible point without shipping facilities, an amendment setting up that, since the institution of the suit, the plaintiffs had been able to sell the lumber at a reduced price, and decreasing accordingly the amount of damages claimed, is not subject to the objection that.it sets up a new cause of action.
3. 'The act approved August 23, 1905 (Acts 1905, p. 120), known as "the reciprocal-demurrage act," is applicable only where the gist of the plaintiff's claim is based on the violation of the carrier's public duty, irrespective of contract. Southern Railway Co. v. Melton, 133 Ga. (65 S. E. 665).
i. Though a railroad company in this State, as to intrastate shipments, is not compelled to accept shipments to points beyond the terminus of its own line, yet it may contract to do so, or may by custom bind itself to do so. It can not grant this accommodation to one customer and refuse it to others standing in the same relation; as to do so would bo an unjust discrimination.
5. A promise by a conductor of a freight-train to furnish cars for a particular shipment is enforceable against the railway company, whore it. appears that he had been entrusted by the company generally with this, power and had been accustomed to exercise it.
6. The evidence fully sustained the verdict. Judgment affirmed.
Argued December 10, 1908. —
Decided September 30, 1909
Hitch & Denmark, for plaintiff in error.
W. T. Burkhalter, contra.