Court Opinion

ID: 6522734
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 19:05:16.542663+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:11.152076
License: Public Domain

PELHAM, P. J.
(1) The first assignment of error relates to the action of the trial court in overruling the motion of the plaintiff (appellant) to exclude the answer of the witness J.'M. Arnold, whose deposition was introduced in evidence, to a question propounded to him on cross-examination by the defendant, which an*444swer is as follows: “The placing of the car on the private siding of L. W. Radina & Co. constituted a delivery by the Cincinnati, New Orleans & Texas Pacific Railway Company.”
(2) No objection Avas made to the question eliciting this answer, and, as the answer was responsive to the question, the ruling of the court in refusing to exclude the testimony was free from error.—Kirk v. State, 10 Ala. App. 216, 65 South. 195. It is insisted by appellant in this connection, however, that, as the answer of the Avitness states only an opinion or conclusion of the witness, Avhich is directly and irreconcilably opposed to- the uncontroverted facts showing that there had not been a completed delivery of the car in question, the statement of this opinion or conclusion of the witness raises no conflict in the evidence with the undisputed facts showing the contrary, that is, that there had not been a completed delivery of the car, the point made being that, as there could be no inference drawn from the undisputed facts testified to that there had been a completed delivery of the car to L. W. Radina & Co. (the consignees under the contract of shipment), the court was in error in submitting the question of a delivery to Radina & Co. to the jury as a predicate for a finding favorable to the defendant on the plaintiff’s cause of action for freight and demurrage charges.
The facts deposed to by the witnesses show that the plaintiff endeavored to deliver the car, but that the consignee not only did not accept, but positively rejected and refused to receive, the shipment, and there could not, therefore, have been a completed delivery of the shipment, and there was no conflict in the evidence on this point, for, “where a witness states an opinion or conclusion which is irreconcilably opposed to the stated *445facts upon which it is founded, the opinion or conelusion is a testimonial nonentity and raises no conflict with the stated facts.”—Hicks v. Burgess, 185 Ala. 584, 64 South. 290, 292.
The court submitted the question of a delivery having been made to the consignees (Badina & Co.) to the jury, and in the oral charge of the court- used this lan•guage, to which an exception was reserved by the plaintiff : “If you believe from the evidence in this case that this lumber was delivered to L. W. Badina & Co., this defendant is not liable.”
We think the-court was in error in so instructing the jury when no fact had been testified to by any witness affording an inference that there had been a delivery and acceptance — a completed delivery of the shipment to Badina & Co., the consignee.
(3) The appellee was neither the owner nor the consignee of the shipment, but was the shipper or consign- or, and, while the bill of lading contained no express stipulation on the part of the consignor to pay the freight, there was an implied contract that it would, as the shipper who had on its own account engaged the services of the plaintiff as a carrier, pay the legally established transportation charges if the consignee should refuse to accept the shipment and pay-the lawful charges. — -6 Cyc. 500, § 5, and authorities cited in note 1. Otherwise there would he no way in those cases where the consignee rightfully refuses to accept the shipment and is not’ responsible for the charges of carriage to enforce the statutes requiring common carriers under stipulated penalty in case of failure to- exact and collect lawful published and established rates and charges.
(4, 5) In this case it is contended that, as the shipper or consignor was not the owner of the goods (lum*446ber) shipped, but was acting only as the agent of the consignee, or a third party, in engaging the services of the carrier, the carrier cannot recover of it the freight charges. Under the facts shown the shipper did not disclose its agency to the carrier at the time of making the shipment, but, on the contrary, took a bill of lading in its own name as consignor, as having shipped the lumber on its own account; There were no facts or circumstances connected with the shipment at the time the shipper delivered the goods to- the carrier putting the carrier on notice that the consignor was acting as the agent of another in making the shipment, and was dealing with it on its own account, or as the owner of the goods, at or before the time of their delivery for carriage. The shipper took a bill of lading and made the shipment in its own name as consignor on its own account, and, in the absence of knowledge or notice to the contrary, the carrier had a right to presume at the time of receiving the shipment and issuing the bill of lading to the shipper as consignor that it was dealing on its own account in its own right, or as the owner of the shipment, although the title, of course, presumptively would eo instanti pass to the consignee upon delivery of the goods to the carrier. This presumptive title, however, that arises after or upon the delivery of the shipment is only prima facie, and may be rebutted by facts showing the consignor to* be the owner.—Southern Railway Co. v. Proctor, 3 Ala. App. 413, 57 South. 513. Where, as here, the carrier receives the shipment from the consignor without knowledge or notice that he or it is acting as the agent of another, it will be held that the carrier received the shipment on the faith of an implied promise on the part of the consignor to pay the lawful freight charges in the event *447the consignee refuses to accept the shipment and pay the charges, and the consignor cannot escape liability therefor by subsequently informing the carrier, after the consignee has refused to accept the shipment, that he was not acting in his own behalf and on his own account, but was acting as the agent, or in behalf of another in making the shipment; in other words, the consignor cannot change or escape his liability as such after entering into the contract of shipment, and dealing with the carrier as the consignor, by notifying the carrier after his shipment has been carried to its destination and rejected by the consignee that he was acting merely as the agent of the true consignor, when that fact was not previously disclosed in the transaction.
(6) It is a familiar principle of law that an agent, who, at the time of entering into a contract with another, does not disclose the fact that he is an agent or acting as such in making the contract, may be held to a' personal liability on the contract.—Wood v. Brewer, 73 Ala. 259; Bell v. Teague, 85 Ala. 211, 3 South. 861; Brent v. Miller, 81 Ala. 309, 8 South. 219; Dexter v. Ohlander, 93 Ala. 446, 9 South. 361.
The rulings of the trial court made the basis of assignments of error are not in harmony with what we have' said, and the rule we have announced as a guide to the court on another trial of the case.
The judgment appealed from is reversed, and the cause remanded for trial in accordance with our holding as hereinabove expressed.
Reversed and remanded.