Court Opinion

ID: 6511926
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:23:10.212239+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:54.477823
License: Public Domain

CLOPTON, J.
We see no error in overruling the demurrer to the complaint for want of certainty in the description of the property, which it is alleged the defendant failed to deliver. It is described as “ one trunk ” containing certain articles, and, among others, “ clothing and personal wearing apparel.” The rule as to certainty in pleadings, as observed by Mr. Stephen, “ is not so strictly construed, but that it sometimes admits the specification of quality and quantity in a loose and general way.” Accordingly, at common law, a declaration in trover for “ a library of books ” has been deemed good without further description; and so for “ two packs of flax and two packs of hemp,” without specifying weight or quantity. Stephen on Plead. 298-299. Our own decisions have sustained descriptions equally wanting in details of statement. Haynes v. Crutchfield, 7 Ala. 189 ; Thompson v. Pearce, 49 Ala. 210. When specific property is sued for, in an action of detinue, a somewhat stricter rule of description is admitted to prevail.—David v. David, 66 Ala. 139.
■ Where the action is brought on a special contract, it is incumbent on the plaintiff to prove the contract, substantially as alleged. A variance in any material matter of description is fatal to the right of recovery. The complaint sets out an agreement by the defendant alone, to transport the goods of plaintiff to Birmingham, to be there delivered to the plaintiff. *591The contract proved was made with the Mobile and Girard Railroad Company, and is not an agreement by the defendant to transport to Birmingham, but to deliver them to the South and North Alabama Railroad Company. The duty and liability of the defendant under the contract proved are materially variant from its duty and liability under the contract as alleged. Under the complaint, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover on the contract proved. — 1 Greenl. on Ev. § 60.
The plaintiff, in April, 1883, procured from the Mobile and Girard Railroad Company through tickets for the transportation of himself and members of his family, and through'checks for the transportation of his baggage from Columbus, Georgia, to Birmingham, Alabama, over the respective roads of the Mobile and Girard Railroad Company, of the defendant, and of the South and North Alabama Railroad Company, which were connecting lines, the defendant’s being the intermediate road. When the baggage reached Union Springs, the place at which the road of defendant connects with the road of the Mobile and Girard Railroad Company, it was in good condition ; but when it was delivered to the plaintiff at Birmingham, one of the trunks had been broken, and the contents abstracted. On these facts, the court instructed the jxiry, if the trunk was delivered to and received by the defendant in good order, and when it was delivered to the plaintiff at Birmingham it was badly broken, and its contents taken out, it devolved on the defendant to show that it was delivered in good condition to the South and North Alabama Railroad Company, and, if it failed to show this, the plaintiff is entitled to recover. There was no evidence, other than that the trunk was in good order at Union Springs, showing when or where it was damaged, or what was its condition when delivered by the defendant at Montgomery to the South and North Alabama Railroad Company. The instruction presents the direct question : Where baggage, for the transportation of which over three connecting roads, operated by separate and independent companies, through checks have been issued by one of the terminal roads, is found damaged when delivered at the place of destination by the other terminal road, does the burden of proof, in the absence of any special contract or arrangement between the companies, rest on the intermediate road to show not only a delivery to the connecting terminal road, but also that the baggage was in good condition when so delivered, it being shown to have been in good order when received by the intermediate road ?
While the transportation of baggage, as such, is incidental to the carriage of the owner as a passenger, and while the railroad companies are only responsible to passengers for injuries sustained from some neglect or wrong, they are liable for the *592safe delivery of their baggage in the same manner and to the same extent as carriers of merchandise. — 2 Rorer on R. R’ds. 991. The question will, therefore, have to be determined on the same principles, as if the baggage had been shipped as freight over the connecting roads. If the defendant were both the receiving and delivering carrier, or liable for the safe delivery of the baggage at the point of destination, proof that it was in good condition when received, and in a damaged condition when delivered, would cast on the defendant the onus of showing that the damage was occasioned by some cause, which excepts from the absolute liability of safe delivery.
An arrangement, express or implied, between companies operating several roads, by which either terminal road can issue through tickets and through checks for baggage, each being entitled only to the fare for transporting over its own line, does, not render each one liable for loss or damage sustained on any of the roads.—Ellsworth v. Tartt, 26 Ala. 733. Such arrangement is not operative to impose on the intermediate carrier the absolute liability of safe delivery.—M. & W. P. R. R. Co. v. Moore, 51 Ala. 394. An arrangement, such as the one shown by the evidence, imposed on the defendant the duty to receive Í2'om the terminal road, safely carry over its own road, and deliver to the other connecting terminal road.—Insurance Co. v. Railroad Co., 104 U. S. 146. The receiving terminal road has-tió power or authority, in the absence of a special contract, to-bind the intermediate road to transport beyond its terminus. When the goods have been safely carried to its terminus, its duty as a carrier ceases, and the duty of forwarding arises.
In England, the courts'generally have held that the duty and obligation of the. carrier, who first receives, continues through the entire route of transportation. In this country there has existed a diversity of opinion. In Railroad Co. v. Manufacturing Co., 16 Wall. 318, Mr. Justice Davis, while regretting this diversity of opinion as -unfortunate for the interests of commerce, says: “ But the rule, that holds the carrier only liable to the extent of his own route, and for the safe storage and delivery to the next carrier, is in itself so just and reasonable that we do not hesitate to give it our sanction.” In Lindley v. Railroad Co. 88 N. C. 547, it was held that, in the absence of explanation as to how or where the loss or damage occurred, or which of the roads on the route is culpable, the receiving carrier must be held responsible for the injury, and that the nondelivery, or delivery in bad condition by the last of the-connecting lines, is prima facie evidence of default in the receiving carrier. In Mobile & Girard R. R. Co. v. Copeland, 63 Ala. 219, it is said: “It must be regarded as settled, that a carrier, though a corporation, chartered by the laws of a par-*593ticnlar State, having a known and defined line of transportation, may contract for the safe carriage and delivery of goods to a'point beyond the terminus of his line, within or without the State; and if such a contract is made, all connecting lines stand in the relation of his agents, for whose defaults he is re* sponsible to the owner of the goods; ” and it was held that'; in such case, it was the known and established duty of the carrier to deliver them at that place, and to the person who has the right to receive them. This rule is conceded, where the contract is for delivery beyond the terminus of the line ; but the special agreement in this case was, that th.e receiving carrier would safely transport the baggage to Union Springs and deliver it in good condition'to the defendant, the next connecting road. When this was done, the duty and responsibility of the receiving carrier were at an end. In case of a non-delivery at the point of destination, or a total loss, the liability is prima faoie on the receiving carrier, and casts on him the onus of showing a delivery in good condition to the next connecting road. The expressions in S. & N. R. R. Co. v. Wood, 71 Ala. 215, if otherwise understood, are explained and modified as here stated. In ease of delivery in bad order by the last carrier, the presumption against the first carrier does not arise.
A different rule applies in the case of the discharging or delivering carrier. From the necessities of trade and commerce, or of successful competition, or from other causes, it has become common to establish long routes of transportation 'by successive and connecting roads. Under such circumstances, it would generally be difficult and oftentimes impossible, for the owner, to show on which road they w'ere injured. One of the roads is certainly responsible; and the last carrier has the means of showing the condition of the goods when received by him. The safety'and protection of the commercial and traveling public require the recognition of the presumption, in the absence of evidence, that the goods continued in the same condition as when received by the first carrier, unless it may be exceptional goods of a perishable nature, and casts on the discharging carrier, who delivers them in a damaged condition, the burden of showing their condition when received by him. It has been held in some cases that no such presumption arises, but the rule we approve is ably and elaborately considered and sustained in the following cases: Laughlin v C. & N. Ry. Co. 28 Wis. 204 ; Smith v. N. Y. Cen. R. R. Co., 43 Barb. 225. This presumption harmonizes with the spirit, and promotes the policy of the statute, defining the duty and liability of common carriers in respect to the reception of goods for transportation, and their delivery.—Code of 1876, § 2139.
No case has been cited to our attention, and we have found *594none, which clearly and expressly determines the rules of presumption in an action against the intermediate carrier. The case of Lindley v. R. R. Co., 88 N. C., supra, has been mentioned as sustaining the rule, that delivery in bad condition by the last of successive lines is prima facie evidence of default in the intermediate line ; but an examination of the opinion shows that the defendant, the Richmond and Danville Railroad Company; was managing and operating the road that received the freight, with other connecting roads, under the general name of the Piedmont Air-Line Railway, and was treated and regarded as the first or receiving carrier. There is no question of the liability of an intermediate carrier for a loss or injury occurring on its own road.—Chi. & R. I. R. R. Co. v. Fahey, 52 Ill. 81.
Though the intermediate carrier occupies, to some extent, relations different from those of the first and last carriers, the principles applicable to them, and to carriers in general, will serve to elucidate the question we are considering.
When goods are received by a common carrier for transportation, and are lost or damaged while in his custody, the presumption is, that it was occasioned by his default; but the owner must offer some evidence tending to show a non-delivery or delivery in a damaged condition — in other words, some evidence of the loss or injury while in the custody of the carrier. Proof of the mere reception of goods by a carrier and of them condition when received, without more, does not create the presumption of loss or damage.—S. & N. Ala. R. R. Co. v. Wood, 71 Ala. supra. We have said that the duty of the intermediate carrier is to transport safely the goods to his terminus, and deliver in the same condition in which they were received to the next connecting line. A delivery, in such case, to the next connecting line is tantamount to, and must be governed by the same rules as a delivery to the consignee, where the goods are to be so delivered - at the terminus of the line of the intermediate carrier. Had the contract of the defendant been to transport the baggage to Montgomery, the terminus of the road, to be there delivered to the plaintiff, proof of the reception of the baggage, in good order, by the defendant, and a delivery to the plaintiff in apparently like order, though it were subsequently discovered it had been damaged, would not, without more, cast on defendant the burden of showing it was in good condition when delivered. The plaintiff must introduce some evidence of the damaged condition of the goods at the time of delivery. On like principles, when the baggage was delivered by the defendant to, and received by the next connecting road, proof that it -was in a damaged condition when delivered by the lust carrier does'not *595operate, in the absence of other evidence, to cast on the intermediate carrier the onus of showing that it was in good condition when delivered to the next connecting road.
We have shown that when goods are received in good condition by the first carrier, to be transported by successive and connecting lines, the presumption is, they continue in the same condition until the contrary is made to appear. This presumption is indulged to place a facie liability on the carrier who delivers the goods in bad order, and who knows their condition when received. To hold that a delivery in bad order by the last carrier raises also the presumption of default in the intermediate carrier, will present the anomaly of two inconsistent legal presumptions — that the same damage was occasioned by the default of the last carrier, and the intermediate carrier, while the goods were in their respective custody at different times.
Were there no evidence of a delivery to the next connecting road by the defendant, who had received the baggage, or evidence that it was in bad order when delivered, the onus would be on the defendant to show that the loss or injury was occasioned by some cause which exempted-from liability. But it appearing from the evidence that the trunk was delivered by the last carrier to the plaintiff, — thereby making manifest a delivery by the defendant to such carrier, — if the plaintiff would hold the defendant liable for the damage, he must offer some evidence showing the condition of the trunk at the time of delivery by the defendant.
A presumption should be the natural, usual, and probable inference from the facts proved. A duty having been performed, the presumption of deficient performance will not arise from a subsequent event, no direct relation or connection between such event and the act of performance being shown.
It may be 'said that this rule will operate to force the owner to successive suits against the different carriers. Any rule of presumption may have the same effect. If the instruction of the circuit court were sustained, and the defendant should show the baggage was in good condition when delivered, the plaintiff would be driven to a suit against the last carrier. No rules can be adopted which would avoid such effect, other than to hold each carrier responsible for the damage, without respect to the line on which it occurred, wfiich would violate well settled principles of law. The formation of long routes of transportation by successive roads is in the interest of cheaper transportation, and rapid transit; and if shippers adopt this mode of shipment, they accept its difficulties with its benefits. We have endeavored to formulate the rule applicable to each carrier, *596which best accords with established legal principles—Darling v. B. & W. R. R. Co., 11 Allen, 295.
Reversed and remanded.