Court Opinion

ID: 3861824
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 08:51:00.543459+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:41:24.813719
License: Public Domain

Argued April 15, 1925.
Defendant shipped a tank car of gasoline from Caspar, Wyoming, to National Oil Company, Boston, Mass., over the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad. The correct freight charges for the shipment were $409.15. By some oversight the railroad collected only $126.79, from the consignee, leaving a balance of $282.36, to recover which the railroad company brought this action of assumpsit against the consignor.
(1) Defendant filed an affidavit of defense raising *Page 3 
a question of law and moved for judgment in its favor, because the plaintiff's statement contained an averment that defendant had, at the time of shipment, orally agreed to assume and pay the freight charges if payment thereof should be refused by the consignee. We are of opinion that the court below rightly refused the defendant's motion. The averment that the consignor agreed to pay the freight if not paid by the consignee, was nothing more than the formal averment of a promise to pay that which the law implied from the act of shipping the car. It is similar to the averment of a promise to pay which the law implies when one buys goods from a merchant, or orders work done by a mechanic. Appellant's contention, in this respect, is answered by the following quotation from the opinion of Mr. Justice BRANDEIS in L.  N.R. Co. v. Central Iron  Coal Co.,265 U.S. 59, 67: "Ordinarily, the person from whom the goods are received for shipment assumes the obligation to pay the freight charges; and his obligation is ordinarily a primary one. This is true even where the bill of lading contains, as here, a provision imposing liability upon the consignee. For the shipper is presumably the consignor; the transportation ordered by him is presumably on his own behalf; and a promise by him to pay therefor is inferred (that is, implied in fact), as a promise to pay for goods is implied when one orders them from a dealer." Defendant was, in no sense, a guarantor and is not sued as such.
(2) Nor do we think the affidavit of defense upon the facts subsequently filed set up a valid defense in law. "The shipment being an interstate one, the freight rate was that stated in the tariff filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission. The amount of the freight charges legally payable was determined by applying this tariff rate to the actual weight. Thus, they were fixed by law. No contract of the carrier could reduce the amount legally payable, or release *Page 4 
from liability a shipper who had assumed an obligation to pay the charges. Nor could any act or omission of the carrier (except the running of the Statute of Limitations), estop or preclude it from enforcing payment of the full amount by a person liable therefor": L.  N.R. Co. v. Central Iron  Coal Co., supra, p. 65. As before stated, the consignor is, ordinarily, primarily liable for the payment of the freight charges, and though acceptance of the goods by the consignee will raise an implied contract on his part to pay the legal freight charges which may be enforced by the carrier (P.C.C. 
St. L.R. Co. v. Fink, 250 U.S. 577; N.Y.C.R. Co. v. York 
Whitney Co., 256 U.S. 406), yet this does not relieve the consignor of his primary liability, where such liability exists: 10 Corpus Juris 445, sec. 699, and annotations.
We need not concern ourselves, in this case, with instances where the shipper of goods was not acting on his own behalf, and this fact was known to the carrier; or where the parties, with the acquiescence of the carrier, agreed that the shipper should not assume any liability whatsoever for the freight charges, or only a secondary liability. See P.  R. Ry. Co. v. International Motor Co., 84 Pa. Super. 582. In the present case the defendant shipped the goods on its own account and signed the shipping order. The contract between the defendant and National Oil Co., affixed to the affidavit of defense, under which the shipment was made, provided that tank cars were to be furnished by the shipper and deliveries of gasoline were to be made at Boston, Mass., f.o.b. tank cars; thus requiring the shipper to pay the freight from the point of shipment to the place of delivery, and fixing its liability as primary. The case, therefore, came within the principle recognized in Central R.R. of N.J. v. Mauser, 241 Pa. 603; P.R.R. Co. v. Whitney  Kemmerer, 73 Pa. Super. 588, 593,594; P.R.R. Co. v. General Crushed Stone Co., 76 Pa. Super. 186; B.  O.R.R. *Page 5 
Co. v. Foster, 81 Pa. Super. 304; and kindred cases, which sustain the liability of the shipper, in such circumstances, to the carrier for the lawful freight rate.
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.