Court Opinion

ID: 6541402
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 22:15:58.98477+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:50.609044
License: Public Domain

Smith, J.  1. COM-j^rGar~ dellvj"|* o able time. . Heath sued the railway company a before a justice of the peace for $100, damages alleged to have been •sustained by him by reason of the detention of certain goods of his. To his complaint he attached his bill of lading,, from which it appeared that the company had received the goods to Cairo, in Illinois, and had undertaken to transfer them to Walnut Ridge, in Arkansas. The plaintiff alleged that the defendant’s servants had negligently carried the goods beyond their place of destination, in consequence-of which they were not delivered to him for a period of seventy days. The defendant was duly summoned, but did not appear in the justice’s court. There was a judgment by default, from which the defendant appealed to the circuit, court. There its appeal was dismissed for the want of prosecution, and it has appealed to this court. The only question is whether the complaint sets forth a., cause of action within the jurisdiction of the justice. The obligations which the law imposes upon a common carrier are not only to deliver at its destination the property-received by him, but he must deliver, or be ready to deliver with reasonable expedition. Cooley on Torts, 640 ; Addison on Torts, 3rd 3d., 464. A delay of seventy days is unreasonable unless explained,, and renders the carrier liable to an action for damages in some court.  a.jarisdiotx Ty the present constitution {Art. VII, sec. 40), justices-of the peace have exclusive jurisdiction in all matters of contract, and concurrent jurisdiction in all matters of damage to personal property, when the amount in controversy does not exceed one hundred dollars. By “matters of damage to personal property” we understand all injuries which one may sustain in respect to his ownership of personal estate.  3. Form o£ action In suing a common carrier for the breach of a contract-for the carriage and delivery of goods, the action may be, inform, either ex contractu or ex delicto. The plaintiff may bring assumpsit, counting upon the nonperformance of the?agreement which the defendant made with him or he may bring case and count upon the violation of the public duty which the defendant owes. But the same law is applicable-to both classes of action and the measure of damages is the-same in both. B. & O. R. R. Co. v. Pumphrey, 59 Md., 390. It is wholly immaterial whether this be regarded as an action upon a contract, or an action for a tort. In either-case the justice had jurisdiction to hear and determine the cause. But if it were material we should not reverse the' judgment-fin the present state of the record, if by any proof that might have been adduced on a trial it was possible for the plaintiff to show that he was entitled to recover. Dicus v. Bright, 23 Ark., 110; Moreland v. Condry, 40 Id. 78. Affirmed.