Court Opinion

ID: 5594665
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-11 02:30:14.775449+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:36:34.254612
License: Public Domain

Felton, Justice,
concurring specially. The question to be decided is whether under applicable principles of law H. W. Durham & Company, Inc., was a contract carrier under Ga. L. 1931, Ex. Sess., pp. 99, 107, as amended, Ga. L. 1965, p. 257 (Code Ann. § 68-514) and, if so, whether it could transfer its obligations and responsibilities to an unlicensed, alleged independent contractor who contracted to produce and transport pulpwood to the ultimate purchaser of the pulpwood, the purchase, production and transportation of. which was to be governed by the contract between Rayonier, Inc., a pulpwood manufacturer, and H. W. Durham & Company, Inc. If Durham was a contract carrier the action was properly filed against it in Long County, where the deaths occurred. Code Ann. § 68-514 (b). Durham was engaged by Rayonier to furnish it with pulpwood in a prescribed territory in which the transactions involved in this case took place. The arrangement between Durham and Rayonier involved several kinds of transactions: (1) The sale and transportation of pulpwood which Durham owned and sold and transported to Rayonier; (2) the purchase of pulpwood by Durham, as broker or dealer, for Rayonier — in which cases Durham undertook to obtain leases on the pulpwood from the owners and to provide for the cutting of the wood and transportation to the mill of Rayonier; and (3) cases where a producer and transporter bought or engaged to buy pulpwood from an owner who sold to the producer other than one having a connection with Rayonier. In this last class of transactions the producer and transporter could not sell, produce and deliver pulpwood to Rayonier, in the territory stipulated, without turn*138ing the complete operation over to Durham as Rayonier’s dealer except that sometimes in such cases Rayonier issued a check in payment of the price of the pulpwood to the owner rather than pay Durham the full price of all items involved, cost, production and transportation, and let Durham issue checks to the owner and seller of the wood, the producer and transporter, and retain its own charges for its brokerage. The first of the methods of handling by Durham is irrelevant to this case as it involves issues not present in this case. A discussion of the second method employed is relevant because it throws light on the method employed by the parties in this case and the legal consequences of the intention of the parties. In the second method of handling, Durham, as dealer or broker for Rayonier, undertakes to purchase the pulpwood from the owner. While the title to the pulpwood bought for Rayonier might be in the dealer temporarily, it went to Rayonier upon payment to the owner and delivery to Rayonier at its mill. The dealer could not sell to others the pulpwood bought for Rayonier as dealer, so, in effect, the total contract between Rayonier and the dealer, Durham, was that the dealer’s undertaking was to buy, produce and deliver to Rayonier the wood purchased for Rayonier, the purchase being often financed by Rayonier. In our view, this kind of agreement involved the agreement by the dealer to transport the wood to Rayonier, as the total price paid by Rayonier included the cost of transportation. This is clearly an agreement to transport another’s property for hire as a contract carrier under the plain terms of Georgia law. Ga. L. 1931, Ex. Sess., pp. 99, 100, as amended, Ga. L. 1964, p. 298 (Code Ann. § 68-502 (c)). It does not comport with logic and common sense to say that the dealer could escape his responsibility under the law by contending that he was hauling his own property as a private carrier. The fixing of the title to property transported at the moment of transportation is not always the criterion for the conclusion that one who hauls property when the title thereto is in the carrier is a private carrier. If this were the case, this would be about the largest opportunity for law evasion that could be imagined. As we have stated, we have argued this second *139arrangement to see what is the truth about this case where the producer-hauler bought, or arranged for the purchase of, the pulpwood from the owner and purchase price of which was paid directly from Rayonier to the owner and where payment for the other items, production and transportation, was made to the dealer, who distributed it to the producer and hauler to cover expenses of production and transportation. If Durham had stayed out of this transaction, W. H. Branch, — the producer who procured the title to the pulpwood in this case, under what we have argued above — would not be a carrier for hire if he hauled the pulpwood, because it was his and ultimately and quickly to become the property of Rayonier and he had no contract with Rayonier to transport. But Durham did not stay out of the picture, because Rayonier promised it that Rayonier would not deal for pulpwood in that territory unless it was at least produced and transported by the dealer. (Rayonier evidently knew that W. H. Branch, the transporter and producer, had acquired title to the pulpwood here involved from the owner because Branch tried to sell it to Rayonier.) In these circumstances, the intention of the parties was that Durham was to do everything usually done when it procured wood and produced and hauled it except procure the title from the owner, because Rayonier insisted that its dealer perform all the other essentials of the contract or it would not purchase the pulpwood which W. H. Branch had bought. In view of the arrangement between Rayonier and the dealer, W. H. Branch was forced to quit acting on his own and procure and transport for Durham. As stated before, Durham made a contract to haul for hire. It could do so only through regular agents of the corporation or agents hired specially by the corporation. The only ways in which Durham legally could have carried out its contract would have been (1) to get a certificate of convenience and necessity from the Georgia Public Service Commission, or (2) to have the wood transported by a certified contract or common carrier. Otherwise, Durham was a carrier for hire and W. H. Branch and Arthur Branch were its agents. The fact that neither Branch nor Durham had certificates proves nothing. There was no evidence that any were applied for and refused, and the reason for refusal.
*140The fact that a hauler has title to- property he hauls is not conclusive that he is a private carrier. Southeast Shippers Assn. v. Ga. Public Service Commission, 211 Ga. 550 (87 SE2d 75) and cit.; A. W. Stickle & Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 128 F2d 155; Scott v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 213 F2d 300, 301. The facts in Elkins v. Schaaf, 189 Wash. 42 (63 P2d 421), clearly distinguish it from this case. The case of Newsome v. Dunn, 103 Ga. App. 656, 658 (120 SE2d 205), holding that a shipper does not have to inquire of a certified carrier the extent of his authorized operations, is not relevant to the facts in this case. In that case, the hauler had a certificate as a carrier for hire. In the circumstances of this case, Durham could not evade its responsibility under its contract with Rayonier by farming out to a producer an uncertified hauler as a so-called independent contractor. To permit it, would rob citizens of the protection the law provides for them through regulation — protection both for the parties as well as the public, for the good and safety of all.
I concur in the judgment for the above reasons.