Judges: Clark, Beown, Walker
Filed Date: 11/30/1910
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
BROWN, J., dissenting; WALKER, J., concurring in dissenting opinion. *Page 400 On 17 September, 1907, the feme plaintiff tendered to the defendant at its freight depot in Charlotte, N.C. a lot of household goods for shipment to Davis, West Virginia, a station on the West Maryland Railroad. She offered to prepay the freight charges, and asked for bill of lading. The defendant declined to receive said goods for shipment, as requested. Again on 18, 19, 20, 21 and 23 September, she renewed her (491) requests to the defendant to receive said freight for shipment, as above stated, but the defendant refused to accept same until 23 September, 1907, when it informed the plaintiff that the amount necessary to prepay the freight was $34.08. The plaintiff thereupon paid the same, and the defendant then accepted said freight for shipment, and issued a bill of lading therefor.
On 17 September, when the plaintiff first tendered the goods and demanded the bill of lading, the defendant's agent informed the plaintiff that there was no established rate for shipment to Davis, West Virginia, and that none had been filed or published, and that he had no authority to receive said goods. Said agent on that day wired the proper authority to obtain the freight rate and for permission to receive said shipment. On 23 September he received such information and permission, and thereupon accepted the freight and issued a bill of lading therefor. At the date of said tender, on 17 September, there was a telegraph office at Davis, West Virginia. The plaintiff remained at Charlotte from 17 September to 23 September, waiting the shipment of said household goods.
The above facts were agreed and it was further agreed that the plaintiff's damage, if she is entitled to recover any, by reason of said delay in Charlotte was $25.
Upon the facts agreed the judge rendered judgment for $250, being penalty of $50 per day for refusal to accept freight tendered for shipment on each of five different days, and $25 compensatory damages, and the cost of this action. The defendant appealed.
The defendant contends that Revisal, 2631, is invalid, so far as it undertakes to impose a penalty on a common carrier for refusing to receive a shipment of freight from one State to another, but concedes that this Court has heretofore decided this point against it. In Lumber Co. v. R. R.,
Reid v. R. R. was again before the Court,
The above decisions were followed by Connor, J., in Garrison v. R. R.,
Interstate commerce does not begin "until the articles have (493) been shipped or started for transportation from one State to the other" was said by Bradley, J., in Coe v. Errol,
The second point the defendant makes is that it could not receive for shipment freight going from one State to another, until the rates of freight to such points had been filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission, as required by the United States statute. The defendant's brief concedes that this point also has been held against him by this Court. The act of Congress, the Interstate Commerce Act, sec. 6, provides: "Every common carrier, subject to the provisions of this act, shall file with the commission created by this act, print and keep open to public inspection schedules showing all the rates, fares and charges for transportation between different points on its own route, and between points on its own route and points on the route of any other carrier by railroad, by pipe line or by water, when a through route and joint ratehave been established." If no through route and joint rate from Charlotte to Davis, West Virginia, had been established, it was not, therefore, prohibited to the defendant to receive this freight. It can not be expected that a freight rate to every railroad station in the Union from Charlotte must be established and published before the railroad can receive freight for any point outside this State, at Charlotte. The Federal statutes does not prohibit the receipt or forwarding of a single shipment, but forbids the carrier to "engage or participate in the transportation of passengers or property," interstate, without filing its rates. It is the business of a common carrier which the defendant is forbidden to exercise without filing its rates. The statute has no application to this case, where the defendant was carrying on such business, presumptively, at least, under the authority of law.Harrill v. R. R.,
Besides, there was nothing which prevented the defendant from accepting the freight to be shipped to the end of its line, there to be delivered to other carriers to be transported to Davis, West Virginia. This it actually did when it finally received this freight and gave its bill of lading therefor on 23 September. The bill of lading recites the receipt of the freight in good order, marked as destined for Davis, West Virginia, and stipulates "which said carrier agrees to carry to its said destination, ifon its own road, or otherwise to deliver to another carrier on the route tosaid destination." There was no reason why the defendant could not have received this freight on the very first day it was tendered, as it was its duty to do, and have given a bill of lading in the identical words that it gave on 23 September. It could have shipped the goods and made the freight payable at destination or it could have foregone *Page 403 the receipt of freight till it could have ascertained by wire the amount thereof, which could have been done while the goods were proceeding on their way. The plaintiff did not demand prepayment of freight, as the condition precedent to acceptance of the goods. She merely offered to prepay.
In Twitty v. R. R.,
In Tel. Co. v. James,
In Morris v. Express Co.,
And finally the defendant objects that by reason of section 20 of the Interstate Commerce Act the initial carrier who issues a bill of lading is liable for the default not only of itself, but of each of the successive carriers to the point of destination, and therefore the State ought not to compel it to issue a bill of lading. It seems to question the constitutionality of the act of Congress. The act of Congress is merely declaratory of what was the common law in this respect and has been held constitutional in Smeltzer v. R. R., 158 F. 649; R. R. v. Crenshaw, *Page 404
No error.
Morris-Scarboro-Moffitt Co. v. Southern Express Co. ( 1907 )
Missouri Pacific Railway Co. v. Larabee Flour Mills Co. ( 1909 )
Reid v. Southern Railway Co. ( 1908 )
Garrison v. Southern Railway Co. ( 1909 )
Bagg v. Wilmington, Columbia & Augusta Railroad ( 1891 )
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. James ( 1896 )
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad v. Mazursky ( 1910 )
Phillips v. North Carolina Rail-Road ( 1878 )
Alsop v. Southern Express Co. ( 1889 )