Judges: Clark
Filed Date: 3/2/1910
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
BROWN, J., dissenting; WALKER, J., concurring in the dissenting opinion.
The exceptions 1, 2 and 12 are for failure to give certain prayers for instruction. On examination we find they were given substantially in the charge, which is sufficient. Harris v. R.R.,
Exceptions 4, 5, 6 and 7, are for refusal to give defendant, s prayers for instruction 3, 4, 6 and 7, which, are in substance, that this being an interstate shipment, the defendant was required to establish, file and publish its rate between Burlington. N.C. and Saginaw, Mich., before shipping this freight, and that the burden was on the plaintiff to show that the rate had been so filed. The duty to file such rate was on the defendant, the fact was in its peculiar knowledge, and its failure to show that it had discharged such duty cannot absolve it from its duty to the plaintiff to accept and ship his freight. It cannot plead its own default as a defense to another default. Indeed, on 3 April, the (72) agent at Burlington did get such rate from division headquarters at Greensboro, twenty-one miles away. There is no evidence that such rate could not have been procured at any time prior thereto.
The court committed no error in refusing these prayers for instruction. The proper establishing, publication and filing rates will be conclusively presumed. In Reid v. R.R.,
In Harrill v. R.R.,
The Federal statute 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, and the statute has no sort of application to this case, where the defendant was carrying on such business and presumptively, at least, under authority of law.
Exceptions 6, 13, 14 and 16 call in question the constitutionally of Rev., 2631, as applied to interstate shipments. We have repeatedly passed upon this contention, The defendant's brief admits this, and cites eight decisions of this Court which it asks us to overrule. In one of the latest of these, Reid v. R. R.,
When the case was again before the Court,Reid v. R. R.,
The above decisions have been since followed by Connor, J., Garrison v.R. R.,
That the interstate commerce did not begin till the goods were accepted for shipment and bill of lading issued is held. Match Co. v. Ontonagon,
Besides, the statutory enforcement, under penalty , of the common-law duty to accept freight "whenever tendered" is not in the scope of terms of any act of Congress, and is neither an interference with nor a burden upon interstate commerce, but in aid of it.
Exceptions 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22 and 23 present only one question, and may, therefore, be treated together. Did the plaintiff have the right to bring this action? Was he the aggrieved party? The law is correctly set forth in the following citations: "The shipper of the goods is the party aggrieved and is the one entitled to sue for the penalty prescribed in Revisal, sec. 2631, which arises from the wrongful refusal of the *Page 72
carrier's agent to accept them for transportation. Reid v. R. R.,
"In giving the penalty to the party aggrieved the statute simply designates the person who has the right to sue and restricts it to him who by contract has acquired the right to demand that the service be rendered. The party aggrieved in statutes of this character is the one whose legal right is denied, and the penalty is enforcible independent of pecuniary injury." Rollins v. R. R.,
This machinery had been shipped to the plaintiff on approval, and as it proved unsatisfactory, it was the plaintiff's duty, if it would relieve itself of liability, to return it to the vendors at Saginaw, Mich., and it had the legal right to demand of the defendant its transportation to that point, and was the party aggrieved by failure to do so.
Connor, J., speaking for a unanimous Court, said in Garrison v. R. R.,
The verdict of the jury established that the defendant failed and refused for sixty-one days to receive said goods for shipment. The plaintiff remitted all in excess of the penalty for forty days.
If the defendant had offered to ship to the end of its line, and declined to ship farther for lack of rates, a different point might have been presented; but there is no such exception in the record or in appellant's brief, and more than one of defendant's prayers is predicated on its refusal to issue any bill of lading because the agent at Burlington did not have the rates to Saginaw, though he had applied to the agent at Greensboro *Page 73
for them. But the neglect of the agent at Greensboro, or of those "higher up," was the failure and default of the defendant. Besides, if the defendant had issued the bill of lading, it is common knowledge that it would have contained the words "said company agrees to carry to its usual place of delivery, if on its road, otherwise, to deliver to another carrieron the route to said destination." These words, always used in such cases, are retained in the bill of lading prescribed by the Interstate Commerce Commission. The plaintiff asked for no other kind of bill of lading, and could not have expected the defendant to be responsible for shipment beyond the end of its own line. The defendant refused to issue any bill of lading at all (which would have been, of course, in the usual form for such shipments) or to ship at all, and the defendant is liable. Twitty v. R. R.,
Affirmed.
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 )
Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Cisco Oil Mill ( 1907 )
Alsop v. Southern Express Co. ( 1889 )