Judges: Bingham, Parsons, Walker, Young, Chase
Filed Date: 12/4/1906
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The defendants are engaged in the carrying trade, as common carriers of freight and passengers. Whiting Sons are milk contractors who buy and sell milk, buying it of the producers on the line of the defendants' road and distributing it at different points along the same. In consideration of the defendants agreeing to furnish Whiting Sons with cars provided with icing facilities for the transportation of their milk, Whiting Sons agreed to pay them a stipulated sum, to furnish the ice, to provide men to do the work incident to handling and caring for the milk while in transit, and to indemnify the defendants against the claims of any of the employees of Whiting Sons "on account of personal injury or damage to property received while on the cars or premises" of the road. In view of the provisions of this contract, and in consideration of his future *Page 108 employment and other considerations, the plaintiff, an employee of Whiting Sons engaged to handle and care for the milk, agreed with Whiting Sons not to make or prosecute any claim against the defendants on account of injuries received by him during his employment and to indemnify Whiting Sons against all liability on account of any such claim. The plaintiff was injured through the defendants' negligence, while on their train in the performance of his duties under the contract; and the question we are called upon to consider is whether these contracts are valid and constitute a defence to this action.
The defendants say that both contracts are valid, and that they should be permitted to avail themselves of the benefits of the plaintiff's contract with Whiting Sons to avoid circuity of action. But whether they can avail themselves of the provisions of that contract to avoid circuity of action depends upon whether their contract with Whiting Sons is one the law will recognize and enforce. The defendants do not dispute the proposition that common carriers cannot by contract relieve themselves from liability arising from their own negligence in the performance of duties imposed upon them by law. Their first contention is, that upon the facts disclosed in the plea the shippers could not demand as of right that the defendants should furnish the cars called for in the contract for the transportation of milk; that neither the common law nor any provision of statute required them to do more than furnish ordinary freight cars for that purpose; that this service was something which they were under no public duty to perform; and that in undertaking to render it they were private carriers and could lawfully impose such terms as they deemed proper as a condition to its performance.
Were the defendants common carriers of milk? Our statutes provide that "Every railroad corporation which shall contract with any person for the transportation of milk in large quantities over any portion of its road shall establish a tariff for the transportation of milk by the can over the same portion of its railroad with fairly proportionate advantages and facilities in every respect." P.S., c. 160, ss. 21, 22, 23; Laws 1881, c. 81. And it would seem that when the defendants entered into the contract with Whiting Sons, they thereupon and by force of the statute became common carriers of milk and were required to establish a tariff for its transportation. The same conclusion would be reached if we applied the principles of the common law as laid down in McDuffee v. Railroad,
Inasmuch, therefore, as the defendants were common carriers of milk, and as it was their public duty to furnish all persons desiring to ship that commodity with reasonable facilities and accommodations for its transportation, this contention of the defendants resolves itself into the inquiry whether their plea states facts from which it can be inferred that the furnishing of cars with icing facilities was under the circumstances more than they could reasonably be required to do in the fulfilment of their public duty; for the question what facilities and accommodations were a reasonable compliance with their public duty — or, to state the proposition in another way, whether the cars furnished were more than *Page 110
their public duty required them to do — is a question of fact. Boothby v. Railroad,
It is further contended that the defendants could not have been required to carry the shippers' servants in milk cars, and that when they agreed to carry them in these cars they undertook to do more than their public duty required, and on this account could lawfully demand of the shippers the contract of indemnity which they did. But this contention is not supported by the facts in the case. As already stated, it was the defendants' duty to provide suitable cars in which to transport the milk. It was also their duty to provide men to handle and care for it while being transported. Beard Sons v. Railway,
In this case it does not appear that the shippers were afforded the opportunity of having the defendants perform their full duty and handle and care for the milk. There is no allegation in the defendants' plea, or provision in the contract of shipment, to that effect; and in view of the absence of such an allegation or provision, and of the defendants' contention that they were under no duty even to provide cars with icing facilities for shipping the milk, it is to be inferred the shippers were not afforded such an opportunity, and that the defendants refused to provide the cars for the milk unless the shippers would furnish the men to handle and care for it and would indemnify the defendants against all liability for damages to the men and their property. In such case it is clear that we must hold that the plaintiff's contract of indemnity is unreasonable and void, and that the plaintiff's contract with the shippers, which is based upon the indemnity contract, cannot be availed of by the defendants as a defence to this action.
The plaintiff was upon the cars at the time of the accident with the defendant's consent. His passage was not free. The consideration for it was the service he rendered in caring for the milk, or the charge against his employers in shipping it. And as the defendants cannot, on the facts disclosed in the plea, avail themselves of the plaintiff's agreement with the shippers, it was the defendants' duty to use due care for the plaintiff's safety; and if they or their servants were negligent, and he was injured in consequence thereof, they were liable in damages.
Whether the agreements relied upon in the plea would have been enforceable if the defendants had been ready and willing for a reasonable compensation to perform their full duty as carriers and had afforded the shippers the opportunity of having the milk carried without restriction or limitation of their public duty, and the shippers, instead of requiring the defendants to perform their full duty, had voluntarily agreed, in consideration of a reduced rate, to furnish the men to handle and care for the milk and to indemnify the defendants against liability for loss occasioned the *Page 112
person or property of the men by the negligence of the defendants or their servants, we are not called upon to decide. It may be said, however, that it has been held in this state that common carriers cannot relieve themselves from the consequences of their own wrongful acts by special contract (Peerless Mfg. Co. v. Railroad,
Demurrer sustained.
PARSONS, C.J., and WALKER and YOUNG, JJ., concurred: CHASE, J., doubted.
Boothby v. Grand Trunk Railway ( 1890 )
Durgin v. American Express Co. ( 1890 )
Nashua Iron & Steel Co. v. Worcester & Nashua Railroad ( 1882 )
Peerless Manufacturing Co. v. New York, New Haven & ... ( 1905 )
Flint v. Boston & Maine Railroad ( 1905 )
Bernardi Greater Shows, Inc. v. Boston & Maine Railroad ( 1938 )
Bernardi Greater Shows, Inc. v. Boston & Maine Railroad ( 1933 )
Wessman v. Boston & Maine Railroad ( 1930 )
Kambour v. Boston & Maine Railroad ( 1913 )
Piper v. Boston & Maine Railroad ( 1909 )