This case involves deciding whether the defendants in error are
liable for the damage occasioned to certain property resulting from
a fire which occurred on October 28, 1894, in a railroad yard at
East St. Louis, Illinois. At the time of the fire, Bosworth was
operating the railway as receiver. The decision depends largely, if
not entirely, on facts, which are stated at great length by the
Court both in the statement of the case and in its opinion. These
papers are most carefully prepared. While both deal with facts,
those facts are stated with clearness, with fullness, with
completeness, and with unusual care. They leave nothing untouched.
Without treating them with the same fullness, the reporter feels
himself unable to prepare a headnote which could convey an adequate
and just account of the opinion and decision of the court. Under
these circumstances, he deems it best not to attempt an
impossibility, but to respectfully ask the readers of this headnote
to regard the opinion of the court in this case as incorporated
into it.
This case involves deciding whether the defendants in error are
liable for the damage occasioned to certain property resulting from
a fire which occurred on October 28, 1894, in a railroad yard at
East St. Louis, Illinois.
The Chicago, Peoria & St. Louis Railway Company, at the date
of the fire in question, was being operated by a receiver appointed
on September 22, 1893, in foreclosure proceedings instituted in the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of
Illinois.
On the assumption that the receiver was responsible for the
damage occasioned by the fire above referred to, various persons
and corporations who had suffered loss filed their interventions,
asserting a liability on the part of the receiver for such damage.
The interveners were nine in number, and all but
Page 179 U. S. 416
two sought recovery for the loss occasioned by the damage or
destruction of barley. The claims other than for barley were
asserted by the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway Company and
the Carr, Ryder & Engler Company, the former corporation asking
to be allowed for the value of its cars, in which were contained
the destroyed or damaged barley, while the latter corporation
demanded the value of certain doors, sashes, etc., consigned to
Birmingham, Alabama. A list of all the interveners is given in the
margin. [
Footnote 1]
The interventions which related to barley shipments alleged
delivery of the cars of barley to an initial carrier, consigned to
a named commission merchant in St. Louis, via East St. Louis, the
delivery of the barley so shipped to the receiver of the Peoria
Company to be "transported to its destination," the carriage by
that company as far as East St. Louis, and the damage by fire of
the barley in the cars "while the same were still in transit and on
the way to destination, and in the possession and under the
control" of the receiver of the Peoria Company. In the answers
filed by the receiver, there was no denial of the allegations
contained in the intervening petitions as to the shipment of the
barley in question and the destination thereof. The answers in
effect merely averred that, after the receipt of the cars and
contents by the receiver, they were delivered by him in the due
course of business to the Terminal Railroad Association of St.
Louis, and were damaged or destroyed while in the possession of
that association and by its negligence.
It was alleged that the delivery to the Terminal Association had
been made by virtue of a contract between the receiver and the
Terminal Association, of date June 1, which contract was annexed as
a part of the answer, and that, by the custom in course of business
existing between the receiver and the Terminal Association for four
years prior to the deliveries in question, it resulted that the
Terminal Association, and not the
Page 179 U. S. 417
receiver was bound for the damage which the fire had brought
about. The receiver, moreover, filed a cross-petition praying that
the Terminal Association be made a party defendant to the
intervention proceedings so that its liability to the interveners
might be decreed. Upon this application, the court issued a rule
upon the association to show cause why it should not be made a
party defendant as prayed. To this action the Terminal Association
appeared, solely for the purpose of objecting to the jurisdiction,
and moved to discharge the rule for various reasons, all of which
addressed themselves to the want of power to compel the appearance
of the Terminal Association as a defendant to the interventions.
The cross-petition, rule, and the motion just referred to were not
thereafter pressed upon the attention of the court, and the
Terminal Association never appeared as a party to the intervention
proceedings.
When the issues on the interventions were thus made up, the
court referred the claims of all the interveners to a master to
take testimony and report. Under this reference, the testimony as
to all the interventions was taken together. During the course of
the taking of the testimony before the master, it having developed
that the propinquity of a warehouse filled with hay was the
proximate cause of the fire, the interveners added to their
petitions the following allegations, as "further, separate, and
distinct ground of recovery therein,"
viz.:
"That upon the arrival of the cars mentioned and described in
said petition at said East St. Louis, and while the same were still
in the possession of said receiver, said receiver negligently
caused and permitted them, together with their contents, to be
placed upon certain tracks in close proximity to a large wooden
warehouse filled with baled and loose hay, and through which said
warehouse locomotive engines were frequently passing and repassing
during all hours, night and day; that said wooden warehouse was
open at the sides and ends, and had railroad tracks passing through
it over which locomotive engines frequently passed, and said hay
was generally exposed to fire escaping from said locomotives; that
said warehouse and hay were easily ignitible, and on account of the
inflammable condition of said hay, the large quantity thereof, and
the dimensions of
Page 179 U. S. 418
said wooden warehouse, the same, if set on fire, would burn with
great rapidity and produce a great conflagration, all of which the
receiver well knew, yet, notwithstanding all this, he negligently
and carelessly caused and permitted said cars and their contents to
be placed upon said side track, near said warehouse, and to remain
thereon for several days, when said hay and warehouse were in some
manner set fire to, and the same burned so rapidly, and produced
such a large conflagration, that said cars and their contents were
damaged and destroyed, as stated in said several petitions, and the
petitioners damaged in the manner and to the extent and amount, as
therein stated."
Prior to the filing of the amended petitions of the interveners
as above stated, the testimony before the master had shown that
there was keen competition for the carriage of barley and other
commodities from points in Iowa, Wisconsin, and Minnesota between
roads entering St. Louis from the west side of the river and those
which carried freight from the territory named into St. Louis via
bridge or ferry connections from East St. Louis. Indeed, it was
shown that in order to get a proportion of the business, the roads
on the East St. Louis side of the river were obliged to furnish
dealers with facilities equal to those which could be obtained from
roads entering St. Louis on the west side. For this purpose, a
joint through rate to St. Louis for barley was made, and on the
arrival of the barley at East St. Louis, unless the consignees had
previously directed to the contrary, instead of being immediately
transferred across the Mississippi River for delivery to the
consignees in St. Louis, it was held in the cars at East St. Louis
to enable the consignees to dispose of the same in carload lots,
and when so disposed of, the cars were either delivered in St.
Louis or transferred for shipment elsewhere, as might be ordered by
the consignees. To such an extent did this custom prevail that it
was testified that East St. Louis had become the market place for
barley consigned from the territory named to St. Louis.
On the hearing before the master, after the testimony on the
subject just stated had been introduced, an offer of proof and
stipulation respecting same was made, to which we shall now call
attention. In presenting a motion for a continuance of the
Page 179 U. S. 419
hearing, on the ground that he had been unable to procure the
attendance of Mr. Teichman and other commission merchants of St.
Louis, counsel for the receiver said:
"We expect to prove by these witnesses that the St. Louis
Terminal Railroad Association personally solicited this particular
barley business, originating on the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul
road, on which this controversy is pending; that these
solicitations by the Terminal Railroad Association were made to all
the barley dealers in St. Louis, to whom the particular
consignments of barley are made which are now in litigation; that
the Terminal Railroad Association, as an inducement to barley
dealers and shippers, agreed to hold the cars on their tracks at
East St. Louis free of car service, and offered other facilities in
and about their yards at East St. Louis, by which the St. Louis
Terminal Railroad Association succeeded in securing the business of
all of the shippers; by that term, I mean the consignees and
shippers except the business of the John Wall Commission Company,
whose business was being handled by the Wiggins Ferry Company, a
competing line with the St. Louis Terminal Railroad Association,
and that at a later day they also secured the business of this
last-named firm. And that the solicitation was made in the interest
of the Terminal Railroad Association for the express purpose of
having the business sent down the east side of the Mississippi
River, so as to give them the benefit of the transfer across the
river from East St. Louis to St. Louis in competition with lines
west of the Mississippi River."
In the record is next set out the following statements of
counsel for the interveners:
"Counsel for interveners: . . . Now, in reference to the
testimony of people at St. Louis in respect to the arrangement made
by the Terminal Railroad Association by which it would hold these
cars of barley and so forth, rather than to postpone this hearing
at this time, I will consent that the witnesses, if here, would
testify as Mr. Wilson has stated. So I do not think a continuance
should be granted on that application. . . ."
"To expedite matters, it is stipulated that the witnesses Otto
Teichman, Henry Grieve of the John Wall Commission Company,
Page 179 U. S. 420
L. Leinke, and Charles Orthwein at St. Louis, if present, would
testify substantially as has been stated by Mr. Wilson."
Leave having been granted the receiver to answer the amended
petitions, he met the new averments respecting the warehouse
contained in the amended petitions by denying that while in the
possession of the receiver, the latter negligently caused or
permitted the property in question to be placed in proximity to the
warehouse referred to in the amended petitions, and further averred
that, after the delivery of the cars to the Terminal Association,
the receiver no longer controlled and directed the placing of the
cars in the yards of the Terminal Association. It was also denied
that the receiver had any knowledge of the dangerous character of
the warehouse.
So also, in the amended answer, doubtless to be able to avail
himself of what was deemed to be a defense arising from the
testimony as to the custom of detaining shipments of barley, the
offer of proof and the stipulation above referred to, the receiver
set up a new defense, stated in his answers as follows:
"This receiver, further answering, avers that all of the said
intervening petitioners had knowledge, through their consignees, of
the condition of affairs that existed in the yards of the said
railroad association prior to and at the time said cars and
contents were damaged and destroyed."
"This receiver, further answering, avers that the cars and
contents mentioned in the said intervening petitions, after being
placed, remained in close proximity to said wooden warehouse until
the same were damaged and destroyed, with the full knowledge,
approval, and consent of the said intervening petitioners, through
their agents, their respective consignees, and in fact thus
remained for the convenience of said consignees, and at their
risk."
In the meanwhile, as by the proof which had been already
introduced before the master, it was shown that the relations
between the Terminal Association and the receiver at the time of
the fire were not controlled by the contract of 1891, which the
receiver had annexed to his answer, but were governed by a contract
made on August 1, 1892, which had been produced on the hearing
before the master, the receiver, in his amended
Page 179 U. S. 421
answer, admitted in effect the error of the averment of his
original answer and conceded that the controversy, insofar as
controlled by the contract, depended upon the one made in 1892.
After the conclusion of the testimony, the master, in a careful
opinion reviewing the law and the facts, reported substantially in
favor of the claims of all the interveners. The testimony which had
been taken as to all the interventions was embodied in but one
report, that upon the intervention of Jacob Rau, and was referred
to in the reports filed upon the other claims.
After hearing on exceptions filed by the receiver to the reports
of the master, the court overruled the exceptions, affirmed the
reports, and decreed the liability of the receiver to the
interveners. An appeal was taken to the Circuit Court of Appeals
for the Seventh Circuit not only by the receiver, but, by leave of
the court, the Chicago, Peoria and St. Louis Railroad Company --
which had become the owners of the Peoria Railway, as assignees of
the purchaser at a foreclosure sale -- also perfected an appeal. In
the circuit court of appeals, the decrees of the circuit court as
to all but one of the interveners were reversed. The appellate
court, however, was divided in opinion as to the reasons for its
action in the cases which were reversed, such division of opinion
being upon the deductions to be drawn from the evidence, one judge
concluding that the circuit court erred upon the grounds stated in
his opinion, while another member of the court, who concurred in
the conclusion that the court below had erred, assigned different
reasons. A third member of the court dissented because he thought
the court below had deduced proper inferences from the proof in the
cause. 87 F. 72. Thereupon a writ of certiorari was granted by this
Court.
Page 179 U. S. 422
MR. JUSTICE White, after making the foregoing statement,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
A solution of the issues which arise on this record involves
only an analysis of the facts for the purpose of ascertaining the
true inferences to be drawn therefrom. In the statement of the case
which we have just made, we have given an outline of the origin of
the controversy, and have referred to the facts only so far as
essential to elucidate the pleadings. We propose now to review the
facts upon which the controversy turns. The testimony to which we
shall refer in doing so is contained in the record of the case of
Jacob Rau, number 13 of this term, as in taking the appeals,
following the course adopted by the master in making his report,
the testimony as to all the interventions was brought up in that
case only, and as found in that record has been treated in the
argument as applicable to all the interventions.
The Terminal Railroad Association of St. Louis, which will be
hereafter, for brevity, styled the Terminal Association, possessed
in the City of East St. Louis extensive tracks, yards, and
facilities for the purpose of successfully carrying on the railroad
traffic which came to that point. It was connected with and
operated lines of railroad running across two bridges, leading to
St. Louis, Missouri, and had many transfer tracks in its railroad
yards, which were connected not only with its St. Louis tracks, but
with the lines of various railroads which reached East St. Louis
from different points. The Terminal Association therefore
controlled the transfer of railroad business arriving at East St.
Louis for St. Louis, and from St. Louis to East St. Louis, thence
to other points, except to the extent that both of these classes of
business were competed for by the Wiggins Ferry Company, a
corporation owning and operating a transfer ferry between East St.
Louis and St. Louis, which latter company also possessed terminal
facilities in East St. Louis.
The Chicago, Peoria and St. Louis Railway, which we shall
Page 179 U. S. 423
hereafter for brevity refer to as the Peoria Company, even when
considering the acts of the receiver of that company, operated a
line of railroad between Peoria, Illinois and East St. Louis, in
the same state. It commenced business at East St. Louis about
January, 1891. The terminus of its main tracks to the latter place
was at a point termed Bridge Junction at a street known as
Stockyards Avenue, which was either beyond the city limits or, if
within the city limits, was on the outskirts thereof. At the point
where the track of the Peoria Company thus terminated, that road
possessed no terminal facilities of any kind for the handling of
its freight business. It had no warehouses, no side tracks, no
switch engines, and no conveniences for the switching or handling
of its freight trains. The road therefore was in a position where
it was practically impossible for it to handle freight destined for
East St. Louis or for carriage beyond that point, and in order to
enable it to discharge its duty as a common carrier as to any such
business, it was absolutely necessary for it to make some
arrangement for that purpose. It is true that the Peoria Company
had a small freight house on the riverfront, with one or more side
tracks adjacent thereto, which were utilized for the loading and
unloading of local freight. But neither this freight house nor the
tracks in question were directly connected with the main tracks of
the road. To make such connection, it was essential, therefore, for
the Peoria Company to use the tracks, of some other railroad.
The Peoria Company thus being substantially without any terminal
facilities whatever for freight business at East St. Louis, that
company, as early as June 1, 1891, entered into an agreement with
the Terminal Association to supply such deficiency. In August,
1892, the agreement made in 1891 was modified, and governed the
relations of the parties when the fire took place. A copy of this
agreement is in the margin. [
Footnote 2]
Page 179 U. S. 424
Under this agreement, the incoming freight trains arriving at
the terminus of the main track of the Peoria road as above stated
were handled substantially as follows:
The Peoria train was stopped on a "Y" track. There, the
Peoria
Page 179 U. S. 425
engine was detached and was placed on a stub track reserved for
the purpose. A switch engine of the Terminal Association then took
hold, broke up the train, and distributed the cars on the tracks
set apart for the Peoria Company under the agreement.
The evidence shows that the place assigned for the use of the
Peoria Company by the Terminal Association, in compliance with the
contract, was a particular portion of the yard of the latter
corporation,
viz., eleven tracks, numbered from 40 to 50,
and that these tracks were commonly used for such purpose. This
latter fact was expressly admitted by the receiver in a stipulation
made during the taking of testimony before the master on the
interventions, in subdivision numbered 2 of which it was agreed
that the cars and other property were damaged by the fire in
question
"while on the tracks of the Terminal Railroad Association of St.
Louis, in its yard at East St. Louis,
commonly used by the
receiver herein under the agreement between said association and
the Chicago, Peoria and St. Louis Railroad Company, dated August 1,
1892."
Though the stipulation referred to was amended in January, 1896,
on motion of the receiver, by the elimination of certain admissions
contained therein, which it was asserted had been discovered to be
incorrect, no attempt was made to seek a correction of the
stipulation so far as respected the use of the deposit tracks.
Besides the freight trains coming into East St. Louis from the
main track of the Peoria road as above stated, there were brought
to the aforesaid deposit tracks the empty as well as
Page 179 U. S. 426
the loaded cars of the Peoria road, coming from the freight
house above referred to, and also the loaded or empty cars destined
for the Peoria Company from other points and coming into East St.
Louis over any other road connecting with the Terminal Association.
On the tracks to which all these cars were taken, substantially,
therefore, all the freight business of the Peoria Company, whether
it arose from dealings with the Terminal Association or with any
other railroad corporation, was carried on, and there all the
outgoing freight trains of the Peoria Company, whether inbound or
outbound, whether destined to be carried to some ultimate point by
the Terminal Association, or intended for delivery by that
association if carried over other roads, remained upon the tracks
set apart in the yard of the Peoria Company until all such purposes
could be accomplished. In other words, under the agreement, all the
ingoing and outgoing terminal freight business of the Peoria
Company was in effect ultimately handled by the Terminal
Association, and the yard in question, as far as set apart, was
necessarily a yard for the transaction of every variety of the
freight business of the Peoria Company.
The tracks thus set apart under the agreement -- that is, tracks
numbered from 40 to 50 -- were capable of holding two hundred cars,
whilst under the contract, the Peoria road was entitled to storage
room for but one hundred and fifty cars. The evidence disclosed
that the Terminal Association, whenever it found it convenient to
do so, utilized the surplus space for the deposit of cars not
belonging to the Peoria Company. The receiver of the Peoria road
and his employees (such as the local agent at East St. Louis and
his assistants, car inspectors, car repairers, etc.) had access to
the deposit tracks. A car used as a workshop by the car repairers
of the Peoria Company was placed near to said tracks. The consignee
had also ready access to the cars placed on such tracks. Over a
portion of the deposit tracks -- that is, numbers 42 and 43 --
passed a structure known as the transfer warehouse, a building some
600 feet in length. On the night of the fire and some time prior
thereto, this transfer warehouse was being used by a St. Louis
corporation, under leave of
Page 179 U. S. 427
the Terminal Association, for the storage of loose and baled
hay.
Such being the relations between the Peoria Company and the
Terminal Association, we are brought to consider the particular
shipments which gave rise to the controversy in this case.
In September and October, 1894, by three distinct transactions
evidenced by telegrams and letters, the Huntting Elevator Company
of McGregor, Iowa, sold to the Teichman Commission Company of St.
Louis a large quantity of barley. Respecting the first purchase,
the commission company, on September 15, 1894, wrote from St. Louis
to the Huntting Company: "We have your telegram accepting our bid
of 56c. net for 25,000 bushels sample barley,
to be shipped to
us here via East St. Louis." Five days later, the Huntting
Company telegraphed to the commission company as follows: "We have
yours of the 19th; please wire us best offer on 10,000 or 20,000 of
our No. 3 sample barley
delivered St. Louis." On November
1, 1894, the commission company telegraphed: "Sold twenty thousand
No. 3 fifty-four net
via East St. Louis," and confirmed
the telegram by letter which read in part as follows: "We wired you
sale today of 20,000 bus. your No. 3 barley at 54c. net here, to be
shipped via East St. Louis." The third sale was effected on October
10, 1894, in the following manner: after a telegraphic offer of
"fifty-five net five thousand McNalley sample" had been declined,
the commission company telegraphed, "Bid fifty-six net, leaving
small margin,
shipment via East St. Louis." The Huntting
Company replied: "Accept five thousand Lime Spring barley." The
barley was delivered to the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway
Company -- three cars at Lime Spring, Iowa, and seven cars at
Prairie du Chien, Iowa. The freight was prepaid by the elevator
company and instructions were given to the agent of the Milwaukee
Company to forward the cars to the commission company at St. Louis
via East St. Louis.
At the time of the shipment in question, no receipts were issued
by the initial carrier to the shipper for the cars of barley so
delivered. It is shown, however, that it was the invariable
Page 179 U. S. 428
custom of the agent of the railway company to fill out the
blanks contained in a printed form of waybill, the pertinent
portion of which form is inserted in the margin. [
Footnote 3]
A completed waybill accompanied each car, and in the case of
barley consigned to a commission company in St. Louis, it would be
recited that the car was "from" the named place of shipment "to
East St. Louis," while in the column headed "Consignee and
Destination" would be inserted the name of the consignee and the
address "St. Louis, Missouri." And the testimony leaves no doubt
that a waybill conformably to the course of business referred to
accompanied each particular car of the shipments now under
consideration.
The cars containing the barley in question were carried to Rock
Island, and there delivered with the waybill to the Rock Island and
Peoria Railroad Company. The latter road conveyed the cars to
Peoria, and delivered them with the waybills to the Peoria and
Pekin Union Railroad Company, a switching association, which
delivered the cars and waybill to the Peoria Company. They were
thence carried by the Peoria Company to the end of its main track,
and were there put upon a "Y" track and carried to the place of
deposit under the agreement as above stated.
The trains containing the cars of barley in controversy reached
the end of the Peoria main track, and the cars in question were
taken by the switch engine of the Terminal Association to the
deposit tracks at the times following: 3 cars at 5 P.M., on
Wednesday, October 24, 1894; 4 cars (2 at 4 A.M., 1 at 1.45 P.M.
and 1 at 8 P.M., respectively), on Thursday, October 25, 1894; 1
car at 2.45 A.M., on Friday, October 26, 1894; and
Page 179 U. S. 429
two cars at 1.45 P.M., on Sunday, October 28, 1894 (the day of
the fire).
It is shown beyond dispute that when the train in which these
cars were found was taken by the Terminal Association on the "Y"
track to be conveyed to the customary place of deposit, the
waybills which accompanied the cars were retained by the Peoria
Company, and were not delivered to the Terminal Association.
On the evening of October 28, 1894, there were many cars of the
Peoria Company standing on the tracks set apart for its use as
above stated, among them those of the present interveners which had
been delivered at the dates previously mentioned. The general
character of the cars of the Peoria Company which were in the yard
is shown by the fact that, on that evening, two trains of freight
cars outward bound over the line of the Peoria Company were made up
and taken by it and carried northward. On the same night, shortly
after eleven o'clock, a fire broke out in the southeast corner of
the transfer warehouse, extending over a portion of tracks 42 and
43, as above stated. The proof unquestionably establishes that this
warehouse, as we have already stated, was filled with hay, loose
and in bales; that the warehouse was open at both ends in such a
way as to create imminent danger of the igniting of the hay by
sparks from passing engines, and that such engines engaged in the
work of handling cars were traveling backwards and forwards on the
tracks in the vicinity of the warehouse. The dangerous character of
the building, as used at the time of the fire, is well stated in
the answer of the receiver as "a veritable fire trap." No
reasonable inference can be deduced from the proof other than that
the fire was caused by the igniting of the hay from the sparks of a
passing locomotive. That the perilous condition of the warehouse
was known to the Terminal Association is beyond controversy, since
it was shown that the warehouse was leased by that company to the
corporation which had stored the hay therein, for the purpose of
doing so. That knowledge of the hazardous use made of the building
was also known to the Peoria Company is likewise true, as it is
shown that the agent of the Peoria Company observed the
situation
Page 179 U. S. 430
some time before the fire, and that such official called the
attention of representatives of the Terminal Association to the
insecurity arising therefrom.
The conflagration destroyed eighty-three cars and their
contents. Of these, thirteen were admittedly chargeable to the
Terminal Association, either because they had been so dealt with by
the Terminal Association as to clearly make it responsible for
them, or were cars of the Peoria Company, for which that company
had delivered waybills to the Terminal Association for the further
movement of such cars, whereby they admittedly passed into the
control of the Terminal Company.
Of the remaining seventy cars belonging to the Peoria Company,
one was filled with outbound freight destined over that road; the
others were cars which had come in over the track of the Peoria
Company at various times, and had been placed in the yard under the
circumstances already mentioned.
With the foregoing facts in mind, we pause in order to state the
conflicting deductions which the parties claim should be drawn from
them. We do this because if what is asserted by each side be
accurately defined, it will enable us in our further examination of
the facts to restrict our inquiry alone to those matters which are
necessarily pertinent.
The contentions of the Peoria Company in every possible aspect
are embraced in three propositions,
viz.:
1. That the barley in question was consigned to St. Louis, and
therefore the obligation of that company was to carry to the
terminus of its line and there deliver to the Terminal Association
for the completion of the transit, and that having, prior to the
fire, delivered to the Terminal Association at the end of the line
of the Peoria road, the responsibility of the latter company to the
owners of the merchandise had ceased.
2. That even if the shipment was to East St. Louis only, as the
Peoria Company, when the merchandise arrived at the terminus of its
road at that point, had delivered the cars to the Terminal
Association, that association thereafter held them not for the
account of the Peoria Company, but for the owners, and that this
delivery by which the Terminal Association came into possession of
the cars for account of the owners was
Page 179 U. S. 431
sanctioned by the custom of trade as to barley shipments, and
was moreover shown to have been expressly authorized by the offer
of proof and the stipulation in connection therewith, which, as we
have shown in the statement of the case, took place on the hearing
before the master prior to the time when the amended answer of the
Peoria Company to the amended petitions in intervention had been
filed.
3. That, as by the custom of trade as to barley, it was shown
that such merchandise on the completion of the carriage to East St.
Louis was there to be held for an uncertain period to wait the
convenience of the owners until direction had been by them given
for further shipment, it followed that, after the arrival of
freight at East St. Louis, it was there retained by whomsoever it
was held not as a carrier, but for the benefit of the owners and to
aid them in the transaction of their business, as their bailee, and
that the Peoria Company was hence not responsible as a carrier
under any view, and under the proof was not liable as a
warehouseman. In effect, all the contentions of the intervener rest
upon a denial of these propositions.
When the two first propositions above stated are duly weighed,
it is seen that, although, in some respects, they contain different
elements, in effect they both must rest upon identical predicate of
fact -- that is, that the merchandise in question had arrived at
East St. Louis and been there delivered to the Terminal
Association. This becomes obvious when it is seen that the first
proposition asserts a nonliability of the Peoria Company, because,
as a connecting carrier it had delivered the merchandise to the
Terminal Association for further transportation, and that the
second proposition rests upon the assertion that, on the arrival of
the merchandise at East St. Louis, it had been delivered to the
Terminal Association, which was, under the custom of trade and the
offer of proof and stipulation above referred to, the agent or
bailee of the owners. The different character in which it is
charged that the merchandise was delivered to the Terminal
Association, as stated in the two propositions, does not obscure
the fact that both propositions essentially depend upon an
assumption of fact common to both -- that is, the de
Page 179 U. S. 432
livery of the merchandise to the Terminal Association on its
arrival at East St. Louis.
In order to dispose of the two first propositions, we come,
then, to consider whether the cars containing the barley, on their
arrival at East St. Louis, were delivered, in the legal import of
that word, by the Peoria Company to the Terminal Association, and
it is perhaps unnecessary to observe that the consideration of this
premise of fact will serve completely to dispose of every argument
based upon the custom of trade by which cars were held at East St.
Louis, and the assumed agreement of the Terminal Association with
barley dealers as embraced in the offer and stipulation made in
relation therewith. In its best aspect, the custom of trade was
simply that the barley be held at East St. Louis by the company in
possession of the same until the consignee gave an order for the
completion of the transit. And, in any view, the offer of proof and
stipulation manifested but an agreement that as to consignments of
barley which were solicited, the Terminal Association would conform
to the course of dealing, and would, when the barley came under its
control and possession, not exact a charge for car service. But
neither the course of business nor the assumed agreement of the
Terminal Association could possibly subject that association to a
liability for merchandise before it came into its possession at a
time when it was held for consignees and subject to their order, by
another and different corporation.
This leads us to determine what was the attitude of the
respective parties under the contract to the freight trains of the
Peoria Company which were taken by the switch engines of the
Terminal Association and placed on the deposit tracks, set apart
for the former company. The legal relation must depend upon the
contract, as it is obvious that the Terminal Association was under
no obligation as a common carrier to accept in train loads freight
arriving over the Peoria road, with cars consigned to different
points and over different connections, and to subject itself, as a
common carrier, to the hazard of sorting out the cars contained in
such trains, and this also without delivery to it of waybills
showing the further destination of such cars. It is also equally
obvious that, under its duty as a common
Page 179 U. S. 433
carrier, the Terminal Association was under no obligation to
allow the use of its yard for all the purposes of the Peoria
Company, the handling of its incoming as well as its outgoing
freight trains, whether of loaded or empty cars, and the furnishing
of all the appliances necessary to do so, and especially to allow a
given number of freight cars of the Peoria Company to occupy a
designated portion of the yard of the Terminal Association for such
time and under such circumstances as the Peoria Company might
elect.
Before coming to consider the text of the contract, the
circumstances surrounding the parties at the time it was made and
the exigencies which caused it to be entered into are rightfully to
be borne in mind as means of interpretation if ambiguity exists. We
hence recall the facts to which we have previously referred. When
the contract was executed, although the Terminal Association
possessed extensive terminal facilities at East St. Louis, the
Peoria Company had no means whatever for handling the freight
business coming in or going out of East St. Louis over its main
line. It had neither yards nor switches nor switch engines at East
St. Louis, nor any of the appliances or instrumentalities essential
to enable it, if it received freight inward or outward bound, to
discharge its duty as a common carrier. The purpose of the contract
then was to bestow upon the Peoria road the facilities it
absolutely required. As the tracks in the yard which the Peoria
Company acquired to carry on its business were therefore the only
terminal facilities which that company had where its incoming and
outgoing freight cars were received and where all its freight
trains were made up, to hold that the yard so far as set aside was
not that of the Peoria Company would be but to say that the
Terminal Association and the Peoria Company had been merged into
one corporation for the purposes of all the terminal business of
the Peoria Company, or that the Terminal Association had become a
guarantor to the shippers of freight over the Peoria road for all
losses occasioned by the Peoria Company for which it was liable as
a common carrier.
We come to a specific examination of the text of the
contract.
The preamble which announces the intention of the parties
Page 179 U. S. 434
in entering into the contract clearly rebuts the construction
that the terminal facilities which it was agreed should be afforded
to the Peoria Company were to be enjoyed by that company without
any responsibility whatever resting on it -- in other words, that
it was to have the facilities which were essential to discharge its
duty as a carrier, but that the Terminal Association was to bear
all the risk of such enjoyment. This results since the preamble
recites that the Terminal Association undertakes
"to give the party of the second part [the Peoria Company]
terminal facilities at East St. Louis, Illinois, for the handling
of its trains, care of its engines and cars, and the handling and
care of its freight, under the following terms and conditions."
Mark, the purpose is to give the Peoria Company "facilities,"
not to cause the Terminal Association to become responsible for the
Peoria Company, whilst the latter was making use of the facilities
given to it. The contract also expresses the purpose thus declared
in the preamble -- that is, that the facilities are to be furnished
to the Peoria Company. The agreement is not that the Terminal
Association will store cars for the Peoria Company, but that there
is to be given to that company "storage room for a reasonable
number of cars necessary to properly take care of and handle the
business" (not of the Terminal Association, but) of the Peoria
Company. The provision in the second paragraph is that
"cars made 'bad order' by and during the making up and breaking
up of trains of the party of the second part [the Peoria Company],
to be repaired by the party of the second part, and the party of
the second part shall furnish its own car inspectors."
This makes the meaning yet clearer, since it results that,
during the making and breaking up of trains, all the risk continued
to be on the Peoria Company. And this is cogently enforced by the
stipulation which immediately follows, that
"all cars made 'bad order'
outside of the yards set
aside for the use of the party of the second part
shall be
repaired by the party causing the damage."
That is to say, the contract, whilst casting the risk on the
Peoria Company during the making and breaking up of its trains, and
whilst its cars remained in the yard set apart for the Peoria
Company, applied a different rule outside of the yard, when by
Page 179 U. S. 435
an order given to the Terminal Association to move the cars for
further transit or delivery they actually came under its control.
It is to be considered also that the compensation provided in favor
of the Terminal Association by the contract is wholly incompatible
with the construction that all the cars in the yard set apart for
the Peoria Company were from the mere fact of their deposit there
to be at the risk of the Terminal Association. Indeed, the fourth
article expressly contemplated that the movement by the Terminal
Association of the cars from the yard set apart for the Peoria
Company should depend on the orders issued by the Peoria Company in
the form of waybills, since it provides:
"The party of the first part [the Terminal Association] to be
governed in making its collections [for cars moved] by instruction
shown on billing to it as to who should pay."
From this analysis of the contract, it results that the
obligations which it imposed were entirely in accord with the
conception naturally suggested by the general considerations to
which we adverted before approaching the text. For it will be
observed that the several provisions of the contract clearly
subject the Peoria Company to all the risk resulting from those
acts which that company was obliged to perform as a common carrier
before it could effect delivery to a connecting carrier, and, on
the other hand, imposed upon the Terminal Association the risk
arising after the performance of such acts. That is, as by the
contract the Peoria Company was furnished the facilities for the
execution of its obligations as a common carrier, it was submitted
to the risk incident to the performance by it of its own duties,
and the Terminal Association was subjected to the risk which would
likely devolve upon it by a delivery by the Peoria Company after
the latter had performed its own duty as a common carrier.
The dealings and conduct of the parties in executing the
contract dispel all question as to the proper interpretation to be
given it. The proof beyond any doubt establishes that the waybills
which we have described, and a sample of one of which we have
reproduced, accompanied the freight cars from the initial point to
the terminus of the Peoria main tracks. When
Page 179 U. S. 436
the Peoria train was taken charge of by the switch engine of the
Terminal Association in order that it might be broken up and the
cars composing the train be placed in the portion of the yard set
apart for the Peoria, these waybills were retained by the latter
company. While the Terminal Association kept a full record of the
cars received on its "Y" tracks from the Peoria Company, and of the
particular track on which each car was ultimately placed,
presumably in order that it might readily locate a car when it
received orders for further movement, as the waybills were retained
by the Peoria, the Terminal Company knew officially nothing of the
final destination of the cars and as to where they were to be
forwarded. It therefore was in a position where it could not move
them until it received forwarding instructions or new waybills from
the Peoria Company. The proof is that only on receipt of such new
instructions or waybills would the Terminal Association card and
switch out the cars from the deposit tracks of the Peoria Company,
and ultimately deliver them to connections or destinations as
ordered by the Peoria. It is established by the evidence,
substantially without conflict, that the cars as placed on the
tracks in the yard set apart, as above stated, continued to remain
there, and were not subject to be moved by the Terminal Association
by the orders of the consignee or any other person until
instructions to do so were given by the Peoria Company. This fact
was testified to by the receiver himself and his employees. Thus,
receiver Bosworth said that when a train of the Peoria Company was
broken up by the Terminal Association, and the cars put upon the
tracks commonly used for the business of the Peoria Company, the
cars were not moved by the Terminal Association until instructions
to do so were given by the receiver, and that they were subject to
the order of the receiver to that extent, and the Terminal
Association would not have recognized any instruction that the
consignee would have made directly to it. The local agent at East
St. Louis of the Peoria road also testified, respecting shipments
of barley consigned to commission merchants whose address would be
stated merely as "St. Louis," that "
there are a great many of
the cars we have orders for before they arrive, giving us
designated
Page 179 U. S. 437
points for delivery." Such cars, however, would be placed on the
deposit tracks referred to until the agent of the Terminal
Association had received from the agent of the Peoria road a new
waybill or manifest for the freight indicating the precise
destination, while cars of barley consigned, as stated, for
delivery in St. Louis, for which no orders for further movement
were given by the consignees prior to the arrival of the cars,
would be allowed to remain on the deposit tracks awaiting
instructions to the Peoria Company from the consignee, such freight
being "as a rule held for the accommodation of the consignee." In
substance, this witness further said:
"In the case of barley shipments, the time of detention on the
deposit tracks would vary from two hours to the same number of
months, depending upon whether instructions from the consignees had
been received prior to the arrival of the cars, or upon the time,
following the deposit of the cars, when the consignee would answer
the notice sent to him and direct as to delivery."
Stapleton, the chief clerk of the local agent at East St. Louis
of the Peoria road, testified on the subject as follows:
"The cars would come in and be placed on the tracks in the
Terminal Association yard wherever they saw fit; we would take the
waybill and notify the consignee that we had a car numbered so and
so loaded with barley; 'Where do you want it?' That is about the
substance of the notice, and at such time as he got ready, he would
send this notice back, endorsed in the back a great many times,
'Send this car to Hines' Brewery,' or 'Send it to Highland,' or
some other point. Then we take and make out a waybill, take that to
Mr. Felps, and take his receipt."
"
* * * *"
"With reference to Teichman's barley, we would sometimes have
orders in our office, in advance of the arrival of the cars, what
disposition to make of them; others we wouldn't. Those we didn't,
when they came, we sent Mr. Teichman notice that the cars were
there, what shall we do with them? Virtually that is the substance,
and he would, at his pleasure, advise us to send the car so and so,
to Hines' Brewery, say. We would
Page 179 U. S. 438
make out a waybill for the car, consign it that way, and deliver
it to Mr. Felps of the Terminal Association."
"
* * * *"
"If a man would say 'Send this to Highland,' that would be
instruction to the Vandalia, but the Terminal Association would
handle it."
This testimony as to the relations existing between the parties
and the necessity for instructions from the Peoria Company or new
waybills before the Terminal Association was empowered to remove
the cars standing in the designated yard is well illustrated by the
proof, which shows that, on October 28, 1894, the day of the fire,
among the cars belonging to the Peoria Company standing in said
yard there were twenty-four cars which had been received at various
times and that, on that day, for these twenty-four cars, new
waybills had been delivered by the Peoria Company to the Terminal
Association, and the cars were moved by the latter corporation, and
therefore escaped the fire.
In passing, we note how completely this proof refutes the
assumption predicated upon the assumed custom of trade, and the
offer of proof and stipulation, since it demonstrates that, up to
the time of the giving of instructions to the Terminal Association,
no relation between the Terminal Association and the consignees of
the barley had arisen, and that the order of the consignees given
to the Terminal Association as to the further movement of the
barley would have been wholly without effect and worthless without
the giving of an order by the Peoria Company to the Terminal
Association on the subject.
In the course of the dealings between the roads, a blank form of
order for the movement of the cars was prepared by the Terminal
Association, was delivered to the Peoria Company, and was used in
the dealings for the purpose intended. One of these blanks was
filled by an employee of the receiver during the course of the
hearing before the master and was put in evidence. A copy will be
found in the margin. [
Footnote
4]
It will be seen that the blank in question plainly manifests
that, prior to the giving of the order, the car referred to in the
document had not been transferred to the Terminal Association,
Page 179 U. S. 439
since it declares that the transfer to that company arises from
the order which the paper contains. Another very conclusive fact is
likewise shown beyond dispute. By the course of business followed
by the Peoria Company, that road, where it received cars from other
roads to be further transported, made to the carrier from whom such
cars were received what are denominated "junction reports" -- that
is, statements showing when the cars in question were delivered by
the Peoria Company to another carrier, and hence passed from its
control. Now these reports thus made, in the course of the
business, embraced cars which had been taken and placed in the yard
after the Peoria Company had issued the new instructions or
waybills to the Terminal Association. Thus, for the purpose of its
dealings with the carrier from whom the cars were received, the
Peoria Company, by its whole course of action, constantly avouched
that the cars were in its possession and under its control while in
the yard up to the time the order to move was given by it to the
Terminal Association, yet the claim now asserted is that the cars
had passed from the possession and control of the Peoria Company
from the mere fact that they had been placed in the yard and before
the order to move was given.
A yet further fact of great significance remains mains to be
noticed. The Peoria Company carried one or more insurance policies
upon property in its possession. In an affidavit to proofs of loss
furnished by the receiver to the insurance companies, verified by
agent Calvert, in December, 1894, it was stated:
"During the night of October 28, 1894, a fire occurred on the
track of the Terminal Railway Association Company at East St.
Louis, State of Illinois (
said tracks being used by the
Chicago, Peoria and St. Louis Railway Company), and burned the
cars and wholly consumed the property freight
in transit
in said
Page 179 U. S. 440
cars, as set forth in statements attached hereto, and forming a
part of this proof of loss. [Italics ours.]"
The statement attached as part of the proofs of loss embraced
the property the value of which was subsequently demanded in the
intervention proceedings. The proof of loss, while enumerating the
claim of the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway for
thirty-eight of its cars which had been destroyed, however
contained no reference to seventeen of the cars of that company
which had been but partially damaged and were repaired by the
receiver without any intimation to the Milwaukee Company that the
receiver was not legally required to bear such expense, although,
as between the Terminal Association and the receiver, the latter
claimed that the former was ultimately liable for such damage.
Concluding that, at the date of the fire, the merchandise in
question had not been delivered by the Peoria Company, and was, in
contemplation of law, within its possession and control, the two
first propositions are disposed of, and it remains only to consider
the third -- that is, even if the merchandise was in the possession
of the Peoria Company at the time of the fire, by the custom of
detaining the barley at East St. Louis for further orders, it was
there held by the Peoria Company not as a carrier, but as bailee,
and under such relation the proof does not establish its liability.
But the legal aspects of this proposition need not be considered,
since it rests upon an assumption of fact which is unfounded, that
the proof is insufficient to fix the responsibility of the Peoria
Company, even although it merely held the merchandise as a bailee
or warehouseman. We have seen that the amended interventions, even
under the hypothesis that the Peoria Company did not hold the goods
at the time of the fire as a common carrier but as a warehouseman,
plainly charged the liability of that company for the destruction
of the property because of its negligence in and about the care of
the goods. The facts which we have already stated as to the
hazardous use of the warehouse and the actual knowledge of the
Peoria Company of its condition clearly sustain this latter ground
of the asserted liability of the Peoria Company. And even although
the proof of actual knowledge by the Peoria Company of the
condition of the warehouse be put out of view, and weight be
Page 179 U. S. 441
given alone to the relation which that company bore to the
tracks set apart for its use, and to its duty under the law to know
the condition of the place where it stored the freight held by it,
and the negligence which must be implied if no actual knowledge
existed of the use made of the warehouse, from the presence of the
officers and employees in that locality in the discharge of their
duty, yet the liability of the Peoria Company in the capacity of
warehouseman was clearly established by the proof.
Incidentally, it seems to be claimed in argument that the
Huntting Elevator Company was not entitled to assert a right of
recovery, because it was not the real party in interest. But we
need not dwell upon this claim, as it depends upon the contention
that the facts established a delivery of the merchandise to the
consignees, a contention which has been fully disposed of by what
has been previously said. And even if under the custom of trade by
which the barley was retained by the Peoria Company at East St.
Louis, it resulted that the Peoria Company became a bailee or
warehouseman for the consignees, under such hypothesis, the right
of the Huntting Elevator Company to recover in the intervention
proceedings is manifest. The proof shows that after the destruction
of the barley by the fire in question, upon the demand of the
consignees, the Huntting Elevator Company, in order to comply with
its contracts of sale, replaced the damaged or destroyed barley.
Under this state of facts, therefore, the Huntting Elevator Company
became in effect the assignees of the consignees in respect to any
claim which the latter might have asserted. Of course nothing which
we have said in the foregoing opinion or anything which will be
contained in the decree which we shall render will preclude any
right which may exist or be asserted by the Peoria Company against
the Terminal Association for the loss occasioned by the fire in
question.
The decree or the circuit court of appeals is reversed, and
the decree of the Circuit Court of the United States for the
Southern District of Illinois is affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER did not hear the argument, and took no part
in the decision of this cause.
[
Footnote 1]
Names of the interveners: The Carr, Ryder & Engler Company;
The Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway Company; The S. H. Hyde
Elevator Company; The W. W. Cargill Compnay; Jacob Rau; Gilchrist
& Company, a partnership; The Huntting Elevator Company;
McMichael & Son, a partnership, and Henry Rippe.
[
Footnote 2]
"Memorandum of an agreement, made this first day of August, A.D.
1892, by and between the Terminal Railroad Association of St.
Louis, party of the first part, and the Chicago, Peoria and St.
Louis Railway Company, party of the second part, witnesseth:"
"That whereas, the party of the first part undertakes to give
the party of the second part terminal facilities at East St. Louis,
Illinois, for the handling of its trains, care of its engines and
cars, and the handling and care of its freight, under the following
terms and conditions:"
"First. It is agreed that the party of the first part shall
furnish the necessary yard room and track facilities in their yards
in East St. Louis, Illinois, as now located, and the necessary
switch engines and yardmen to do the switching of the party of the
second part, in the making up and breaking up of all freight trains
that depart from and arrive at East St. Louis, and to furnish
storage room for a reasonable number of cars necessary to properly
take care of and handle the business of the party of the second
part, not exceeding one hundred and fifty (150) cars at any one
time, and the charge for the facilities and the work above named
shall be at the rate of fifty cents (50) per loaded car in and out,
except cars on which the party of the first part receives a bridge
toll, which will be handled free; empty cars in and out free."
"Second. Cars made 'bad order' by and during the making up and
breaking up of trains of the party of the second part to be
repaired by the party of the second part, and the party of the
second part shall furnish its own car inspectors."
"All cars made 'bad order' outside of the yards set aside for
the use of the party of the second part shall be repaired by the
party causing the damage."
"Third. For all loads to and from the National stockyards, the
party of the second part is to pay the party of the first part one
(1) dollar per car in and out, inclusive of the charge for making
up and breaking up of trains, but not the trackage charge at
National stockyards."
"Fourth All cars consigned to and from the East St. Louis
freight house of the party of the second part to be switched to and
from the Wiggins transfer tracks without extra charge. Regular
switching charges and rules to apply on all other cars to and from
connections, the party of the first part to be governed in making
its collections by instructions shown on billing to it as to who
should pay. In the absence of any instructions, the switching
charges will follow the car."
"Fifth. The party of the first part to furnish track room upon
which the engines of the party of the second part can be switched
and cared for and turned, as may be required, the care of such
engines to be under the supervision of the party of the first part,
the price for the service rendered to be agreed upon by the master
mechanic of the party of the first part and the superintendent of
motive power and machinery of the party of the second part."
"This contract to be in force from and after the 1st day of
August, 1892, and to continue for six months from that date, and to
be renewed from time to time, as desired at the expiration thereof,
if satisfactory to both parties."
"In witness whereof, the parties hereto have caused the same to
be executed in duplicate this ___ day of _____, A.D. 1892."
"Terminal Railroad Association of St. Louis"
"By J. O. Van Winkler,
General Superintendent"
"Attest: ________ ________,
Secretary"
"Chicago, Peoria and St. Louis Railway Company"
"By W. S. Hook,
President"
"Attest: Marcus Hook, Secretary"
[
Footnote 3]
Portion of waybill:
Form 287 1/4.
CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE AND ST. PAUL RAILWAY
Car No. _____ Special Way Bill Way Bill No. _____
Whose Car from ________ to ________ Date _____ 189_
This form must be used in all cases in billing Flour or Produce
made from Wheat milled "in transit."
===============================================================================
Consignor Consignee and No. of Description of Weight Rate Local
Adv.
Destination Pkgs. Articles Local Unpaid Charges
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[
Footnote 4]
Car No. 680. Terminal Railroad Association of St. Louis.
C., M. & St. P. Manifest of freight transferred.
From C.P. and St.L. R. Co. To Eads R. Co. Oct. 10, 1894.
Consignor Consignee and destination Description Weight
Charges
C. M. and St. P. Teichman Com. Co. Barley 30,000 $51.00
Wykoff 16th St. and Union depot
St. Louis, Mo.