This action was brought by defendants in error to recover the
value of 187 bales of cotton destroyed in the fire mentioned in
Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Reiss, ante,
183 U. S. 621. The
facts as to the manner of doing business at Westwego are the same
as those stated in that case, and also in the case of the
Same
Company v. Clayton, 173 U. S. 348. The
bill of lading contained the following clauses:
"1. No carrier or party in possession of all or any of the
property herein described shall be liable for any loss thereof or
damage thereto by causes beyond its control, . . . or for loss or
damage to property of any kind at any place occurring by fire or
from any cause except the negligence of the carrier."
"3. No carrier shall be liable for loss or damage not occurring
on its own road or its portion of the through route, nor after said
property is ready for delivery to the next carrier or to consignee.
. . ."
"4. . . . Cotton is excepted from any clause herein on the
subject of fire, and the carrier shall be liable as at common law
for loss or damage of cotton by fire. . . ."
"11. No carrier shall be liable for delay, nor in any other
respect than as warehousemen, while the said property awaits
further conveyance, and in case the whole or any part of the
property specified herein be prevented by any cause from going from
said port in the first steamer, of the ocean line above stated,
leaving after the arrival of such property at said port, the
carrier hereunder then in possession is at liberty to forward said
property by succeeding steamer of said line, or, if deemed
necessary, by any other steamer."
"12. This contract is executed and accomplished, and all
liability hereunder terminates, on the delivery of the said
property to the steamship, her master, agent or servants, or to the
steamship company, or on the steamship pier at the said port, and
the inland freight charges shall be a first lien, due and payable
by the steamship company."
Held:
(1) That the measure of the common law liability between
connecting carriers is properly stated in the opinion in the next
preceding case, and the cases therein referred to;
(2) That, under the wording of the fourth clause in the bill of
lading, the defendant was properly held liable;
(3) That there was nothing to go to the jury upon the question
of a delivery of the cotton to the steamship company under the
twelfth clause of the bill of lading;
Page 183 U. S. 633
(4) That, upon the facts stated, it was clear that at the time
when the cotton was lost, there had been no delivery, actual or
constructive, to the steamship company, so as to divest the
defendant of its common law liability for the loss of this
cotton.
Whatever may generally be the effect of a notice to a connecting
carrier, upon the question of terminating or altering the liability
of a preceding carrier for the goods, it is quite clear that it has
no effect in diminishing the liability until actual delivery in a
case where the preceding carrier still continues to have full
control over the goods and has a choice as between connecting
carriers, and may, notwithstanding such general notice, deliver the
goods under certain circumstances to another carrier for further
transportation.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought by the defendants in error, who are
aliens, in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern
District of New York, to recover the value of 187 bales of cotton
destroyed in the same fire at Westwego, Louisiana, November 12,
1894, mentioned in the immediately preceding case. As in that case,
the defense here is based upon certain clauses of the bill of
lading providing exemption from common law liability in the
contingencies mentioned. There was a verdict for the plaintiffs by
the direction of the court, and the judgment entered thereon having
been affirmed in the circuit court of appeals, 98 F. 538, the
railway company has brought the case here by writ of error.
The facts as to the manner of doing business at Westwego are the
same as those stated in the foregoing case, and also in the
Clayton Case, 173 U. S. 348. The
cotton arrived at Westwego between October 17 and 29, and had been
so placed on the pier that it was only necessary for the steamship
company to send a ship there and take the cotton when pointed out
to
Page 183 U. S. 634
its master or other officer. In this case, there had been sent a
notification to the steamship company, by means of the "transfer
sheets" mentioned in the statement of facts in the other case, of
the arrival of the cotton as early as November 2, for most of it,
and for a few bales as late as November 10. After the evidence was
in, the defendant requested to go to the jury upon the question
whether the cotton was awaiting further conveyance at the time of
its destruction, and also upon the question of whether the cotton
had been delivered to the steamship company, and also upon the
whole case. The request was refused. The clauses of the bill of
lading to which reference is made are the following:
"1. No carrier or party in possession of all or any of the
property herein described shall be liable for any loss thereof or
damage thereto by causes beyond its control; . . . or for loss or
damage to property of any kind at any place occurring by fire, or
from any cause except the negligence of the carrier."
"3. No carrier shall be liable for loss or damage not occurring
on its own road or its portion of the through route, nor after said
property is ready for delivery to the next carrier or to consignee.
. . ."
"4. . . . Cotton is excepted from any clause herein on the
subject of fire, and the carrier shall be liable as at common law
for loss or damage of cotton by fire. . . ."
"11. No carrier shall be liable for delay, nor in any other
respect than as warehouse men, while the said property awaits
further conveyance, and in case the whole or any part of the
property specified herein be prevented by any cause from going from
said port in the first steamer of the ocean line above stated
leaving after the arrival of such property at said port, the
carrier hereunder then in possession is at liberty to forward said
property by succeeding steamer of said line, or, if deemed
necessary, by any other steamer."
"12. This contract is executed and accomplished, and all
liability hereunder terminates, on the delivery of the said
property to the steamship, her master, agent, or servants, or to
the steamship company, or on the steamship pier at the said port,
and the inland freight charges shall be a first lien, due and
payable by the steamship company. "
Page 183 U. S. 635
The claim of the railway company is that the language of the
fourth clause in the bill of lading, which excepts cotton from any
clause therein on the subject of fire, and which renders the
carrier liable as at common law for loss or damage by fire, is
limited in its application to those clauses in the bill of lading
which speak of fire, and that the common law liability of the
company existing under the fourth clause is subject to the
provisions of the other clauses mentioned in the bill, which
provide for exemption or reduction of liability under the facts
stated in them. In other words, that if the company might otherwise
be liable for the loss of cotton by fire by reason of the fourth
clause, yet, if at the time of the loss, the property was ready for
delivery, although not delivered, to the next carrier, as provided
for in clause 3, or if it awaited further conveyance, though not
actually delivered to the connecting carrier, as stated in clause
11, that then it would be exempted under the third or its liability
reduced under the eleventh clause of the bill of lading, and the
plaintiff could not therefore recover, on the proof in this case.
Of course, if under the twelfth clause the property had actually
been delivered to the succeeding carrier, its destruction by fire
thereafter would not render the preceding carrier liable for that
loss.
The measure of the common law liability between connecting
carriers is stated in the opinion in the preceding case and the
cases therein referred to, and need not be here repeated.
Now what is the true construction of the fourth clause? In
relation to that, it was stated by Judge Shipman, in delivering the
opinion of the circuit court of appeals herein, as follows:
"The principal question in the case is upon the proper
construction of the sentence in clause 4 in relation to the
liability of the defendant for loss of cotton by fire. The bill of
lading was prepared for a contract in regard to property of any
kind, and in clause 1 the carrier was exempted from liability from
loss by fire except through his negligence. The part of the
sentence in clause 4, 'Cotton is excepted from any clause herein on
the subject of fire,' probably refers only to clauses wherein fire
is mentioned; but the concluding part of the sentence, 'and the
carrier shall be liable as at common law for loss or damage
Page 183 U. S. 636
of cotton by fire,' has a wider sweep, and means that the
carrier, notwithstanding limitations of its common law liability
which are provided in the bill of lading, retains such liability in
regard to damage to cotton by fire. The clause as a whole intended
to leave and did leave unaltered the implied liability of the
carrier for loss to cotton by fire. The limitations which the
parties did permit were contained in clauses 3 and 11, which said
that the carrier should not be liable for damage after a readiness
to deliver, or otherwise than as a warehouseman after the property
waited further conveyance. Whatever may be the extent of these
limitations, they were to a certain degree modifications of the
common law liability of the first carrier, but its liability at
common law for loss to cotton by fire remained intact. The request
of the defendant to go to the jury upon the question of delivery of
the cotton was properly refused. There was no evidence of a
delivery. The cotton was never in the actual or constructive
possession of either of the steamship companies, and neither was
ready to take it from the defendant's possession, and therefore
clause 12 has no bearing upon the question of the defendant's
liability."
We think this view of the circuit court of appeals is the
correct one, and that, under the wording of the fourth clause in
the bill of lading, the defendant was properly held liable. The
first part of that clause in terms takes cotton out of any clause
on the subject of fire, and as if such language might possibly
render it doubtful as to what the status of cotton would be by
merely excepting it from any clause on the subject of fire
contained in the bill of lading, it is further provided that "the
carrier shall be liable as at common law for loss or damage of
cotton by fire." The whole is a special and specific provision
which applies to cotton alone and to the loss of cotton by fire.
The other provisions apply generally to all property, whatever its
character and wherever taken. In other words, these other clauses
are of a general nature, while the fourth clause refers to cotton
alone, and to the specific cause of the loss,
viz., by
fire. We are of opinion that the specific clause takes effect to
the exclusion of the general clauses containing matters of general
exemption, and that therefore the carrier remains liable as
Page 183 U. S. 637
at common law for a loss of cotton by fire while in the
possession of the carrier, although it was ready for delivery to
the next carrier within the meaning of the third clause, or was
awaiting further conveyance within the meaning of the eleventh
clause; but that, if it had been actually delivered before the
loss, the railway company would not have been responsible therefor.
The defendant's claim, if allowed, would leave the shipper without
recourse for loss by fire after the notification had been given to
the steamship company and before the delivery of the cotton had
been made to it, because the railway company would be under no
liability for the loss of the cotton by fire excepting by reason of
its own negligence, and the insurance of the cotton, while in the
possession of the steamship company, would not attach, and so the
shipper would be without any adequate protection during that time.
True, he might obtain special insurance during this intermediate
period, but it would add to the expense of the transit which, under
the terms of the bill, he would naturally not feel called upon to
make, and it would be inconvenient and troublesome to do it, and
the court ought not to unduly limit the plain language of the
clause for the purpose of thereby enabling the company to escape a
liability cast upon it by the common law, and which it voluntarily
assumed.
As cotton was the subject of the special provision, its language
should be given full sway, and should not be curtailed by other
provisions in other clauses of a general nature referring to all
kinds of property.
We are also of opinion that there was nothing to go to the jury
upon the question of a delivery of this cotton to the steamship
company under the twelfth clause of the bill of lading. It may be
assumed that the pier of the railway company was the place
understood and agreed upon between that company and the steamship
company to make delivery, when it was made, of the cotton to be
thereafter carried by the steamship company; but, upon the
uncontradicted evidence in this case, we are of opinion that the
simple arrival of the cotton at the pier, and notice thereof given
to the steamship company by means of the "transfer sheets" spoken
of in the other case, did not, in and
Page 183 U. S. 638
of itself, amount to a delivery of the cotton to the steamship
company, constructive or otherwise. Nor was it a delivery on the
steamship's pier, as between the shipper and the railway company,
within the language of clause 12, and for the reasons herein
stated, the notice to the steamship company did not relieve the
railway carrier from liability.
The uncontradicted evidence shows that the cotton came to the
railway pier under these circumstances: the pier was built by the
railway company, and was in its sole and absolute control and
possession. Not a bale of cotton could be taken from it without the
action of that company; its own watchmen were in charge of the pier
at all times, and when a steamship came to the pier, it was only
under a permit or an order from an officer of the railway company
that the cotton was taken. It was pointed out by the servants of
the railway company, and, within the custom of the port of New
Orleans, it had to be brought within the reach of the ship's tackle
before the ship was called upon to take it. The expression "ship's
tackle" means "where the ship's ropes can get onto it so that the
ship's winches can pull the cotton in." The custom was that, after
a steamship company returned the transfer sheets which had been
sent it by the railway company, an order was made out by the
railway officials on the Westwego office of the defendant to
deliver to the steamship company's agents such cotton as was
ordered. It does not appear that any such order was given. Prior to
the time of the arrival of the vessel which was to take the cotton
and the arrival of the stevedores, the steamship company had no
charge of any of the cotton on the pier. There was no particular
spot on the pier at which, if cotton were there deposited, it was
understood between defendant and the steamship companies to have
been deposited in the care, control, or possession of any of such
companies; but, on the contrary, the whole pier was covered by
cotton destined indiscriminately for transportation to different
European ports by different lines of steamers, not one of which
could take a bale of cotton away without the order of the railway
company.
Before the ship took the cotton, it gave a mate's receipt for
it, although sometimes the receipt would not come as soon as
Page 183 U. S. 639
that, and the cotton would be delivered before the receipt was
given. The cotton which came in on the cars of the defendant was
placed all along the pier, and that which was destined for any
particular company had to be pointed out and selected from a large
mass of cotton on the pier. The railway company had contracts with
various steamship companies -- with the West India & Pacific,
the French line, the lines for which Miller & Company were
agents, the Hamburg-American line, and some others -- and the
cotton for all these various lines was unloaded upon this pier of
the railway company, and was distributed all over the wharf, so
that, when a steamship came to the dock upon which the cotton was,
that which was intended for the particular steamship then at the
pier would be brought out to it or within reach of its tackle by
the railway employees, depending upon where the cotton was, and how
far away from the ship, and it was understood between the steamship
and railway companies that the railway company would get out the
cotton when necessary to do it, and by getting out the cotton was
meant dragging it from where it was stored on the wharf out in
front or near enough in front to enable the steamship people to get
it without having to go around through the bales of cotton.
The connection of the steamship companies with the
transportation of the cotton was the subject of special contracts
between those companies and the railway company. The initiation
would be an agreement between a steamship company and the railway
company for a certain charge for freight across the ocean for a
stated amount of cotton from New Orleans to Liverpool or Bremen, or
whatever other foreign port it might be, and no particular cotton
was specified. Having obtained this agreement as to price and
number of bales, the railway company would then agree with the
shipper in Texas for a through rate from the point in Texas at
which the cotton was to be taken to the port abroad, and it would
then give a bill of lading such as was given in evidence in this
case, providing for the through rate and the liabilities of the
various carriers by rail and by sea; but it was only after an
arrangement had been made and a contract entered into between the
railway and a
Page 183 U. S. 640
steamship company that the latter company would send a steamer
to the Westwego pier. The evidence is uncontradicted in regard to
what the steamship lines had to do under the agreements they had
with the defendant; in some cases they were not under any
obligation to come to the pier unless the defendant had at least
1,500 or 2,000 bales of cotton ready for them, while in another
case the steamship company which had a contract to take 20,000
bales of cotton from the railway company was not to be called on to
go to the wharf unless there were at least five hundred bales ready
to deliver to it, and by the bill of lading the railway company
might, under certain contingencies, if it deemed necessary, forward
the cotton by some steamer of another line than that mentioned in
the bill. The steamship companies took their own time in coming to
the Westwego pier for the cotton. If they had no special contract
with the railway company, they did not come at all. It was not the
case of a regular delivery by the railway company to a connecting
carrier at the pier of the latter.
Now upon these facts, we regard it as entirely clear that, at
the time this cotton was lost, there had been no delivery, actual
or constructive, to the steamship company, so as to divest the
defendant of its common law liability for the loss of this
cotton.
Within clause 12 of this bill of lading, there was no delivery
of the property by the defendant, either to the steamship, her
master, agents, or servants, or to the steamship company, or on the
steamship company's pier at the port of New Orleans, even upon the
assumption that the pier at Westwego was the point agreed upon
between the railway and the steamship companies, where the delivery
of the cotton was to be made when it was delivered. How can it be
said that there was a delivery to this steamship company upon the
facts above detailed when, by agreement between the parties, the
company was not to take the property until it sent a steamship to
the pier for that purpose? Until it was delivered to it at the
steamer's side, the steamer had neither possession nor control over
it. By the bill of lading, the defendant could in certain
contingencies, and at any time before delivery to the ship, send
the cotton by another
Page 183 U. S. 641
steamer. Until the ship did come to the pier, there can be no
question of actual delivery in this case.
Nor does the notification to the steamship company that there
was cotton at the pier awaiting or ready for delivery to it make
such notification a constructive delivery of the cotton, and
terminate the liability of the railway company. Here was a pier
containing thousands of bales of cotton, destined to various
European ports, and by various lines of steamers, with a special
right to the railway company, mentioned in clause 11, to send the
cotton mentioned in any particular bill of lading by a steamer of a
line other than the one mentioned in the bill, and no obligation of
the steamship company to send for the cotton until there was a
quantity of 500 bales in some cases, and in others until there were
from 1,500 to 2,000 bales ready for the particular steamer. A
notification to a steamship company by means of a "transfer sheet,"
which was taken to be a notice that there was cotton at the pier
ready for delivery to a steamer when it came, did not necessarily
take away the right of the railway company to send that cotton by
another steamer, and the company which was notified and sent a
steamer would have no ground of complaint if, upon the arrival of
the steamer at the pier, other cotton consigned to the same port
were given it to the same amount. There being only this conditional
obligation to send for cotton on the part of the steamship company,
and none upon the part of the defendant to at all events deliver
the specified cotton to the former, and the steamship company not
having sent a ship to the pier, there was no limitation of the
defendant's liability wrought by the notification.
Whatever may generally be the effect of a notice to a connecting
carrier, upon the question of terminating or altering the liability
of a preceding carrier for the goods, it is quite clear that it has
no effect in diminishing the liability until actual delivery in a
case where the preceding carrier still continues to have full
control over the goods and has a choice as between connecting
carriers, and may, notwithstanding such general notice, deliver the
goods under certain circumstances to another
Page 183 U. S. 642
carrier for further transportation. Until actual delivery in
such case, the preceding carrier is not divested of his
liability.
The case of
Pratt v. Railway Company, 95 U. S.
43, and the other cases referred to by counsel in his
argument at the bar, have no application in the view we take of the
facts. The
Pratt case was fully commented upon in
Texas &c. Company v. Clayton, 173 U.
S. 348, in the course of the opinion of the Court, and
it seems to be too clear for argument that the case does not
justify an inference that the facts which we have just detailed in
regard to this cotton constitute a delivery, either constructive or
actual, to the steamship company, or to the pier of that
company.
We are therefore of opinion that the court below did not err in
directing a verdict for the plaintiffs for the value of the cotton,
and the judgment in their favor is
Affirmed.