Although the original interstate bill of lading of a car
shipment was surrendered for an intrastate bill while the car was
still in transit, if the car moved in a continuous interstate
commerce shipment from its departure to its destination, a delivery
at an intermediate point and substitution of an intrastate bill of
lading is not such a new and distinct shipment as takes the car out
of interstate commerce.
Although the federal question may not have been asserted until
the application for rehearing, if the state court then considered
and disposed of it adversely to plaintiff in error, this Court has
jurisdiction under § 237, Judicial Code.
The Kansas courts, in determining the responsibility of the
carrier under the bill of lading of an interstate shipment, having
applied a local rule investing an innocent holder of a bill of
lading with rights not available to the shipper,
held that
such rule is in direct conflict with the general commercial law on
the subject, and applying the same to an interstate shipment was
reversible error.
Quaere whether attributing such characteristics to an
interstate bill of lading in conflict with the general commercial
rule would not, even in the absence of legislation by Congress,
constitute a direct burden on interstate commerce.
The Carmack Amendment to the Act to Regulate Commerce being an
assertion of the power of Congress over the subject of interstate
shipments, the duty to issue bills of lading and the
responsibilities thereunder was action by Congress in regard
thereto, and necessarily excludes state action in regard
thereto.
The prime object of the Carmack Amendment was to bring about a
uniform rule of responsibility as to interstate commerce and
interstate bills of lading.
The principal subject of responsibility in regard to a matter
within its exclusive control embraced by an Act of Congress
necessarily carries with it the incidents thereto.
93 Kan. 456 reversed.
Page 241 U. S. 372
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction of this Court under
§ 237, Judicial Code, and the construction of interstate bills
of lading under the Act to Regulate Commerce, are stated in the
opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
We are of the opinion that a motion to dismiss is without merit,
but the reasons which lead us to that conclusion will be more
clearly appreciated after we have made a statement of the case.
Until that is done, we hence postpone the subject.
J. Bell & Son, having sold a carload of bulk corn to the C.
V. Fisher Grain Company, residing and doing business at Kansas
City, Missouri, on September 21, 1910, shipped the same from Yanka,
Nebraska, over the Union Pacific Railroad. The bill of lading
identified the car as L. W. No. 33,791, containing 100,420 pounds
of corn, and the same was consigned to Topeka, Kansas, to the order
of the consignors (Bell & Son), with a direction, however, in
the bill of lading, to "notify C. V. Fisher Grain Company, care of
Santa Fe, for shipment." A draft for the purchase price of the corn
was mailed to Kansas City, Missouri, accompanied with the bill of
lading, indorsed over to the order of the Fisher Grain Company, and
on the presentation of this draft to the Grain Company at Kansas
City, Missouri, while the car was yet in transit, it
Page 241 U. S. 373
paid the same and became the possessor and owner of the bill of
lading. On the 24th of September, the Grain Company surrendered to
an agent of the Santa Fe at Kansas City, Missouri, the Yanka bill
of lading which it had thus acquired, and took in exchange for it
another bill, consigning the identical car to their own order at
Elk Falls, Kansas, a place on the Santa Fe road, with a direction,
however, to notify at Elk Falls the Nevling Elevator Company. This
bill of lading was dated the same day as the original bill for
which it was exchanged -- that is, September 21st -- although it
was in fact only signed and issued on the 24th of that month, and
although on its face it treated the car as being at Kansas City, in
reality the car was in transit from Yanka, not having yet reached
Topeka.
Harold, the defendant in error, a grain dealer at Wichita,
Kansas, who had sold on September 15th a carload of corn to Shoe
& Jackson at Elk Falls, to be shipped or delivered in a stated
number of days, bought the carload of corn described by the bill of
lading issued at Kansas City, and, paying a draft for the purchase
price drawn by Fisher Grain Company, with the bill annexed, he
became the owner of the bill, and directed that delivery of the
corn be made to Shoe & Jackson. The car from Yanka had then not
yet been delivered to the Santa Fe at Topeka, having reached that
point only on the 28th of September, on which day it was offered to
the Santa Fe for carriage and delivery at Elk Falls. Finding that
the car was in bad order, the delivery was declined, and the car
turned back to the Union Pacific. That road, discovering that the
damage was such that the car could not be repaired while it was
loaded, sent it to an elevator, transferred the grain to another
car, S. P. No. 85,721, and turned that car over to the Santa Fe.
The new car, however, did not contain the exact quantity of grain
originally shipped from Yanka, as one of the defects in the old car
was a leaky door, and
Page 241 U. S. 374
several hundred pounds of the corn had been lost in transit. The
car was promptly carried by the Santa Fe to Elk Falls and offered
for delivery, but, as the period for the fulfillment by Harold of
his contract with Shoe & Jackson had elapsed, and there had
been a decline in the market price of corn, the latter refused to
take the car. Thereupon this suit against the Santa Fe was
commenced by Harold to recover the loss which he had suffered by
the alleged unreasonable delay in delivery at Elk Falls, consisting
of three items: first, the difference between the price at which
the corn had been contracted to be sold to Shoe & Jackson and
the market price at the date the car was offered for delivery;
second, the amount of the freight paid on the corn which had been
lost, and third, a reasonable attorney's fee which it was alleged a
statute of the State of Kansas authorized to be recovered in case
of delay of a carrier in the delivery of grain.
In its defense, the company alleged the shipment over the Union
Pacific from Yanka, averred that the corn was received by it at
Topeka in order to complete the transportation to Elk Falls, and
charged that, by a condition of the bill of lading issued at Kansas
City, as the delay had been wholly caused by the Union Pacific,
there was no liability on the part of the Santa Fe, and that,
besides, that company was not liable, because of a failure to give
a notice of claim in compliance with a condition which was also
contained in the Kansas City bill of lading. There was judgment in
the trial court for the plaintiff, and the judgment of the court
below, affirming such action, is the one now under review.
The court, after referring to the bill of lading sued on (the
one issued at Kansas City), and after stating that "the shipment
intended to be described in the bill of lading originated at Yanka,
Nebraska, on the Union Pacific Railway," proceeded to state the
facts which we have recapitulated, and which had been admitted
in
Page 241 U. S. 375
evidence without objection. In substance conceding that, if the
facts stated were made the test of the rights of the parties, the
judgment under review was wrong, because there had been, as a
matter of fact, no unreasonable delay in delivering the corn by the
Santa Fe, it was held that the judgment rendered was right, since
the plaintiff below, as the purchaser of a bill of lading for
value, had a right to rely upon the face of the bill, to treat the
corn as having been received by the carrier at Kansas City on the
date the bill of lading was issued, and therefore to recover for
the unreasonable delay in delivery which necessarily would result
from excluding from view the facts concerning the movement of the
corn from Yanka, Nebraska, and the date of its delivery at Topeka
to the Santa Fe. The essence of the opinion was aptly summed up in
the syllabus which preceded it, drawn by the court, which is as
follows:
"1. The rule which invests the innocent holder of a bill of
lading with rights not available to the shipper, declared in
Savings Bank v. A., T. & Santa Fe R. Co., 20 Kan. 519;
Railway R. Co. v. Hutchings, 78 Kan. 758, and
Hutchings v. Railway Co., 84 Kan. 479, is followed in a
case where the plaintiff purchased corn described in a bill of
lading, and paid the shipper's draft attached to the bill in the
usual course of business."
In addition, the allowance of the attorney's fees under the
Kansas statute was upheld on the ground that the statute was within
the legitimate police power of the state to enact, and not
repugnant to the state or federal Constitution.
The motion to dismiss, referred to at the outset, is based on
the ground that the action of the court involved no question of
interstate, but purely one of intrastate, commerce. But this
disregards the fact that the bill of lading which was sued upon was
an interstate commerce bill
Page 241 U. S. 376
covering a shipment from Kansas City, Missouri, to Elk Falls,
Kansas. True, it is urged that that bill of lading is not the test
of whether there is jurisdiction, because it was shown that in
reality the shipment was an intrastate one from Topeka, Kansas, to
Elk Falls in that state. But this assumes that, although the
judgment rests upon the conception that the previous movement of
the corn from Yanka could not be considered as against the
plaintiff because he was an innocent third holder of the bill of
lading issued at Kansas City, nevertheless, for the purpose of
determining whether jurisdiction exists, the facts as to the
shipment from Yanka must be treated as relevant. Leaving aside,
however, this contradiction, and considering the facts as to the
movement of the grain from its inception, we are of opinion that,
from that point of view, it was clearly established that the grain
moved in a continuous interstate commerce shipment from the date of
its departure from Yanka to the termination of the transit at Elk
Falls, and that the delivery of the car to the Santa Fe at Topeka
for further movement was therefore not a new and distinct shipment
in intrastate commerce. We reach this conclusion in view of the
place of business of the Fisher Grain Company (Kansas City,
Missouri), of the fact that there was no person at Topeka to whom
the grain was consigned, of the indorsement of the bill of lading
to the Fisher Grain Company, and the annexing to it of a draft
drawn on that company at Kansas City for the purchase price, and
because the order on the face of the bill of lading to "notify C.
V. Fisher Grain Company, care of Santa Fe for shipment" made it
apparent that it was not contemplated that the interstate shipment
should terminate at Topeka, but that the car should move on as the
result of such direction as might be given while it was in transit
by the Fisher Grain Company at Kansas City, Missouri.
But, further, it is said that, granting there was a federal
Page 241 U. S. 377
question, as it was not asserted of relied upon until
application for a rehearing, it is not open for consideration. The
answer, however, is that the court considered and disposed of the
question by holding that the facts which were otherwise pertinent
and controlling must be put out of view because the interstate
commerce bill of lading in the hands of Harold, the purchaser, was
in fact negotiable paper, giving greater rights to such purchaser
than could be enjoyed by the shipper, or by the one from whom he
had acquired the bill. It is obvious, therefore, that this was a
decision of a federal question which we have power to dispose of as
such, and we come to consider it.
That the local rule applied by the court below was in direct
conflict with the general commercial law on the subject, as
repeatedly settled by this Court, is plain.
Shaw v. Railroad
Co., 101 U. S. 557;
Pollard v. Vinton, 105 U. S. 7;
Iron Mountain Ry. v. Knight, 122 U. S.
79;
Friedlander v. Tex. & Pac. Ry.,
130 U. S. 416;
Mo. Pac. Ry. v. McFadden, 154 U.
S. 155;
The Carlos F. Roses, 177 U.
S. 655,
177 U. S.
665.
Nothing could better point out the irreconcilable conflict
between the local doctrine applied by the court below and the
general law, as illustrated in the cases cited, than does the
following statement in the opinion in the
Roses case, last
cited (p.
177 U. S.
665):
"A pledgee to whom a bill of lading is given as security gets
the legal title to the goods and the right of possession only if
such is the intention of the parties, and that intention is open to
explanation. Inquiry into the transaction in which the bill
originated is not precluded because it came into the hands of
persons who may have innocently paid value for it."
Whether, in the absence of legislation by Congress, the
attributing to an interstate bill of lading of the exceptional and
local characteristic applied by the court below, in
Page 241 U. S. 378
conflict with the general commercial rule, constituted a direct
burden on interstate commerce, and was therefore void, need not now
be considered. This is so because, irrespective of that question,
and, indeed, without stopping to consider the general provisions of
the Act to Regulate Commerce, it is not disputable that what is
known as the Carmack Amendment to the Act to Regulate Commerce (Act
of June 29, 1906, c. 3591, § 7, 34 Stat. 593) was an assertion
of the power of Congress over the subject of interstate shipments,
the duty to issue bills of lading, and the responsibilities
thereunder, which, in the nature of things, excluded state action.
Adams Express Co. v. Croninger, 226 U.
S. 491,
226 U. S.
505-506;
Mo., Kan. & Tex. Ry. v. Harriman
Bros., 227 U. S. 657,
227 U. S.
671-672;
Boston & Maine R. Co. v. Hooker,
233 U. S. 97,
233 U. S. 110;
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. v. Robinson,
233 U. S. 173,
233 U. S. 180;
Cleveland & St.Louis Ry. v. Dettlebach, 239 U.
S. 588;
Georgia, Florida & Alabama Ry. v. Blish
Mill. Co. ante, p.
241 U. S. 190.
Indeed, in the argument it is frankly conceded that, as the
subject of a carrier's liability for loss or damage to goods moving
in interstate commerce under a bill of lading is embraced by the
Carmack Amendment, state legislation on that subject has been
excluded. It is insisted, however, that this does not exclude
liability for error in the bill of lading purporting to cover an
interstate shipment, because "Congress has legislated relative to
the one, but not relative to the other." But this ignores the view
expressly pointed out in the previous decisions dealing with the
Carmack Amendment, that its prime object was to bring about a
uniform rule of responsibility as to interstate commerce and
interstate commerce bills of lading -- a purpose which would be
wholly frustrated if the proposition relied upon were upheld. The
principal subject of responsibility embraced by the act of Congress
carried with it necessarily the incidents thereto.
See the
subject aptly and clearly illustrated by
St. Louis &
San
Page 241 U. S. 379
Francisco R. Co. v. Woodruff Mills, 105 Miss. 214,
where a statute of the State of Mississippi, accomplishing the very
result applied by the court below, was decided to be no longer
applicable to interstate commerce because of the taking possession
by Congress of the field by virtue of the amendment referred
to.
As it follows from what we have said that the court below erred
in applying the local law to the interstate commerce shipment under
consideration, its judgment must be reversed, and the case remanded
for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
And it is so ordered.