A case involving rights arising from through bills of lading
issued under the Carmack Amendment is reviewable by this Court upon
writ of error to a state court.
St. Louis, Iron Mountain &
Southern Ry. Co. v. Starbird, 243 U.
S. 592.
By request of the shipper and by action of the carriers in
dealing with the freight accordingly, a shipment governed by the
Carmack Amendment and bills of lading thereunder may be diverted
from the original destination, and the original bills of lading be
continued in force as applicable to the new destination.
When the bill of lading provides that the liability of any
carrier for damage to goods shall be computed on the basis of the
value of the goods -- the
bona fide invoice price to the
consignee -- at place and time of shipment, the difference between
that value and the value of the goods when delivered at a new
destination, to which they have been diverted under such bill of
lading by consent of the parties, is a proper measure of damages
suffered in transit.
So
held when the goods were damaged when they reached
the original destination and were sold, in bad condition, by the
shipper at the new destination.
In such case, the shipper discharges his duty to the carrier
when he sells the goods at the new destination for the best price
obtainable.
Under the Carmack Amendment, an initial carrier sued for
negligent damage to goods is not entitled to recover over against a
connecting carrier which did not contribute to such damage.
172 S.W. 195 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 244 U. S. 32
MR. JUSTICE Day delivered the opinion of the court:
Defendant in error, Texas Packing Company, brought its action in
the District Court of Bell County, Texas, against the Gulf,
Colorado, & Santa Fe Railway Company, plaintiff in error, to
recover damages growing out of a series of shipments of dressed
poultry from Temple, Texas, to St. Louis, Missouri, but which were
rerouted over the line of the Wabash Railroad Company from St.
Louis to Chicago. The shipments were on bills of lading, among the
terms of which was the following: "Iced to full capacity at Temple
with crushed ice adding 12 percent salt. Re-ice at all regular
icing stations with crushed ice using 12% salt." The Packing
Company, in its petition, after averring the necessity of proper
icing and the contract to that effect between it and the carrier,
alleged negligence on the part of the carriers in failing to reice
the poultry properly and regularly, as a result of which plaintiff
claimed damages in the sum of $12,202.87.
The Santa Fe Company answered, denying the allegations of the
petition and alleging the absence of a contract of carriage from
Temple to Chicago, and averred by way of cross-petition that, under
the terms of the bills of lading, its obligation was to carry the
shipments and deliver them within a reasonable length of time to
its connecting line, en route to destination, and that it did
within a reasonable time carry and safely deliver the shipments in
good and proper condition, or in such condition as they were
received by it, to its connecting line, the Wabash Railroad
Company; that, under the terms of the bills of lading, the
liability of each carrier was distinctly limited to all such loss
and injury as occurred while the shipments were in its possession,
and that there was no loss or injury to the shipments while the
same were in its
Page 244 U. S. 33
possession; that any loss or injury thereto was the result of
the negligence of the plaintiff or the Wabash Railroad Company, and
that it is not responsible herein for any of the losses or injuries
complained of in plaintiff's petition; that the Santa Fe Company,
being the initial carrier, was made responsible under the act of
Congress for all loss or injury occurring en route, but that, under
said act, it is entitled to vouch in the Wabash Railroad Company
and recover over and against it for any loss or injury occasioned
to the shipments in question through its negligence, and that, if
there was any negligence of any carrier which resulted in loss to
plaintiffs, the same was the negligence of the Wabash Railroad
Company.
Accordingly, the Wabash Railroad Company was made a defendant
and filed an answer, asserting that it was not a proper party to
the suit and denying that it was guilty of the negligence
complained of. It further averred that the shipments were delivered
at Chicago in the same condition as when it (the Wabash Company)
had received them, and that it received and transported the
shipments by virtue of a contract with the plaintiff to which the
Gulf, Colorado, & Santa Fe Railway Company was not a party or
in any way interested, and prayed a dismissal with its costs.
In appears from the record that the shipments were separately
billed from Temple, Texas, to St. Louis, Missouri at dates varying
from December 24th to December 30th, 1910; that, upon January 4th,
1911, the shipper requested the carrier's agent at Temple, by
telephone, to divert the five cars from St. Louis to Chicago; that
the agent said he would, asked where the bills of lading were, and
upon being told that they were in St. Louis, said that the
carrier's representative in St. Louis would perhaps see that the
notations of the diversion were made upon the bills; that no new
bills were issued, and that thereupon the shipments were continued
to Chicago.
Page 244 U. S. 34
Concerning the stipulation as to icing in transit at "all
regular icing stations," there is testimony tending to show the
cars were in fact reiced en route to St. Louis at all but one
regular station -- Shawnee, Oklahoma, but the failure to reice at
this point resulted in a lapse of from twenty-eight to fifty-four
hours without ice and salt.
Upon the issues made, the jury found for the Packing Company
against the Santa Fe Railway Company, and upon the issue between
the Santa Fe and Wabash Companies, the verdict was in favor of the
Wabash Company. The district court rendered judgment accordingly,
and the case was taken to the court of civil appeals, where the
judgment of the district court was affirmed. 172 S.W. 195.
As the case involves rights set up and denied which arose upon
through bills of lading issued under the Carmack Amendment, it is
properly reviewable here.
St. Louis, Iron Mountain &
Southern Ry. Co. v. Starbird, 243 U.
S. 592. Indeed, both parties admit that the federal
statute controls, and the case must be decided under its
provisions.
As required by the Texas statute (Art. 1639 of the Revised
Statutes of Texas, 1911), the court of civil appeals made findings
of fact in which it said:
"The verdict of the jury is amply supported by testimony, and we
therefore make findings of fact to the effect that appellant
breached its contract of shipment, as alleged in appellee's
petition, and that, as a result of that breach, the property which
was shipped was injured and damaged to the extent found by the
jury, and that the proof failed to show that any of the damage
referred to was caused by the Wabash Railroad Company."
The plaintiff in error, in urging certain grounds for the
reversal of the judgment of the court of civil appeals, contends
that the district court erred in charging the jury as to the
measure of damages. On that subject, the district court charged the
jury as follows:
Page 244 U. S. 35
"(4) If you find for the plaintiff, you will assess the damages
at the difference between the invoice price of said poultry,
to-wit, the sum of Twenty-Two Thousand Two Hundred Thirty-Eight and
56/100 ($22,238.56) Dollars, and the value of said property at the
time the same was delivered to plaintiff or its agents, the Western
Cold Storage Company in Chicago, by the carrier, with six percent
interest per annum from January 15th, 1911."
This interstate shipment was governed by the terms of the
Carmack Amendment, requiring the initial carrier to issue a receipt
or bill of lading, and as this Court frequently has held, with the
effect of making such contract the measure of liability between the
parties. It is insisted that, inasmuch as the bill of lading made
St. Louis the point of destination, it is immaterial what the value
of the property was in Chicago, to which point the goods were
shipped, having been sold in transit to a company in that city. On
this point, the record shows that the bills of lading covered the
shipment of five cars of dressed poultry from Temple, Texas, to St.
Louis, where they were consigned to the "order of the Texas Packing
Company, notify St. Louis Refrigerating & Cold Storage
Company." There is testimony to show that the poultry, while in
transit, was sold in Chicago, and that, while the cars were in St.
Louis on the sidetrack of the St. Louis Refrigerating & Cold
Storage Company, the shipper called upon the agent of the Santa Fe
Company at Temple to divert the cars to Chicago. The testimony also
shows that the agent promised to do so, said that he would wire a
representative of the railway company in St. Louis to divert the
cars, that no new bills of lading were issued, that the agent asked
for the original bills of lading and was told that they were in St.
Louis, and said that the representative of the carrier there would
perhaps call at the bank and make the proper notations thereon.
It is fairly inferable from the evidence that the bills of
Page 244 U. S. 36
lading originally issued were continued in force by the action
of the parties, simply changing the place of destination, and
remained binding contracts when the Santa Fe Company accepted the
diversion of the shipment from St. Louis to Chicago.
The bills of lading contained this stipulation:
"The amount of any loss or damage for which any carrier is
liable shall be computed on the basis of the value of the property
(being the
bona fide invoice price, if any, to the
consignee, including the freight charges if prepaid) at the place
and time of shipment under this bill of lading, unless a lower
value has been represented in writing by the shipper, or has been
agreed upon or is determined by the classification or tariffs upon
which the rate is based, in any of which events such lower value
shall be the maximum amount to govern such computation, whether or
not such loss or damage occurs from negligence."
The testimony showed that the invoice price of the poultry at
Temple to the Packing Company was $22,238.56, and that the poultry
was worth at least that sum at Temple at the time of shipment. We
think that, in taking this sum as the basis of computing damages,
the trial court did but enforce the stipulation in the bills of
lading. That sum was the
bona fide invoice price to the
consignee, which the bills provided was to be the basis of recovery
in case of loss or damage. We think the court properly charged the
jury to take the difference between this invoice price and the
value of the poultry at the time the same was delivered in Chicago
in arriving at the amount of damages. No question is raised in this
case as to the right of the plaintiff to recover also the freight
paid.
See Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Olivit Bros.,
243 U. S. 574.
The testimony shows that the poultry reached St. Louis in poor
condition, and that the cars were there reiced and forwarded to
Chicago, where the poultry was delivered, still in bad condition,
and really unfit for market. It was
Page 244 U. S. 37
nevertheless sold for the best price which could be obtained.
When the poultry reached Chicago in that condition, the consignee
discharged its duty to the railway company when it sold the damaged
goods for what could be obtained for them.
The testimony shows that the poultry was taken to a storage
company at Chicago, where it was kept until it could be sold, and
ultimately realized the sum of $10,035.69. The jury returned a
verdict, under the instruction of the court to deduct the value of
the property at Chicago from the invoice price, in the sum of
$9,000 and interest. Evidently, in this state of the record, no
harm was done to the rights of the plaintiff in error in assessing
the sum which the jury awarded against it.
We cannot agree with the contention of the plaintiff in error
that the value of the deteriorated poultry at Temple or St. Louis
should have been taken as the sum to be deducted from the invoice
basis of value.
Apart from the stipulation of these bills of lading, the
ordinary measure of damages in cases of this sort is the difference
between the market value of the property in the condition in which
it should have arrived at the place of destination and its market
value in the condition in which, by reason of the fault of the
carrier, it did arrive.
New York, Lake Erie & Western R.
Co. v. Estill, 147 U. S. 591,
147 U. S. 616.
The stipulations of these bills of lading changed this rule in the
requirement that the invoice price at the place of shipment should
be the basis for assessing the damages.
The poultry in fact had no market price, at Temple or elsewhere.
It was badly deteriorated, and when the shipper sold it at the
point of destination for the best price it would bring, he did all
that could be fairly required of him to save the carrier from
resulting loss.
The trial court charged that the Santa Fe Company was entitled
to a recovery against the Wabash Railroad Company
Page 244 U. S. 38
if the jury found that the Santa Fe Company and Wabash Railroad
Company were both guilty of negligence in the handling of the
poultry, in which event the jury were told that the Santa Fe
Company would be entitled to a verdict against the Wabash Railroad
Company for that part of the sum to which the Wabash Company had
contributed by its negligence to plaintiff's injury. It is urged by
the plaintiff in error that the Santa Fe Company, as the initial
carrier, regardless of its own negligence, was entitled to recover
against the Wabash Company in proportion as the negligence of that
company contributed to the loss, and it is contended that the
testimony tends to show that the Wabash Railroad Company did not
properly reice and otherwise care for the poultry in transit. The
record shows no proper exception reserved upon which to base this
criticism, and the question becomes immaterial in view of the
verdict of the jury in favor of the Wabash Railroad Company and the
express finding of the Court of Civil Appeals that the proof failed
to show that any of the damages had been caused by the Wabash
Railroad Company.
We find no error in the judgment of the court below, and it
is
Affirmed.