In an action against an initial carrier to recover for goods
lost on the line of a connecting carrier, the Carmack Amendment
does not lay upon the shipper the burden of proving that the loss
was "caused by" the connecting carrier. P.
249 U. S.
191.
Where a shipper took depositions as to telephone and postal
communications tending to prove liability of a connecting carrier
for a loss of goods, and the defendant initial carrier introduced
the depositions in evidence,
held that it could not be
heard to object that the senders of the messages were not
identified as officers or agents of the connecting carrier. P.
249 U. S.
192.
A shipment of poultry, delayed by floods, was appropriated by
state military authorities at the solicitation of the carrier and
upon its false or not justified representation that the fowls were
abandoned by their caretaker and dying.
Held that the
carrier was liable to the shipper, as the loss was not attributable
to "the act of God" or "the authority of law" excepted in the bill
of lading.
Id.
235 F. 857 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 249 U. S. 189
MR. JUSTICE CLARKE delivered the opinion of the Court.
On March 21, 1913, the plaintiff in error, the initial carrier,
accepted a carload of live poultry from the defendant
Page 249 U. S. 190
in error, the shipper, for transportation from Cypress,
Illinois, to Newark, New Jersey, and issued the customary bill of
lading, containing the provision that the carrier should not be
liable for any loss or damage to the property "caused by the act of
God . . . or the authority of law."
In the progress of transportation, the car arrived at Dayton,
Ohio, on the morning of March 25th, and was there delayed by a
flood caused by rains so unprecedented that, on that date, martial
law was declared applicable to Dayton and the territory in which
the car was held. The floodwaters overflowed the rails on which the
car stood, but did not reach the body of the car so as to affect
the health of the poultry, and access to and from it was readily
maintained by the caretaker.
On March 31st the state military authorities took possession of
the car and distributed its contents to persons rendered destitute
by the flood.
Suit against the carrier, based on the bill of lading, commenced
in a state court, was removed to the appropriate district court of
the United States.
On the trial of the case, the shipper introduced evidence
tending to prove that the confiscation was due to the solicitation
of representatives of the carrier and to their false representation
that the fowls were dying from lack of food and attention and had
been or were about to be abandoned by the caretaker, but the
railroad company denied this and introduced evidence tending to
prove that there was no such solicitation or false representation
and that the confiscation was rendered necessary by the exigencies
of the situation and by the necessity for supplying food to the
people rendered homeless by the flood.
The trial court charged the jury:
That it was the duty of the carrier to transport the property to
destination, if it could do so; that it could not overcome the
flood or the action of the military authorities,
Page 249 U. S. 191
and that, if the latter acted of their own volition, the shipper
could not recover, but that, if the military authorities seized the
consignment solely upon and by reason of the invitation of the
railroad company, and if, but for this confiscation, the property
or any part of it, in the exercise of ordinary care, could have
been transported to its destination, then the defendant, the
carrier, would be liable for the value of such part of it as the
jury might find from the evidence could have reached its
destination, to be determined by the invoice price at the point of
shipment, less any deterioration caused by the delay solely
incident to the flood.
The verdict was for the shipper, and we are asked to review the
judgment of the circuit court of appeals affirming the judgment of
the district court entered upon that verdict.
The carrier argues that three errors each requiring reversal of
the judgment appear in the record.
The first claim is that the court refused to rule that, by its
terms, the Carmack Amendment (34 Stat. 595, c. 3591, § 7)
casts upon the shipper the burden of proving affirmatively that the
loss which occurred on a connecting line was "caused by" the
connecting carrier. But, assuming that the question is presented by
the record, which is doubtful,
Galveston, Harrisburg & San
Antonio Ry. Co. v. Wallace, 223 U. S. 481,
223 U. S. 491,
rules that, under the act as construed in
Atlantic Coast Line
R. Co. v. Riverside Mills, 219 U. S. 186,
219 U. S.
205-206, in such a case as we have here, the liability
of the initial carrier is as if the shipment had been between
stations in different states, but both upon its own line, and this
renders the contention untenable.
Adams Express Co. v.
Croninger, 226 U. S. 491,
does not conflict with this conclusion,
Cincinnati, New Orleans
& Texas Pacific Ry. Co. v. Rankin, 241 U.
S. 319,
241 U. S.
326.
The second claim is that error was committed in the
admission
Page 249 U. S. 192
of testimony of military officers that the confiscation of the
property resulted from communications received by them by postal
card and telephone from the agents and officials of the railway
company respecting the condition of the poultry and that the
caretaker had abandoned it, without evidence being required to
identify the senders of such messages as officers or agents of the
company. But this evidence, while taken in the form of depositions
by the shipper, was introduced by the carrier. One who asks a court
and jury to believe evidence which he introduces will not be heard
to claim that, for technical reasons, it was not admissible.
There remains only the contention that substantial error was
committed by the circuit court of appeals in approving as sound law
the charge to the jury that, if the military authorities seized the
consignment of poultry solely upon and by reason of the invitation
of the railroad company, and that if, but for this confiscation,
the property or any part of it, in the exercise of ordinary care,
could have been transported to its destination, then the carrier
would be liable, etc.
The shipment was not lost by the "act of God," and the defense
of the carrier on the facts was narrowed to the claim that it was
prevented from performing its contract "by the authority of law" --
by the appropriation by the military authorities.
The verdict approved by two courts will be accepted by this
Court as a conclusive finding in favor of the shipper upon the
questions of fact involved.
The duties and liabilities of a common carrier have been so
fully discussed by this Court, notably in
Railroad
Co. v. Lockwood, 17 Wall. 357, and in
Bank of
Kentucky v. Adams Express Co., 93 U. S.
174, that they need not be restated here.
The common law principle making the common carrier an insurer is
justified by the purpose to prevent negligence
Page 249 U. S. 193
or collusion between dishonest carriers or their servants and
thieves or others, to the prejudice of the shipper, who is, of
necessity, so remote from his property, when in transit, that proof
of such collusion or negligence when existing, would be difficult
if not impossible.
Coggs v. Bernard, 2 Lord Raymond 909;
Riley v. Horne, 5 Bing. 217. The obligation to transport
and to deliver is so exceptional and absolute in character that the
relation of the carrier to the shipper was characterized in
Railroad Co. v. Lockwood, supra, as so partaking of a
fiduciary character as to require the utmost fairness and good
faith on its part in dealing with the shipper and in the discharge
of its duties to him, and so lately as
American Express Co. v.
Mullins, 212 U. S. 311,
this Court declared that, if a carrier, by connivance or fraud,
permitted a judgment to be rendered against it for property in its
charge, such judgment could not be invoked as a bar to a suit by a
shipper.
These decisions, a few from many, illustrate the character of
the relation of trust and confidence which must be sustained
between a common carrier and a shipper. It rests at bottom upon a
commercial necessity and public policy which would be largely
defeated if the carrier were permitted by false representations, or
by representations which, though not intentionally false, were not
known to be true, to procure the appropriation by military or other
authority of property in its custody, as the jury found was done in
this case, and thereby defeat its obligation to carry and
deliver.
These principles of law governing the relations between the
carrier and the shipper amply justified the charge of the trial
court to the jury, and the judgment of the circuit court of appeals
must be
Affirmed.