Where, in the contemplation of the parties and by the terms of
the bill of lading, a shipment is purely intrastate, and neither
the bill nor any state regulation give a right to divert or reship,
the action of the shipper and connecting carrier in forwarding the
goods, after arrival at destination, to a new destination in
another state under a new bill cannot impress the original shipment
with an interstate character, subject it to the Interstate Commerce
Act and interstate tariffs, and so render the initial carrier
liable under the Carmack Amendment for damage occurring under the
new consignment.
200 Mo.App. 655 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS delivered the opinion of the Court.
June 10, 1918, the petitioner delivered to respondent railway
company at Ingleside, Texas, a carload of vegetables consigned to
himself at Dallas, Texas, a point off its lines, where he intended
to sell them. He accepted a bill of lading upon the face of which
was plainly printed: "For use only between points within the State
of Texas."
Page 254 U. S. 490
It contained no reference to a diversion or reshipment, and the
record discloses no rule or regulation by the state statutes or
authorities on that subject.
The car moved over respondent's road to Waco, and then over the
Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway to Dallas, where it appears to
have arrived promptly with contents in good condition. Upon
petitioner's request, made after such arrival, the Missouri, Kansas
& Texas Railway forwarded the car to Kansas City over its own
lines, took up the original bill of lading, and issued an
interstate one acknowledging receipt of the vegetables at Dallas.
When the car reached Kansas City, the contents were in bad
condition, and thereupon petitioner sued respondent as the initial
carrier, claiming a right to recover damages under the Carmack
Amendment to the Interstate Commerce Act, 34 Stat. 584, c.
3591.
The court below held that the provisions in interstate tariffs
permitting reconsignment or change of destination did not apply,
that the carrier only agreed to transport to Dallas, and was not
liable for damage sustained beyond that point.
Respondent's contract appears to have related only to a movement
between points in the same state. It had no notice or reason to
suppose that the freight would pass beyond the destination
specified. The original undertaking was an intrastate transaction,
subject, of course, to any applicable rules and regulations
prescribed by state authority. The record discloses none, and we
are unable to say, as a matter of federal law, that the tariff
schedules for interstate shipments or the provisions of the
Interstate Commerce Act constituted part of the agreement. The
general principles announced in
Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe
Ry. Co. v. Texas, 204 U. S. 403,
204 U. S. 411,
are applicable.
Ohio Railroad Commission v. Worthington,
225 U. S. 101;
Texas & New Orleans R. Co. v. Sabine Tram Co.,
227 U. S. 111, and
similar cases are not
Page 254 U. S. 491
controlling. They involved controversies concerning carriage
between points in the same state which was really but part of an
interstate or foreign movement reasonably to be anticipated by the
contracting parties -- a recognized step towards a destination
outside the state. The distinctions are elucidated in
Texas
& N. O. R. Co. v. Sabine Tram Co. Here, neither shipper
nor respondent had in contemplation any movement beyond the point
specified, and the contract between them must be determined from
the original bill of lading and the local laws and regulations.
Affirmed.