In a contract governing an interstate shipment of livestock, the
carrier's liability for negligent injury of the stock during
transportation may lawfully be conditioned upon the presentation of
a written claim by the shipper within five days from their removal
from the cars. P.
250 U. S.
467.
In view of the enlarged scope of "transportation" as defined by
the Hepburn Act, an interstate movement of livestock is not ended
when the car containing them is placed opposite a cattle chute of
the carrier on a switch track at destination and left in charge of
the shipper for unloading, when an adequate time for unloading them
has not expired, although the shipper assumed the duty, risk and
expense of their unloading by the terms of the contract for
transportation.
Id. Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago
& St. Louis R. Co. v. Dettlebach, 239 U.
S. 588.
Reversed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 250 U. S. 466
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Respondents delivered to the Toledo, St. Louis & Western
Railroad at East St. Louis, Illinois, a carload of horses for
transportation, under a limited liability livestock contract or
bill of lading via petitioner's road, to themselves at Suffern, New
York their home. Among other things, the contract provided:
"That the said shipper is at his own sole risk and expense to
load and take care of and to feed and water said stock whilst being
transported, whether delayed in transit or otherwise, and to unload
the same, and neither said carrier nor any connecting carrier is to
be under any liability or duty with reference thereto except in the
actual transportation of the same. . . . That no claim for damages
which may accrue to the said shipper under this contract shall be
allowed or paid by the said carrier, or sued for in any court by
the said shipper, unless a claim for such loss or damage shall be
made in writing, verified by the affidavit of the said shipper or
his agent, and delivered to the general auditor of the said carrier
at his office in the City of Chicago, Ill., within five days from
the time said stock is removed from said car or cars, and that, if
any loss or damage occurs upon the line of a connecting carrier,
then such carrier shall not be liable unless a claim shall be made
in like manner, and delivered in like time, to some proper officer
or agent of the carrier on whose line the loss or injury
occurs."
Immediately after the car arrived at Suffern, petitioner placed
it on a switch track opposite a cattle chute and left it in charge
of respondents for unloading. By letting
Page 250 U. S. 467
down a bridge, they at once connected the chute and car, and
were about to lead out four horses when an engine pushed other cars
against it and injured the animals therein. No written claim was
made for the loss or damage as provided by the bill of lading, and
when sued, the carrier defended upon that ground. Respondents
maintain that transportation had ended when the accident occurred
and consequently no written claim was necessary. The courts below
accepted this view.
Under our former opinions, the clause requiring presentation of
a written claim is clearly valid and controlling as to any
liability arising from beginning to end of the transportation
contracted for.
Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co. v.
McLaughlin, 242 U. S. 142;
St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Ry. Co. v.
Starbird, 243 U. S. 592;
Baltimore & Ohio R. Co. v. J. G. Leach, 249 U.
S. 217;
Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St.
Louis Ry. Co. v. Dettlebach, 239 U. S. 588,
239 U. S.
593-594;
Southern Ry. v. Prescott, 240 U.
S. 632.
In
Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Ry. Co. v.
Dettlebach, we pointed out that the Hepburn Act enlarged the
definition of "transportation" so as to include
"cars and other vehicles and all instrumentalities and
facilities of shipment or carriage, irrespective of ownership or of
any contract, express or implied, for the use thereof and all
services in connection with the receipt, delivery, elevation, and
transfer in transit, ventilation, refrigeration, or icing, storage,
and hauling of property transported,"
and we said from this and other provisions of the act
"it is evident that Congress recognized that the duty of
carriers to the public included the performance of a variety of
services that, according to the theory of the common law, were
separable from the carrier's service as carrier, and, in order to
prevent overcharges and discriminations from being made under the
pretext of performing such additional services, it enacted that, so
far as interstate
Page 250 U. S. 468
carriers by rail were concerned, the entire body of such
services should be included together under the single term
'transportation,' and subjected to the provisions of the act
respecting reasonable rates and the like."
In the instant case, when injured, the animals were awaiting
removal from the car through a cattle chute alleged to be owned,
operated, and controlled by the railroad. If its employees had then
been doing the work of unloading, there could be no doubt that
transportation was still in progress, and we think that giving
active charge of the removal to respondents, as agreed, was not
enough to end the interstate movement. The animals were in the car;
no adequate time for unloading had transpired. The carrier had not
fully performed the services incident to final delivery imposed by
law. These included the furnishing of fair opportunity and proper
facilities for safe unloading although the shippers had contracted
to do the work of actual removal.
See Hutchinson on
Carriers, §§ 711, 714, 715.
Petitioner's request for an instructed verdict in its behalf
should have been granted. The judgment below must be reversed, and
the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with
this opinion.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE CLARKE dissenting.
I greatly regret that I cannot concur in the opinion and
judgment of the Court in this case, but I cannot consent to share
in what seems to me a very strained construction of a definition in
the Hepburn Act (34 Stat. 584, c. 3591, § 1) which will result in
keeping alive a bill of lading, with the effect of excusing the
carrier from liability for negligently damaging the livestock of a
consignee after it had been delivered on the ground that a claim in
writing for the damage, duly verified, had not been presented
within five days.
Page 250 U. S. 469
My reasons for dissenting, stated as briefly as may be, are as
follows:
It is shown by the opinion of the Court that the consignee, a
partnership of three members, was bound by the bill of lading to
unload the horses at destination.
The consignee, being notified by the carrier as to the probable
time of the arrival of the car, on the day before it arrived, paid
what was supposed to be the full amount of the freight charges, and
two members of the partnership were at the station at three o'clock
in the morning to receive and unload it.
When the train came, the senior member of the consignee stood in
the cattle chute with the conductor while the latter was placing
the car for unloading and approved as satisfactory the position in
which it was placed. Thereupon a brakeman set the brake, the engine
was cut off, and the conductor went away and left the car in the
sole custody of the consignee, after saying to its representative,
"You had better get them out as soon as you can, as they have been
on the road a good while, and are tired and hungry." Two members of
the partnership, consignee, went to work at once to unload the
horses, but it was necessary to get some boards to make the bridge
from the car to the chute safe, and in about half an hour, when the
two were in the act of leading two horses from the car, other cars
were negligently thrown against it and caused the damage sued
for.
I dissent from the opinion of the Court because I agree with the
three New York courts that the undisputed facts thus stated show
that the transportation was ended, and the delivery of the stock
was so completely made as to end all liability of the carrier under
the bill of lading, before the negligence of the company occurred
which caused the damage complained of.
What constitutes delivery of goods or of livestock by a carrier
is usually a mixed question of law and fact, but
Page 250 U. S. 470
where, as here, the facts are not disputed, it is a question of
law.
What more was there for the carrier to do -- what more could it
have done -- to make more complete the delivery necessary to
fulfill its obligation as a carrier? The journey was ended, the
freight charges were paid, and the car was placed on a side track
in an appropriate place and position for unloading, which was
approved by the consignee. It had been accepted by two members of
the partnership, consignee, and had passed into their exclusive
custody a full half hour before the accident. No assistance was
asked for or needed after the conductor delivered the car and went
away, and thereafter the carrier owed to the consignee only the
duty which it owed to any property lawfully upon or near to its
tracks -- not to negligently or willfully injure it, and it was for
violation of that duty, not for failure to discharge duties imposed
by the bill of lading, that this suit was instituted. The case is
one of side track delivery, the equivalent of the familiar delivery
of a car to an "industrial track" or "team unloading track" of a
railroad, with possession taken by the consignee before the damage
was done.
To the weighty authority of the New York courts which decided in
this case that the delivery was complete before the damage was done
may be added, a few from many, the decisions of the supreme courts:
of Michigan, in a strikingly similar case, but with not so complete
a delivery, in
Brown v. Pontiac, Oxford & Northern R.
Co., 133 Mich. 371; of Illinois, in
Gratiot Street
Warehouse Co. v. St. Louis, Alton & Terre Haute R. Co.,
221 Ill. 418; of North Carolina, in
Reid v. Southern Railway
Co., 149 N.C. 423; of Georgia, in
Kenny Co. v. Atlanta
& West Point R. Co., 122 Ga. 365,
and see Hedges v.
River Railroad Co., 49 N.Y. 223.
The definition of "transportation" in the Hepburn Act (34 Stat.
584), relied upon in the Court's opinion, seems
Page 250 U. S. 471
to me quite irrelevant. That provision was incorporated into the
act to prevent unjust discrimination by carriers in terminal
delivery charges, as the context and the history of the act
abundantly show. It defined "transportation," but did not define
what should constitute delivery to a consignee; that was left
untouched, and is governed by the prior decisions of courts and by
those which have been developed since.
Equally beside the question involved seems to me the decision in
Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Ry. Co. v.
Dettlebach, 239 U. S. 588,
239 U. S.
593-594, cited in the opinion of the Court. The question
there under consideration was whether, when goods carried to
destination were lost after they had been held more than a month
uncalled for, the liability of the carrier was to be determined by
the terms of the bill of lading or by the more limited liability of
a warehouseman. Obviously there was no question in the case as to
what constituted delivery, for there was no pretense of delivery,
actual or constructive, and therefore the decision cannot be of
service in determining this case.
The opinion of the Court in this case concludes:
"The animals were in the car; no adequate time for unloading had
transpired. The carrier had not fully performed the service
incident to final delivery imposed by law. These included the
furnishing of fair opportunity and proper facilities for safe
unloading, although the shippers had contracted to do the work of
actual removal.
See Hutchinson on Carriers, §§ 711, 714,
715."
I cannot find justification, in the sections cited for such a
statement of the law as is here made.
Section 711 deals with the obligation to unload carload freight,
and, after saying that it is "the uniform rule and custom in this
country" for the consignee to unload, the only other relevant
statement of the writer is:
"All therefore that can be required of the railroad
Page 250 U. S. 472
company is that it shall place the cars where they can be safely
and conveniently unloaded."
This the carrier in the case before us had done to the
satisfaction and acceptance or the consignee before the accident
complained of.
Section 714 deals with the liability of the carrier pending
removal (delivery) of the goods, and says:
"During this reasonable time [for delivery], the liability of
the carrier remains unchanged; but so soon as it has elapsed, he no
longer stands in the relation of carrier to the goods, but in that
of an ordinary bailee for hire."
The "reasonable time" here referred to is palpably that
necessary for the carrier to wait before its obligation becomes
that of a warehouseman when the consignee does not appear to claim
the shipment; it is not applicable to the time for unloading after
the property has been accepted by the consignee.
Section 715 declares that:
"If the consignee is bound to unload the goods himself from the
car, it is the duty of the carrier to place the car where it can be
unloaded with a reasonable degree of convenience and to furnish the
consignee with safe and proper facilities for the purpose."
All of this the carrier in this case did, and the consignee not
only approved as satisfactory, safe, and proper the position in
which the car was placed and the facilities furnished for unloading
it, but the delivery of the car was accepted and was in the actual
possession and custody of the consignee for a very considerable
time before the accident complained of happened. It was not in any
attempt or effort on the part of the carrier to improve the
unloading facilities or to assist the consignee that the damage was
done, but it was the result of a tort, pure and simple -- of a
negligent switching operation, entirely independent of the delivery
of the shipment, occurring a half hour after it had been
accepted.
Page 250 U. S. 473
The delivery having been completed and accepted by the
consignee, the five-day limitation, so unreasonable in itself that
it has been prohibited by congressional enactment (38 Stat. 1196,
c. 176, § 1), has, in my judgment, no applicability to this case,
and to bottom the conclusion announced upon the definition of
"transportation" in the Hepburn Act is to convert what was intended
for the protection of shippers of property in interstate commerce,
into an instrument of injury and injustice.
For the reasons thus stated, I dissent from the opinion and
judgment of the court.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA and MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS concur in this
dissent. MR. JUSTICE DAY also dissents.