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Wells v. Wilmington Weldon R. R. Co.

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1858
51 N.C. 47 (N.C. 1858)

Summary

In Wells v. Wilmington W. Ry. Co., 51 N.C. 47, the court had this to say: "The liability of a railroad company as a common carrier does not begin until the article is received by its agent and is put into its custody for the purpose of being carried on the road.

Summary of this case from National Union Fire Ins. v. Atlantic & East Carolina Ry. Co.

Opinion

December Term, 1858.

An action cannot be maintained against a railroad company as a common carrier for the loss or destruction of goods deposited on the road side, at a place where there was no regular station, and no agent, although a conductor of a freight train had promised to stop and take them.

Roadside deposits, made to save the trouble of hauling to a regular depot, are at the risk of the owners, until they are put on a freight car.

ACTION on the case, tried before ELLIS, J., at the Spring Term, 1858, of Edgecome Superior Court.

Conigland, for the plaintiff.

Moore and Dortch, for the defendants.


The plaintiff declared against the defendants as a common carrier.

The plaintiff placed eighty or one hundred barrels of turpentine at a point on the defendant's railroad, called "The Nicholson place," to be carried on a freight train to a distillery at Battleboro'. The place where the turpentine was deposited, was not a regular station on the road. They had no warehouse nor employees there, but frequently took on freight from that point. Two different conductors had promised, soon after the turpentine was placed at the point above named, to take it to the distillery "as soon as they could," which not being done for some weeks, the plaintiff applied to another conductor, who said "he would carry it on the following Monday morning; that he thought he could do so at that time." On that morning, some turpentine was taken from the "Nicholson Place" to Battleboro', but none of the defendant's, although there were empty cars in the train. The plaintiff's turpentine while lying at the Nicholson Place, was destroyed by fire.

The Court intimated an opinion that the plaintiff could not recover on this state of the facts, on which he submitted to a nonsuit, and appealed.


The declaration is against the defendant as a common carrier, for the loss of the turpentine. We concur in the opinion that the proof does not make out the case. The liability of a rail road company, as a common carrier, does not begin until the article is received by its agent, and is put into its custody for the purpose of being carried on the road. If the article is put on the platform at the company's depot, with the knowledge of the agent, that amounts to an acceptance, and it is not necessary that it should be entered on the way bill or freight bill, or any written memorandum made, in order to make the company liable for it to the same extent as after it is actually put on a freight train; for its duty, as a common carrier, begins whenever the article is received for the purpose of being carried, and the owner relinquishes his control over it; after that, it makes no difference in respect to the liability of the company, whether the article is sent off immediately, or is, for the convenience of the company, kept over and either permitted to remain on the platform, or is put into the warehouse. If, however, the article is kept over for the convenience of the owner, as if he should request that it might be put into the warehouse and not be sent until further instructions, then, as we apprehend, the company would not be liable, as a common carrier, but only as a depository, inasmuch as the article was not received for carriage, until such further instructions should be given. So, if the article reaches the place of destination, and is put on the platform of the depot, we apprehend the liability of the company, as a common carrier, is then at an end. The owner, or his consignee, should be there to receive it, and, in his absence, it is put in the warehouse as a deposit. Whether it is the duty of the company to give the owner or consignee notice of its arrival, is a question into which we will not enter; indeed, we were not at liberty to give a decided opinion upon the questions to which we have had reference, and their suggestion was merely for the sake of illustration. In our case, the turpentine was not carried to a depot, but was put at a place on the road side, at which articles were sometimes taken in, but the company had no house there, and no agent there: and the idea that the turpentine was received and taken into its charge, so as to make the company liable as a common carrier, while it lay there on the ground, by the force and effect of the indefinite promises of the conductors to stop at some time or other, and take it in, is out of the question.

Upon a consideration of the intention and acts of the parties and the nature of the subject, this Court is of opinion that all those "road-side deposits," made to save the trouble of hauling to a regular depot, are at the risk of the owners until they are put on a freight car, and in that manner received by an agent of the company.

If the plaintiff had declared for a breach of contract in not receiving the turpentine on a particular day, or within a reasonable time, it is settled that he could not have recovered its value; Ashe v. DeRossett, 5 Jones' Rep. 299. Whether he could have maintained the action so as to entitle himself to nominal damages, upon the evidence offered, it is not necessary for us to enquire, because, in this Court, he has made his election to assume that the turpentine was received, so as to make the defendant liable as a common carrier, and reference is made to the other mode in which he might have declared, because the case seems to have been made up with that view. The plaintiff had a right to his election, and exercised it purposely to raise the question as to the defendant's liability for the value of the turpentine.

PER CURIAM, There is no error. Judgment affirmed.


Summaries of

Wells v. Wilmington Weldon R. R. Co.

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1858
51 N.C. 47 (N.C. 1858)

In Wells v. Wilmington W. Ry. Co., 51 N.C. 47, the court had this to say: "The liability of a railroad company as a common carrier does not begin until the article is received by its agent and is put into its custody for the purpose of being carried on the road.

Summary of this case from National Union Fire Ins. v. Atlantic & East Carolina Ry. Co.
Case details for

Wells v. Wilmington Weldon R. R. Co.

Case Details

Full title:THEOPHILUS B. WELLS v . THE WILMINGTON AND WELDON RAIL ROAD COMPANY

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Dec 1, 1858

Citations

51 N.C. 47 (N.C. 1858)

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