Alcorn v. Adams Express Co.

146 S.W. 747, 148 Ky. 352, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 441
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 14, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 146 S.W. 747 (Alcorn v. Adams Express Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alcorn v. Adams Express Co., 146 S.W. 747, 148 Ky. 352, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 441 (Ky. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Lassing —

Reversing.

John 3D. Alcorn, while in the service of the United States Army in the Philippine Islands, died, and the Government caused his body to be returned to his parents, living at Rice Station, Estill county, Kentucky. His body was delivered to- the Wells Fargo & Co. express, at San Francisco, and transported by it to Cincinnati, Ohio, and there delivered by the Wells Fargo & Co. Express to the Adams Express Co. for shipment to its destination, where it arrived about the 26th day of August, 1908, and was held for several hours by the [353]*353agent of said company, who refused to give it up to the parents of decedent because the express charges thereon, amounting to $138, had not been paid.

It appears that, at the time the body was delivered to the Wells Fargo & Co. Express by the representatives of the Government, an arrangement was made whereby all charges were to be paid by the Government; but, through some misunderstanding, error or oversight on the part of the Wells Fargo' & Co. Express, the terms of this arrangement as to the payment of the express charges were not communicated to the Adams Express Company, and because of this fact the agent refused to deliver the body of decedent to his parents for some hours and until he had ascertained that it was not to be held until the charges were paid..

Alleging that he had been caused to suffer great mental pain and anguish by reason of this conduct on the part of the agents of the Adams Express Co., A. C. Alcorn, father of decedent, instituted a suit in the Estill Circuit Court against the Adams Express Co., in which he sought to recover damages in the sum of $1,025. The company in its answer denied liability and pleaded, in justification of its conduct, the following facts: On the 23d day of August 1908, it received at Cincinnati, Ohio, from the Wells Fargo & Co. Express, a shipment, purporting to be a corpse, with written instructions from said Wells Fargo & Co. Express, to transport same to Eice Station, Ky., and to collect on delivery thereof the sum of $127 charges for said Wells Fargo & Co. express; that it thereupon advanced and paid to said Wells Fargo and Co. Express the sum of $127 and added same to its own charges for transportation of said corpse from Cincinnati, Ohio, to Eice Station, Ky.; that when said corpse was received it did not know that he had been shipped under a contract with the War Department, or that the charges were to be paid by the Government; that under the written directions and instructions received in the form of a way bill and transfer sheet from the Wells Fargo & Go. Express, at the time the corpse was delivered to it, it was instructed and directed to collect of the plaintiff, the consignee, the said $127 before delivering the corpse to him, and that, in holding the corpse for the length of time it did and demanding payment of the charges, as stated, it acted only under and in accordance with the written direction of the Wells Fargo & Go. Express.

[354]*354Upon the issue thus formed a trial was had, which resulted in a verdict in favor of - plaintiff for $500. A motion >and grounds for a new trial were promptly filed and, upon consideration, the' motion was sustained and the verdict set aside. A second trial was had, which resulted in a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $800, and this verdict was likewise, upon motion, set aside. A third trial was entered upon and, at the conclusion of all of the evidence, the court instructed the jury peremptorily to find for the defendant, which was done. The petition was dismissed and the plaintiff appeals and seeks to have the ruling of the trial judge, in sustaining the motion of defendant for a new trial after the rendition of the first and second verdict, set aside and the case reversed, with directions to enter a judgment upon the first verdict. Or, if for any reason that could not be done, that judgment be directed entered upon the second verdict. Or, if it should be held that he is not entitled to this relief, that the case be reversed because of error on the part of the trial judge in giving to the jury the peremptory instruction upon the first trial to find for the defendant.

/ It clearly appears in the evidence that, when the agent of the Wells Fargo & Co. Express, at Cincinnati, delivered the - corpse to the Adams Express Co. it was not accompanied by the contract which the Wells Fargo & Co. Express had made with the representative of the Government in San Francisco, and it is apparent that the Cincinnati agent of the Wells Fargo & Co. Express did not know of the existence of this contract, else he would not have exacted of the Adams Express Co. the prepayment of its charges, amounting to $127 before delivering tbe corpse to the Adams Express Co. and the trial court was of opinion that, inasmuch ias the. Adams-Express Co. knew nothing of the contract which had been made by the Wells Fargo & Co. Express, it was not bound by such contract, but must be considered-as having made and entered into a new and different contract with the Wells Fargo & Co. Express, for the forwarding of the body from Cincinnati to its destination, from that which had been made by the Wells Fargo & Co. Express, with the Government, and that, in making this new contract with the Adams Express Co. the Wells Fargo & Co. Express acted as the agent of the consignor. He was doubtless influenced in reaching this decision by the text in Hutchison on Carriers, 3 Ed., Sec. 139, [355]*355where the author, in dealing with a state of facts similar to that under consideration, says:

“When goods are delivered to the carrier for the purpose of being carried to a point beyond the terminus of its route, and for that purpose to be delivered by him to a connecting carrier in order to continue the carriage, or where it becomes necessary for that purpose to make successive deliveries from one to another upon a continuous line or succession of carriers, the first and each succeeding carrier becomes the agent of the owner of the goods to make delivery to the next carrier; and it is incumbent upon him to do so not only to relieve himself from further liability, but because it is a duty which he owes to the owner, and which he has assumed with the acceptance of the goods. He is the party in charge of them, and the only one with whom the succeeding carrier can make the necessary arrangements, and stands toward them for this purpose in the position of an owner.”

The court in Briggs v. Railroad, 6 Allen, 246, 249; Hayman v. Canadian Pacific Railway Co., 86 N. Y. Supp., 728; Patten v. Union Pacific Railway Co., 29 Fed., 590, and Whitney v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 S.W. 747, 148 Ky. 352, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alcorn-v-adams-express-co-kyctapp-1912.