American Merchants' Union Express Co. v. Schier

55 Ill. 140
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 55 Ill. 140 (American Merchants' Union Express Co. v. Schier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Merchants' Union Express Co. v. Schier, 55 Ill. 140 (Ill. 1870).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Breese

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action of assumpsit, brought to the Jo Daviess circuit court by Joseph Schier,against the American Merchants’ Union Express Company, to recover damages for the nondelivery of a trunk and its contents belonging to the plaintiff, of the value of $135, entrusted to the defendants as common carriers, at Galena, in this State, and consigned to plaintiff at West Goshen, in the State of Connecticut.

The jury found for the plaintiff the value of the trunk and contents in damages. A motion for a new trial was overruled and judgment rendered on the verdict, to reverse which the defendants appeal, assigning as error the refusal of the court to grant a new trial, that the verdict was contrary to the law and the evidence, and against the instructions of the court.

The trunk in question was delivered to the agent of defendants at Galena, on the twenty-first of January, 1869, by Herman Schier, the brother of appellee, and for which the agent gave him. the usual receipt. He could not then read or write English, nor was the receipt explained to him, nor did he know its contents. Neither he nor his brother, at that time, could read or write English, having come from Prussia in November, 1868.

The trunk, it appears, was billed by the agent at Galena to Palmer, in Massachusetts, a station about ten miles east of Springfield, on the Boston and Albany railroad, and found its way, by several transfers, to a station of the Adams Express Company, called Wolcottville, on the Naugatuck railroad, and about eight miles east of West Goshen, on the twenty-sixth of January, 1869, and was there placed in a warehouse belonging to the Adams Express Company, where it remained until the second day of March following, when the warehouse was consumed by fire, and the trunk and its contents with it.

The case turns very much upon the question, was Wolcottville a proper place for this trunk to have been sent by appellants ? But there is a question preliminary to that to be settled —was Palmer a proper place to which to bill the trunk ? If it was a proper place, then Wolcottville would be, perhaps, under the circumstances, a proper place to which it should have been sent, as there was a daily stage carrying express matter from that place to West Goshen. If Palmer was not the proper place to which to bill the trunk, then the company did not properly discharge their duty, and are responsible for the consequences.

Upon this point, the witness most relied on by appellants, E. G. Westcott, the superintendent for the Adams Express Company, testified that Palmer was an improper place to bill property to from Galena, Illinois, for West Goshen.

This, of itself, ought to be sufficient to settle the controversy. The first fault being with the company, and by that fault the loss was occasioned, the company should suffer the loss. The undertaking of the company, in the absence of any special contract, was, to transport the property to the place of destination by the most usual, safest, most direct, and most expeditious route, and there deliver it to the consignee. What was the most direct, usual, and most expeditious route for this trunk, as established by the testimony?

The Housatonic railroad branches from the Boston and Albany railroad at Pittsfield, near the western boundary of the State of Massachusetts, and, running south, reaches West Cornwall, in Connecticut, a station upon it eight miles west of West Goshen, at which there is a regular daily line of stages to West Goshen for the conveyance of express matter, and the general custom is, when express packages are received at Cornwall, directed to well known persons at Goshen, for the express agent at Cornwall to send them by the stages, and the drivers collect the charges. West Cornwall station is but forty-nine miles south of Pittsfield.

Isaac Marsh, who had been a railroad and express agent at that place for twenty-five years, says, in answer to the question, what was the usual and customary place, generally, to bill property to, sent from the west by express to West Goshen, during the month of January, 1869, and prior, he supposed it was billed to Pittsfield, thence to West Cornwall as the most proper place; and as to property expressed from Galena, and directed to West Goshen, he says, it would be more proper to bill to Pittsfield, thence to West Cornwall, from the fact that the distance between the two places is but forty-nine miles, while the nearest route by rail from Pittsfield to Wolcottville, by way of Springfield and Palmer, would be 162 miles. He says, freight left at Pittsfield for West Goshen would reach its destination the next day, but if sent by Springfield it must be delayed longer. He supposes West Cornwall to be the usual and customary station nearest West Goshen when property arrives, sent by express from the west to West Goshen. It may have been sent to Wolcottville by interested express companies. The business of this witness was to take charge of all packages designed to be forwarded by express; keep an account of and forward the same; take charge of all packages received for delivery at the office, collect charges on them, deliver or forward to consignees, if known, and if the parties lived off the line, to notify them by mail of the receipt of the packages, with the charges on them. He further says, if property sent by express in January, 1869, was billed at Galena to Pittsfield, it would arrive, in due course of transportation, at West Cornwall, for West Goshen, in about four days. He further says, that appellants had an office in Pittsfield in January, 1869, and the Housatonic railroad had an agent there, who received and forwarded packages over that road. Property sent from Pittsfield to West Cornwall would pass over this road, and it would be the usual, and by far the most direct and shortest route to West Goshen. This railroad, in the months of January and February, 1869, furnished ample facilities for the transportation of property over it, each agent being authorized to act as agent for the Housatonic and Hew York Express, established by the Housatonic railroad company, who were perfectly responsible for all goods passing through their hands. Should think Wolcottville an unusual place to send goods billed from the west.

This witness also states, that during these months, appellants transferred to this railroad at Pittsfield, for transportation to West Cornwall and vicinity, a bill of castings in December, 1868, and on the first, second, eleventh, fourteenth, fifteenth and twenty-sixth of January, 1869, divers other bills, box and package, and in February, many more. He concurs with appellants’ witness, Westcott, in saying, that Palmer would be an improper place to send property billed from the west, directed to West Goshen, as that place is sixty-eight miles southeast of Springfield, and property sent to it from the west must pass through Pittsfield to reach Palmer. If property was, at Palmer, directed to West Goshen, the shortest and most direct route would be by way of Springfield, Hartford, Waterbury and Wolcottville, as the distance from Palmer to the last named place by this route is ninety-four miles. The route would be from Palmer to Springfield, fifteen miles west; then change for Hartford, twenty-six miles south; then change for Waterbury, thirty-three miles southeast; then change for Wolcottville, twenty miles north.

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Bluebook (online)
55 Ill. 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-merchants-union-express-co-v-schier-ill-1870.