Aradalou v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad

114 N.E. 297, 225 Mass. 235, 1916 Mass. LEXIS 1223
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 114 N.E. 297 (Aradalou v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aradalou v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad, 114 N.E. 297, 225 Mass. 235, 1916 Mass. LEXIS 1223 (Mass. 1916).

Opinion

Rugg, C. J.

This is an action to recover the value of household goods shipped in interstate commerce by virtue of a contract with the defendant over its line from New Haven, in the State of Connecticut, to New Bedford in this Commonwealth, and lost in transit. The actual value of the goods is conceded to be $75. The plaintiff is entitled to recover that sum unless prevented by [238]*238an agreement with the defendant or by the terms of the interstate commerce act. The defendant contends that its liability is limited to $10 per hundred weight by virtue of an agreement contained in the so called “release clause,” which appears on the bill of lading, marked “Exhibit A,” on the shipping order, marked “Exhibit C,” and on the “release” attached to the statement of agreed facts marked “Exhibit B,” three papers issued at the time of the shipment.

A contract limiting the liability of a carrier for the goods in case of loss, made as a part of an agreement for the rate charged, is valid under the recent acts of Congress regulating-rates. Such a contract is in effect an agreement respecting what the property is as to value. That was the rule established by this court. Bernard v. Adams Express Co. 205 Mass. 254. It is the settled doctrine of the United States Supreme Court, whose decisions in this particular are binding upon other courts, that, “where alternate rates'fairly based upon valuation are offered, a railroad may limit its liability by special contract.” Cincinnati, New Orleans & Texas Pacific Railway v. Rankin, 241 U. S. 319, 327.

The release clause on each of the three papers was signed in the name of the plaintiff by his agent. The release clause was affixed to ea'ch of these papers by a red ink stamp furnished and used by the defendant, which with its blanks was as follows: “For the purpose of enabling the carrier to apply the proper published rate, as explained in its classification and tariffs, I hereby declare that the value of the property herein described does not exceed dollars per pounds, and that in case of loss or damage thereto, I will not assert claim against the carrier on a higher basis of value than dollars for each pounds or fraction thereof in weight of the property so lost or damaged.” This controversy arises because of the character of the writing or figures inserted in the blank spaces in these release clauses.

Regarding the way in which these blanks touching the value of the goods Weré filled, the Superior Court judge found that on Exhibit A, which was the bill of lading, the agent of the defendant "writing the paper intended to write 10.00 before the word ‘dollars.’ He made no decimal point, and the limitation in each case on Exhibit A is clearly 1000 dollars. I am satisfied that on [239]*239Exhibit C he intended to write the word ‘ten’ before the word ‘dollars,’ but in each case he made an indecipherable scrawl which might as well be taken to be the Arabic numeral 1 followed by two ciphers looped together as the written word ‘ten’.”

The three original instruments marked Exhibits “A,” “B,” and “ C,” pursuant to a clause in the exceptions, were presented to this court at the argument. The defendant asks us to decide that the judge was wrong in his finding of fact by inspection of these original documents. That cannot be done. The full court sitting in banc has no jurisdiction to determine facts in actions at law. It can only decide questions of law. Electric Welding Co. Ltd. v. Prince, 200 Mass. 386. Marvel v. Cobb, 204 Mass. 117. Whether markings upon paper are legible or undecipherable is a question of fact and not of law. The only question of law that can be presented in a case like the present where the original instrument is made a part of the exceptions is whether there was any evidence to support the finding. Bailey v. Marden, 193 Mass. 277, 279. It is clear from an inspection of the original paper that the finding as to “an indecipherable scrawl” was quite justified. No rulings were asked as to the effect of Exhibit B. The judge did not make any finding respecting it, nor decide whether it was legible or not. Under these circumstances, by itself it cannot affect the determination of the case presented on "the record. It is not necessary to consider whether, even if its release clause was different from that on the bill of lading, it could control or affect the terms of the bill of lading, which is required to be issued by the carrier by the Hepburn act of U. S. St. June 29, 1906, c. 3591, (34 U. S. Sts. at Large, 593,) in § 7, the Carmack amendment, Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway v. Harold, 241 U. S. 371, 378, and which, according to well established commercial usage, constitutes the contract between a shipper and carrier. See Southern Railway v. Prescott, 240 U. S. 632. The case must be decided on the footing that these findings of fact by the trial judge were right. It may not be inappropriate to add that there appears to be no reason to doubt their correctness.

The contract as to restriction of the defendant’s liability in case of loss between the parties, in the bill of lading, limited the value of the goods to an amount not exceeding “1000 dollars.” That is the finding of the judge. If that be taken as the whole [240]*240contract of the parties, the plaintiff is. not precluded from recovery of the full value of his goods, which is much less than $1,000. The blanks in the release clause on the shipping order, Exhibit C, are found by the judge to be an “indecipherable scrawl,” which might be taken for the Arabic figures “100” as well as for the word “ten.” An "indecipherable scrawl” does not constitute a contract. When the parties undertake to put their agreement in writing and express its crucial terms by characters or symbols so illegible that the tribunal established to try the facts cannot determine the signification of that which is on the paper, then no contract in writing has been made. That which was written upon the shipping order, Exhibit C, in the release clause, being of no effect, cannpt modify the agreement of the parties expressed on the bill of lading. If the two papers be construed together, the one of plain words controls the rights of the parties unaffected by the other meaningless paper.

The judge ruled rightly that what the defendant’s agent intended to do when he wrote in the blank spaces of the limitation clause on the shipping order was immaterial. The intent of one party in reducing to writing a contract, which subsequently is signed by both parties, not communicated to the other party, is not admissible in his own favor in an action where the meaning and effect of the contract are in controversy between the parties. Taft v. Dickinson, 6 Allen, 553. Tallant v. Stedman, 176 Mass. 460.

So far as the case stands upon the paper agreement of the parties set forth in the bill of lading, it is manifest that there is nothing to prevent the plaintiff from recovering the full value of the goods. The representation of maximum value which he made at the time of shipment was far in excess of the amount which he now demands.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 N.E. 297, 225 Mass. 235, 1916 Mass. LEXIS 1223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aradalou-v-new-york-new-haven-hartford-railroad-mass-1916.