Bowler & Burdick Co. v. Toledo & Ohio Central Railroad

3 Ohio N.P. 322
CourtLucas County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedSeptember 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ohio N.P. 322 (Bowler & Burdick Co. v. Toledo & Ohio Central Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowler & Burdick Co. v. Toledo & Ohio Central Railroad, 3 Ohio N.P. 322 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

LEMMON, J.

Gentlemen, 1 have given what attention I have been able, since the adjournment of the court last evening, to the questions which were submitted for the determination of the court, and I do not find that the questions here submitted have been fully reached and disposed of by the Supreme Court of Ohio. Certain principles, however, have been established .by our own Supreme Court, which indicate the trend of thought, and which will probably be followed by that court upon questions of this kind.

The case cited from 148 US. (Humphreys v. Perry, p. 627,) presents facts very similar to the case at bar, and we feel that it is our duty to consider that case somewhat in stating the conclusion to which we shall arrive. I will call attention particularly to the remarks of Judge Blatchford, in deciding this case, in which he states the finding of the court as to the facts. He says —after he has gone cover the testimony somewhat and having quoted along from the witnesses:

“The evidence, therefore, is that the trunk which Perry delivered to be checked as his personal baggage, was a wooden trunk of dark color, iron bound, heavy for its size, and in size what a sampleman would call small; the question arises on these facts, whether the agent was bound to know, or to be presumed to know, that such a trunk contained a stock of jewelry. If he was, it must be presumed, contrary to the positive evidence, that he could tell what was in the trunk by looking at it or handling it, and this, notwithstanding the agent testified as follows, on cross examination: ‘Q. Don’t you know, from your experience of eleven years, if a trunk containing jewelry came into your possession and you handled it, you would be able to tell what it was? A. No. sir; and nobody else.’
“The hypothetical trunk put to Patterson on cross-examination was described as a trunk with heavy iron corners and iron clasps, iron along the corners and iron bandages all around it, and two or three strong locks in front. That hypothetical trunk does not appear to be such a trunk as Perry delivered to the agent.
“Perry, as a passenger on a passenger train, was bound to act in good faith in dealing- with the carrier. He presented the trunk to the baggage agent as containing his personal baggage, and got a check for it as such ; and that being so, he cannot recover for ihe loss of a stock of jewelry contained in it. No circumstances occurred, according to the evidence, which required the baggage agent to make inquiries as to the contents of the trunk so presented as personal baggage. The presentation of the trunk, under the circumstances, amounted to a representation that its contents were personal baggage. The fact that Perry and other persons, on other occasions, bad obtained, on passenger tickets, checks from other railroad companies for trunks containing merchandise, by representing them as containing personal baggage, furnishes no good reason for permitting a recovery in the present case. There is no evidence to show that, on the occasions where Perry and other travelers received checks, on passenger tickets, for trunks containing jewelry, that the carrier knew what were the contents of the trunks. The testimony is that John H. Perry did not know of a railroad company which would receive and check a trunk as a passenger’s baggage, which was filled with valuable jewelry.”

The evidence in the case from which I have been reading makes the case very similar — almost entirely parallel — with the case at bar. In the case at bar the testimony was slightly different, and the difference of testimony, I apprehend, arises largely because of a difference of positiveness in the witnesses testifying in the two cases. There was great positiveness in the statement of the witness in the case decided by Judge Blatchford. His answer: “No, sir; and nobody else”, is quite in contrast with that of the witness who was agent at Glouster; but the positiveness of a statement in the form of the answer, those who have been accustomed for years to examine the testimony of witnesses know, is not the governing rule; they necessarily look_ to all the circumstances; the manner in which the party is placed; how bis attention is drawn to the question; what opportunities he has for observation, and what are the possibilities of his correctly observing, rather than to the positiveness of a witness in a statement. Now, the witness who represented the company says he does not remember calling upon the plaintiff’s agent and having the conversation that was referred to. We are positive, from the testimony, that he did so call, and that he did have that conversation, and that those goods were there before him ; the weight of the evidence, we think, clearly shows that. But it also shows, we are equally satisfied, that the mind of the agent was not impressed with those circumstances; he went there for a certain purpose, was intent upon that, [324]*324asked if the extra baggage had been paid, and, on getting the information that it had been paid, turned and walked out. Now, he was not there for such a length of time and under such circumstances as would necessarily charge him with notice of the property so lying upon the table of a shelf there. He had nothing to do with that, he had no concern with it. He called there and asked the question — a matter of business which concerned his duty to the railroad company. That answer was made, and the evidence does not disclose that he remained a moment afterwards, but turned around and walked out. Well, it is a common observation that where a person goes into a room in the daytime, out from the sunlight into a place where it is necessarily darker than outside,he does not at once see with distinctness what is in that room. The eye requires a little bit of time to adjust itself to the darker situation, and he is not, under these circumstances, as likely to see and observe what is in that room as he would be if he remained there until the eye had adjusted'itself to the new situation. Are we enabled, under these circumstances, to say then, that this witness, when he says, with apparent probity of intention and precaution, that he didn’t see the property that was lying there — that he didn’t know —can we say that he did see? If ne did not see it, certainly the Company is not to be blamed because of the fact that he might have seen it and did not. He is not charged with any duty in reference to that matter. If he did not see it, there was nothing to put him upon inquiry when he saw the trunks. No sir there any evidence that his attention was called to the fact that that particular property, if he did see it, was carried in these particular trunks. All the evidence, therefore, which goes to charge the Company with notice in reference to the character of the property which they were receiving, was the appearance of the trunks themselves. And the same evidence in that regard, almost in the same words, as fully as in the case at bar, was presented in the case decided by tbe Supreme Court of the United Slates. There the trunks dre described — such trunks as are described in this case; they were visible. They were so described, not only by the owners,but by the railroad agents and servants themselves. There is no difference in the testimony in that regard, but Judge Blatchford, in pronouncing the opinion of the Court, says there was no evidence tending to show that, there was knowledge upon the part of the railroad company of the property and goods which were in these trunks.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ohio N.P. 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowler-burdick-co-v-toledo-ohio-central-railroad-ohctcompllucas-1894.