Cary v. Cleveland & Toledo Rail Road

29 Barb. 35, 1859 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 152
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 29 Barb. 35 (Cary v. Cleveland & Toledo Rail Road) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cary v. Cleveland & Toledo Rail Road, 29 Barb. 35, 1859 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 152 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1859).

Opinion

Wm. F. Allen, J.

A reversal of the judgment and a new trial is asked for, upon exceptions taken on the trial at the circuit. Only one or two questions were urged upon the argument of the appeal, yet as the counsel for the appellant has, in his printed points, taken the position that upon the whole evidence the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, and that the defendant’s several exceptions were well taken, it becomes necessary to examine the several points made at the trial; and it will be convenient to examine them in the order in which they were taken.

At the close of the plaintiff’s case the defendant’s counsel moved for a nonsuit, on several grounds :

[38]*381. That the proof showed that the loss of the baggage occurred after it had been carried over the defendant’s road.

2. That no demand on the. defendant, for the baggage, had been proved.

3. That no contract on the part of the defendant to carry Miss Bedell, (the plaintiff’s assignor,) or her trunk, beyond the termination of its road at Cleveland, had been proved.

4. That the proof was insufficient to sustain the cause of action alleged in the complaint.

At this stage of the trial no proof had been given of the actual loss of the trunk. It had been deliVered to the defendant’s servants at Toledo for carriage to Buffalo, and upon being demanded at Buffalo of the proper person, it had not been delivered to the claimant. There was, then, no evidence that the trunk had ever left Toledo, and although there was room for a surmise that it might have reached Buffalo and been destroyed in the fire and by the burning of the car house, there was no evidence of the fact upon which the court could act. The plaintiff relied upon the non-delivery of the trunk; and if the non-delivery was occasioned by a loss or destruction at a point or under circumstances which exonerated the defendant from liability, that fact had not then been proved. The demand made at Buffalo was clearly proved, and no question was raised that it was not made of the' proper person. It was assumed that the person of whom the demand was made was the one who would have had the charge of the baggage on its arrival at Buffalo, with authority to deliver it to the proper owner. He was the general superintendent at the station at Buffalo, and as such, was the proper person of whom the demand should have been made. (The Taff Vale Co. v. Giles, 22 Eng. Law and Eq. 202.) Whether he was the agent of the defendant for the delivery of the baggage received at Toledo and checked by the defendant’s servants over the intervening roads, will be considered in another connection, so far as it becomes important to do' so. That there was no proof of a contract on the part of the defend[39]*39ant to carry the lady and her baggage beyond the termination of its road, cannot be alleged. The proof was that she applied to the defendant’s clerk and servant for a passage ticket by rail road from Toledo to Buffalo, and was furnished with tickets which carried her to Buffalo over the defendant’s road and the other intermediate' roads; and the defendant’s clerk receiving the fare for the whole distance. Some contract was made by the defendant at that time, and if, upon the evidence, the defendant desired to make a question whether it was a contract for carriage by the defendant for the whole distance, or whether, in entering into the contract, the defendant represented and contracted for and in behalf of other corporations or individuals, as to a part of the distance, he was entitled to have such question passed upon by the jury; that is, if there was a doubt as to what the contract was, it was a proper question for the jury. But there was certainly evidence to carry the cause to the jury upon the question whether or not the defendant had contracted as alleged. The remaining point, that the proofs were insufficient to sustain the action, was not probably relied upon, aside from the specific questions made. The court properly denied the motion for a nonsuit. The defendant then gave evidence to show the connection and business relations to each other of the several rail roads forming the line between Toledo and Buffalo; that each road received the established fare for carrying each passenger over its road; that at Buffalo and Toledo tickets were sold for the whole distance; at the latter place, by the defendant’s servants and agents, and at the former by the servants and agents of the Buffalo and State Line Bail Boad Company; that the moneys received by the respective companies were deposited daily tó the credit of the company by whom they were received; and that settlements were periodically made between the several companies. It was also proved that ■ at Cleveland the passengers and baggage were changed to and from the defendant’s cars, which did not pass over the roads of the other companies, and that separate [40]*40tickets for passage over the several roads, but printed on the same slip of paper, were issued to passengers purchasing at Buffalo and Toledo. Evidence was also given tending to show that the baggage in question was delivered by the defendant to the Cleveland, Painesville and Ashtabula Rail Road Company, at Cleveland, and that it arrived at Buffalo and was destroyed by fire the same night. The train upon which the plaintiff’s assignor was a passenger was due at Buffalo about 5 o’clock in the afternoon and in time to connect with a train going east on the Hew York Central Rail Road, but was detained by obstructions, and did not arrive until about 10 o’clock in the evening and after the eastern train had left; and this arrived at the same time with two other trains which had also been detained by the same causes. The owner of the baggage did not claim it that evening, but went directly from her car, which could not enter the car house, to a hotel. There was an unusual crowd of passengers and accumulation of baggage. The car house, with much of the baggage, was destroyed that night, and the owner of the trunk in suit was unable to procure it when she called for it the next morning. The servants of the rail road companies were ready and offered to deliver the baggage that arrived on those trains the same evening, and did deliver all that was claimed.

At the close of the evidence the defendant’s counsel again asked for a nonsuit, on the grounds:

1. That the defendant had not legal capacity or power, under or by its charter, to contract to carry a passenger or the trunk and contents beyond the limits of the state of Ohio; that the contract of the defendant to carry Miss Be-dell and her trunk to Buffalo was illegal and void; and that the defendant was not estopped from repudiating the contract and insisting upon this defense; and

2. That the liability of the defendant as a common carrier ceased when the trunk arrived at Buffalo; and there was no evidence of any negligence at Buffalo whereby the trunk [41]*41was lost; and that the onus of proving such negligence was upon the plaintiff.

The motion was denied by the court; and as these two propositions in connection with those urged at the close of the plaintiff’s case, somewhat modified in form, constitute the basis of the several exceptions to the charge or rulings of the judge in submitting the case to the jury,-they may be considered in the same connection. The court charged the jury, 1st. That the defendant was not discharged by the delivery of the trunk in question to the Cleveland, Painesville and Ashtabula Bail Boad Company; 2d.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 Barb. 35, 1859 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cary-v-cleveland-toledo-rail-road-nysupct-1859.