Curtis v. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad

74 N.Y. 116
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 11, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 74 N.Y. 116 (Curtis v. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curtis v. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad, 74 N.Y. 116 (N.Y. 1878).

Opinion

Miller, J.

The right of a passenger to recover of a railroad corporation damages arising by reason of a loss of baggage, while traveling upon the railroad, is fully established, and according to the laws of this State there can be no question as to the liability of such company for the loss actually sustained, when it fails to fulfil the contract with the traveler, or is chargeable with negligence, by which the damages are caused. The baggage, for which a recovery ivas had, was delivered to the defendant at Scranton, in the State of Pennsylvania, to be transported to and delivered in the city of Yew York. The first question which arises upon this appeal is whether the statute of the State of Pennsylvania, passed in 1867, which limits and defines the liability of railroad corporations upon contracts entered into by them for the transmission of baggage, forms a part of the contract *120 between the plaintiff and the defendant, and should be con sidered as determining the right to recover and the amount of the recovery. I think that the statute cited has no application, and that the rights of the parties must be determined in accordance with the laws of the State of New York, which are applicable to such contracts, as is manifest by referring to the principles which govern contracts of this description. One of the rules applicable to the subject is that the lex loci contractus is to govern, unless it appears upon the face of the contract that it was to be performed in some other place, or made with reference to the laws of some other place, and then the rule of interpretation is governed by the law of the place. (Dyke v. Erie Railway Co., 45 N. Y., 113 ; Sherrill v. Hopkins, 1 Cow., 103.) The place of delivery was a material and important part of the contract, and until such delivery, the same was not completed and fulfilled. Upon a failure to deliver the baggage to the plaintiff, in the city of New York, there was a breach of the contract; and as the final place of performance was in that city, it would seem to follow that, within the rule laid down, the contract was to be governed, at least so far as a delivery is concerned, by the laws of New York. This certainly was to be done in a different place from where the contract was made, and it is a reasonable inference that it was in the contemplation of the parties at the time, and that it was entered into with reference to the laws of the place where it was to be delivered. So also, when it appears that the place of performance was different from the place of making the contract, it is to be construed according to the laws of the place where it is to be performed. (Sherrill v. Hopkins, supra, p. 108, and authorities there cited ; Thompson v. Ketcham, 8 Johns., 189; 4 Kent’s Com., 459.) The place of final performance of the contract being in the city of New York, although the transportation was mostly through other States, no reason exists why a failure to deliver the baggage should not be controlled by the laws which prevail at the place of delivery. It is said that the contract is entire and indivisible, and we are referred *121 to some cases outside of this State, which, it is claimed, sustain the doctrine that the locality where the contract was made, in cases of this character, must control. None of the cases cited are entirely similar to the one at bar and do not involve the precise point now considered. But even were it otherwise, they are not, I think, controlling, as no reason exists why a contract to deliver baggage should not be governed by the laws of the place where the baggage is to be delivered.

It is also said that the plaintiff has no right of action whatever ; that he was not a passenger by the train, having previously passed oyer the road, and he had no right to have his property brought by another train at a later day. The baggage in question consisted of articles which had been in use by the plaintiff and his wife and child, and the wife and child were on the same train, accompanying the baggage. It may be assumed, I think, that the plaintiff was sufficiently represented by his wife, and it was not absolutely necessary that he should be personally present, either under the statute of Pennsylvania or otherwise, to entitle him to maintain an action for the loss of the baggage. The relationship existing between husband and wife is of such an intimate and confidential character that she may properly be regarded as representing him, under the circumstances presented. She was j certainly acting in the place and on the behalf of her husband, in traveling over the defendant’s road, and it would be establishing a rigid and a severe rule, which is not sustained by authority, to hold that where the husband, by reason of business or otherwise, was obliged to leave the baggage for himself and family in charge of his wife, to be bi ought at a future day, that all claim for damages for any cause was lost. In none of the cases cited' to maintain the position, that no recovery can be had where the owner is not with the baggage, does it appear that the wife of the plaintiff had the baggage in charge, or that in part it was for the use of the owner and his wife and child. The baggage being, to some extent, at least, for the benefit of the members of the plain *122 tiff’s family, who were on the train, and had paid their fare, the case is distinguishable from one where the plaintiff’s servant, or some other person, who has no interest in the baggage, takes his place, or even where the plaintiff himself follows the baggage on a later train. (See Wilson v. Grand Trunk Co., 56 Me., 60; Becher v. Great Eastern Co., 5 L. R. [Q. B.], 241; Stimson v. Conn. River Co., 98 Mass., 83; Belfast and Ballymena Co. v. Keys, 9 H. of L. Cases, 556.)

The right of the husband to maintain the action as against a stranger is quite clear. The judge, on the trial, found that he was the owner, and the evidence shows that he had purchased most of the articles, as necessaries for the. proper clothing of himself, his wife and child. He clearly had a right to sue for his own wearing apparel and for that of the infant. . He had never absolutely parted with any portion of it to his wife, and hence she had no direct title to the same, or control over it, upon any such ground.

The contest here is not between husband and wife in regard to her paraphernalia, but for damages for the loss of articles which the husband had a right to control and dispose of. At common law, during coverture, the wife’s paraphernalia belonged to the husband, and for an injury to it he was the .proper party to sue. The statute has not changed the rule, except that the wife’s paraphernalia is secured to her even against creditors. (2 R. S., 84, §§ 9, 10.) The title is in the husband when he has paid for the articles, and furnished them. Mor do the statutes in reference to the rights of married women, and gifts of personal property from the husband to the wife, affect the husband’s right, until a gift has been actually made, and is proved. As the evidence does not show any such gift, the right of the husband was paramount and should be upheld. Where there is a gift, the wife may bring an action, but otherwise the husband must sue. (Rawson

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 N.Y. 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curtis-v-delaware-lackawanna-western-railroad-ny-1878.