De Wolff v. Adams Express Co.

67 A. 1099, 106 Md. 472, 1907 Md. LEXIS 100
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 13, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 67 A. 1099 (De Wolff v. Adams Express Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Wolff v. Adams Express Co., 67 A. 1099, 106 Md. 472, 1907 Md. LEXIS 100 (Md. 1907).

Opinion

*473 Schmucker, ].,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant in this case sued the appellee to recover the value of two diamond rings received by it in New York for transportation to Baltimore but lost in transit and never delivered to the consignee. The declaration charged the defendant with the loss of the rings through its own negligence or that of its servants or agents but contained no allegations of fraud or illegal conversion.

The Express Company in addition to the general issue pleas set up by special pleas that it had undertaken to carry the rings only under the special contract, to be hereafter mentioned, by which the value of the rings had been fixed at $50, and that before the bringing of the suit it had tendered the plaintiff $50 in liquidation of its liability under the contract but he had refused to accept it.

The case was tried before the Court without a jury and at the close of the evidence the Court rejected the plaintiff’s prayers and granted one-offered by the defendant declaring as matter of law that “under the pleadings and evidence in the case the limit of the plaintiff’s recovery against the defendant is fifty dollars.” A verdict for that sum was thereupon rendered against the defendant and judgment entered thereon and the plaintiff appealed. One of the plaintiff's rejected prayers asserted the proposition that the receipt given by the company for the package containing the rings was not efficient in law to release it in whole or in part from its common law liability as a common carrier for its own negligence or that of its agents or servants, even though the Court sitting as a jury found that the receipt was accepted by the plaintiff’s agent in New York at the time of the shipment of the goods. The other rejected prayer of the plaintiff fixed the measure of damages, in the event of a verdict in his favor, at the full value of the rings.

The record contains but one bill of exceptions, and that relates to the Court’s ruling on the prayers.

The following facts appear from an agreed statement of facts found in the record. On or about December 28th, 1905, Henry McAleenan, a pawnbroker residing in New York City, *474 shipped from that c-ity to Baltimore by the Adams Express Company one small package consigned to the appellant. At the time of the shipment the shipper did not disclose to the company the contents or value of the package but when he was asked by the company’s agent what value he would place on the shipment.he stated no value, whereupon the agent delivered to- him a receipt or bill of lading on which was stamped “ Value asked and not given',' and the shipment was accepted for transportation by the company and the bill of lading was delivered to tlie shipper and accepted by him. The bill of lading is as follows:

“The Company’s charge is based upon the value of the property, which must be declared by the shipper.
ADAMS EXPRESS COMPANY.
(Non-Negotiable Bill of Lading.)
i i West 34th Street,'New York,
Dec. 28, 1905.
Received from McAleenan One Pa Valued at $ ..... Value Asked & Not Given.
Marked S. DeWolff
Baltimore, Md.
Which the company agrees to carry upon the following terms and conditions, to which the shipper agrees, and as evidence thereof, accepts this bill of lading.
I-. The consideration of the rate charged for carrying said property, which is regulated by the value thereof and is based upon a valuation of not exceeding fifty dollars unless a greater value is declared, the shipper agrees that the value of said property is not more than fifty dollars, unless a greater value is stated herein, and that the company shall not be liable in any event for more than the value so stated, nor for more than fifty dollars if no value is stated herein.
Charges Coll For the Company, Moran.
Liability limited to $50 unless a greater value is declared.”

It was also agreed that the plaintiff could produce as a witness the shipper McAleenan who would testify that the package when shipped contained two diamond rings valued at $400.

There is evidence in the record tending to prove that, according to the method pursued by the Express Company in fixing charges for transportation and handling shipments, if *475 the true nature and value of the contents of the package containing the rings had been disclosed by the shipper at the time of shipment, the express charges would have been double what they were and the package would, immediately upon its receipt, have been taken to the money department of the company’s New York office and handled on a jewelry way bill, and placed in a sealed jewelry trunk and given in care of a special messenger in its transit to Baltimore and there delivered in what is known as a money delivery wagon in an iron safe in charge of a guard in addition to the driver; and other special precautions involving greater expense would have been taken for its protection while in the custody of the company. By reason of the failure of the shipper to give, in response to the company’s request, proper information as to the value of the package it was handled while in the company’s charge as a small package of ordinary merchandise and came in due course of transit to the petty parcel room of the company in Baltimore and there disappeared and although diligent search for it was made it has never been found.

Under these circumstances no error is to be found in the rulings of the learned Judge below on the law of the case. It has several times been held by this Court that a common carrier may lawfully restrict the amount of its common law liability by a special contract just and reasonable in its nature. In Brehme v. Adams Express Co., 25 Md. 328, the present appellee was sued for the value of a package which it undertook, by a contract, similar to the one now before us, to transport from New York to Baltimore but failed to deliver at the latter place. In that case, the package when delivered by the shipper to the carrier was in such form that its contents, consisting of light but costly goods valued at $675, were not visible and were not disclosed to the Express Company nor was any statement of their value given. The receipt or bill of lading given for the package by the Express Company contained a provision that in no event “shall the holder hereof demand beyond the sum of fifty dollars at which the article hereby forwarded is hereby valued unless otherwise herein expressed or *476 unless specially insured (by the company) and so specified in this receipt.”

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Related

New York, Philadelphia & Norfolk Railroad v. Peninsula Produce Exchange
122 Md. 215 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1914)
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89 A. 433 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 A. 1099, 106 Md. 472, 1907 Md. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-wolff-v-adams-express-co-md-1907.