Dexter v. Syracuse, Binghamton & New York Railroad

42 N.Y. 326, 1870 N.Y. LEXIS 54
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 21, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 42 N.Y. 326 (Dexter v. Syracuse, Binghamton & New York 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
Dexter v. Syracuse, Binghamton & New York Railroad, 42 N.Y. 326, 1870 N.Y. LEXIS 54 (N.Y. 1870).

Opinions

E. Darwin Smith, J.

The points made upon the motion for a nonsuit present the true theory of the defence, and present for discussion and consideration the true principles upon which the right of action of the plaintiff depends. The requests to charge, and the propositions submitted to the circuit judge, are simply reiterations in a different form, quite needlessly made, of the same points or questions. It is not denied and cannot be, in view of the numerous decisions on the subject in this State and in others, that the defendants, as a carrier of passengers, are responsible for the carriage and safe delivery of such baggage as by custom and usage is ordinarily carried by travelers, and that the payment of the usual fare includes, in contemplation of law, a compensation for the conveyance of such baggage. (Edwards on Bailment, 580; Story on Bailment, 499 ; Orange Co. Bank v. Brown, 9 Wend., 114; Pardee v. Drew, 25 Wend., 460; Powell v. Meyers, 26 Wend., 591; Merrill v. Grinnell, 30 N.Y., 594.)

The difficulty is not with the rule of law, but with its particular application to the facts of the case.

It is for the obvious interest of the carriers of passengers to encourage travel by allowing the passenger to take with, him as baggage whatever he may deem proper or desire for! his necessity, comfort, convenience, pleasure or amusement I on the journey or on his stay away from his home,within reasonable limits.

The question, as held in Merrill v. Grinnell, where property lost by a traveler is claimed as baggage, is whether it is or was a reasonable description or class and amount of baggage, in view of the condition in life of the passenger, the extent and object of his journey, the time of his contemplated absence from his home, and other parti ciliar circumstances of the case. The error, I think, in the argument of the defendant’s counsel, as presented at the trial on his motion for a nonsuit, and in his numerous requests, is in the *330 claim that the baggage which a traveler may take, and the carrier must safely transport and deliver’, is limited to such apparel or other articles as were absolutely ” necessary or material for his use, comfort or convenience on his journey, or while away. from his home. In this case, the plaintiff’s husband was away from his home without a trunk or any articles of wearing apparel, so far as wc can see from the evidence, except such as he had upon his person. The trunk and apparel, for which the action was brought, were purchased in the city of New York to take with him on his return home. ITe probably did not need or intend to use any portion of it by the way. He left New York at six o’clock r. ar., and arrived at his home in Cortland the next morning or forenoon.

The argument of the counsel in effect is, that having no occasion for the use of the clothing or other articles contained in the said trunk on the way, he had no right to carry them as baggage at the risk of the carrier, or any baggage. Such a rule would, I think, be too strict and narrow for these times, when steamboats and railroads have so wonderfully increased the temptations and facilities for travel, and superseded the old modes of transportation by stage-coaches, canal and river boats, and other ways as means of transportation from place to place formerly in use.

It would be a more fair rule to hold the carrier responsible for whatever he received as baggage from the traveler within such limits as to weight and amount as the carrier might fix and prescribe. Public carriers and the courts, I think, have been growing more liberal on this subject of late than formerly. The case of Merrill v. Grinnell indicates the growth of a spirit of progress and expansion on this subject corresponding with the great increase of travel and intercommunication among the people in modern times.

In this case, the assignor of the plaintiff and the owner of the trunk, for whose loss, with its contents, the action was brought, was allowed to recover for manv articles of clothing, besides money, that the passenger did not need to use by *331 the way. He was an emigrant from Germany to New York, and purchased Iiis ticket at Hamburg for the transportation of himself and baggage to New York via Hull and Liverpool; his baggage consisting of a black leather trunk and its contents, consisting of a large amount of wearing apparel, among which were six dozen shirts, two swords, valued at sixty-eight dollars, $800 in gold, and other articles, valued in all at $1,991.27. This court allowed the plaintiff to recover for all these articles. The chief controversy related to the money. It is quite apparent that of these materials of wearing apparel, very few, and of the money very little, if any, were requisite for the use of the passenger by the way. His ticket for transportation was paid for at-Hamburg before he started, and it does not appear that he sought or had occasion to open or to take anything from his trunk before his arrival in New York, where, upon demand for it, it was found to have been stolen or lost.

This case, I think, clearly establishes that the right of the traveler to recover of the carrier for lost baggage is not limited to such apparel or other articles as he expected to use or needed by the way. I think a young man, for instance, may start from his eastern home to remove to and take up his residence in a' western State or city and take with him his ordinary wearing apparel, though he might not need or expect to use a single article of it by the way,except such as he wore upon his person; and I cannot admit that it would be a sound rule of law, to hold that, if a gentleman from the interior of the State or country should purchase in New York or in any other city a new coat or a new suit of clothes for his own use and put it into his trunk, he could not recover of the carrier for its loss, because he did not expect to stop to wear it or to put it on by the way. With the exception of the few articles purchased for his wife and other members of his family, the contents of the trunk in controversy in this action consisted of articles of male attire suitable for the condition of the plaintiff’s husband, and purchased and designed, as he testified, for his immediate personal use.

The case is not one .where there was any fraud practiced 01 *332 intended, upon the carrier, or any implied misrepresentation that the articles were apparel or clothing,'when in fact they were merchandise, as in the case of Pardee v. Drew (25 Wend., .460). In that case the plaintiff was a merchant, residing at Delhi, in the county of Delaware. He put on hoard the defendant’s steamboat,in New York, a trunk to be transported to Catskill, and took passage himself at the same time to accompany the trunk home, where he would doubtless, in the ordinary course of travel, arrive on the same day. The trunk was filled with silks and other fine goods of the value of about $300, purchased for sale, and contained nothing else. The plaintiff recovered for the value of the trunk and its contents, at the circuit, and the Supreme Court set aside the ■ verdict and granted a new trial, on the ground that the trunk was filled with

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.Y. 326, 1870 N.Y. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dexter-v-syracuse-binghamton-new-york-railroad-ny-1870.