Earnest v. Express Co.

8 F. Cas. 259, 1 Woods 573
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 15, 1873
DocketCase No. 4,248
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 F. Cas. 259 (Earnest v. Express Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Earnest v. Express Co., 8 F. Cas. 259, 1 Woods 573 (circtndga 1873).

Opinion

WOODS, Circuit Judge.

The evidence upon the trial as appeared by the brief thereof agreed to by counsel, established these facts. The plaintiff was a jeweller in the city of Atlanta in the habit of sending to and receiving from New York City valuable packages by express. He was furnished by the express company with a book containing the blank receipts of the company. On the 8th of February, 1899, he went to the agent of the defendant in Atlanta, with a small package containing four diamond rings valued at $735. The package was a paper box about three inches long by two and a' half wide and was covered with brown paper and directed to a firm in New York. There was no value stated upon the package nor other mark to indicate its value. The plaintiff when he delivered the package, to the defendant’s agent presented one of defendant’s receipts which he had taken from the book furnished by the express company and had filled up in his own hand. This receipt read as follows:

“Read this receipt. Southern Express Company. Express forwarders. Domestic bill of lading. Atlanta, February 8, 3809. Received of E. E. Earnest, package valued at (not given) dollars, and for which amount the charges are made by said company, marked S. & M. N. Strauss, New York.”

Then followed several printed stipulations among which were the following: “It is a part of the consideration of this contract and it is agreed that the said express company are forwarders only, and are not to be held liable or responsible for any loss or damage to said property while being conveyed by the carriers to whom the same may be by said express company intrusted or arising from the dangers of railroads, ocean or river navigation, steam, fire in stores, depots or in transit, leakage or breakage, or from any cause whatever, unless in every case the same be proved to have occurred from the fraud or gross negligence of said express company or their servants, unless specially insured by it and so specified on this receipt, which insurance shall constitute the limit of the liability of the Southern Express Company in any event; and if the value of the property above described is not stated to the sli pper at the time of shipment and stated in the receipt, the holder hereof will not demand of the Southern Express Company a sum exceeding fifty dollars for the loss or damage to each package herein receipted for.” The receiving agent of the defendant asked the plaintiff the value of the package, and he refused to give it. The charge upon the package for transmission to New York was one dollar. If the value had been fixed, there would have been an additional charge [260]*260of one-half of one per cent., amounting to three dollars and a half and upwards. The plaintiff had been frequently informed by defendant’s agent of this rule in reference to additional charges on value. The contents of the package and its value remained unknown to defendant’s agent. The defendant’s agent upon the refusal of plaintiff to make known the value of the package, stated to plaintiff that the express company would not be liable for more than fifty dollars on the package unless he fixed a value, which proposition the plaintiff disputed and claimed the law to be otherwise; whereupon his attention was called to the clause in the receipt bearing upon that point.

Valued packages delivered to defendant for transportation are put in sealed pouches and tfiese pouches in an iron safe, and the messenger receiving the pouch receipts for it to the one delivering it. Unvalued packages for convenience merely and not for security, are placed in a wooden box, and there is no rule of the company to prevent throwing them upon the floor of the car. They are delivered from one messenger to another, the latter simply receipting the way bill and receiving the goods in bulk. The package in question was safely carried as far as Dalton, Georgia, as an unvalued package. It was there delivered to a second messenger to be transferred with other express freight to another car. When the second messenger . before starting examined the packages transferred to his own car to see if they were all there, this package was missing. There was some testimony tending to show that in the transfer of the express freight from one car to another, this package was stolen br one Green, who assisted in making the transfer. Green was not in the employ of either the railroad or express company, but was the .servant of the express agent at Dalton, and sometimes assisted in transferring heavy express freight from one car to another. The express messenger at Dalton who delivered the package and the one who received it, both testified that they were careful and diligent in the discharge of their duty touching this package, supposing it to be one not worth more than fifty dollars, and there was no evidence to rebut this proof except the fact of' the loss of the package. The jury returned a verdict of fifty dollars for the plaintiff, and the plaintiff now moves for a new trial on the ground that upon the facts the verdict should have been for the value of the diamonds.

A motion for a new trial is addressed to the sound discretion of the court, and if upon a review of the case the court is of opinion that substantial justice has been done, and a correct result reached by the verdict, a new trial will not be granted, even though there may have been error in the progress of the trial. Proceeding upon this principle, we nave considered the case as presented by the agreed facts, to determine whether the verdict is right or wrong, and have reached the conclusion that it is right and ought not to be disturbed. The modern doctrine both in England and this country is now well settled, that a common carrier may by express contract, or by notices brought home to the knowledge of the owner of the goods before or at the time of delivery to the carrier, if assented to by the owner, limit his common law liability. “As the extraordinary duties annexed to his employment concern only in the particular instance the parties to the transaction, involving simply rights of property, the safe custody and delivery of the goods, we are unable to perceive any well founded objection to the restriction or any stronger reasons for forbidding it, than exist in the case of any other insurer of goods to which his obligation is analogous and which depends altogether upon the contract between the parties. The owner by entering into the contract virtually agrees that in respect to the particular transaction the carrier is not to be regarded as in the exercise of a public employment, but as a private person who incurs no responsibility beyond that of an ordinary bailee for him, and answerable only for misconduct or negligence.” Nelson, J., in New Jersey Nav. Co. v. Merchants’ Bank, 6 How. [47 U. S.] 382. See, also, Sager v. Portsmouth, S. & P. Ry. Co., 31 Me. 228; Bean v. Green, 12 Me. 422; Cooper v. Berry, 21 Ga. 526; Dorr v. New Jersey Steam Nav. Co., 1 Kern. [11 N. Y.] 485; Atwood v. Reliance Transp. Co., 9 Watts, 87; Verner v. Sweitzer, 32 Pa. St. 208; Parsons v. Monteath, 13 Barb. 353; Moore v. Evans, 14 Barb. 524. It is generally held, however, in this country that a common carrier cannot, by special notices brought to the knowledge of the owner of the goods or by contract even, exempt himself from the duty to exercise ordinary care and prudence in the transportation of goods. Cole v. Goodwin, 19 Wend. 251; Atwood v. Reliance Transp. Co., 9 Watts, 87; Camden & A. R. Co. v. Baldauff, 16 Pa. St 67.

According to the agreed facts in this case, the stipulations of the receipt were brought distinctly to the knowledge of the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 F. Cas. 259, 1 Woods 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/earnest-v-express-co-circtndga-1873.