Fitch v. Carpenter

161 P.2d 824, 70 Cal. App. 2d 827, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 1141
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 21, 1945
DocketCiv. 14869
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 161 P.2d 824 (Fitch v. Carpenter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fitch v. Carpenter, 161 P.2d 824, 70 Cal. App. 2d 827, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 1141 (Cal. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

SHINN, J.

Plaintiffs recovered a judgment in the sum of $1,950 as damages suffered in the loss of their household goods which defendant W. L. Carpenter, doing business under *829 the firm name and style of Argonne Van Lines and Argonne Van and Storage Company, a common carrier, undertook to transport from Mill Valley, California, to Los Angeles. The complaint alleged the contract of carriage, the payment of defendant’s charges in the sum of $173.61, that defendant represented to plaintiffs that all goods carried by him were fully covered by insurance against loss by fire; that they were induced thereby to enter into the contract of carriage with him, that defendant was negligent in the handling of the goods, and that the goods were thereby wholly lost through fire while in possession of defendant. In a separate cause of action plaintiffs alleged breach of the contract of carriage by failure to deliver the goods as agreed, and in the third cause of action it was sought to recover the sum paid for the transportation charges. The goods were alleged to be of the value of $4,239.50.

In addition to denials, the answer alleged that plaintiffs instructed defendant to set the goods off at San Francisco until notified by plaintiffs that they were ready to accept delivery thereof; that this instruction was followed; that the goods were destroyed by fire while so set off, and it alleged the making of a special contract of carriage, by the terms of which defendant’s liability was limited to a sum equal to ten cents per pound for the weight of the goods shipped, amounting in the aggregate to $528. The agreement pleaded by defendant as a limitation upon his liability consisted of a provision in a bill of lading that the value of the property did not exceed ten cents per pound. Floyd Fitch, 16-year-old son of plaintiffs, signed his own name to this declaration of value in the bill of lading. Plaintiffs filed an affidavit denying the authority of their son to enter into an agreement on their behalf and the due execution by them of the alleged agreement limiting defendant’s liability.

The court found the allegations of the complaint to be true, with the exception of the amount of plaintiffs’ damage, which was fixed at $1,950. It was further found that plaintiffs did not execute the bills of lading and did not authorize their son to execute the same on their behalf and that they did not authorize the stopping of said goods in transit at San Francisco nor the unloading thereof by defendant. Although by finding the allegations of the complaint to be true the court found that defendant represented the goods to be covered by *830 insurance, and was negligent in the handling of them, these findings are immaterial; the other facts found furnish a sound basis for the judgment.

Plaintiffs arranged for the shipment of their gopds at defendant’s San Francisco office during the week preceding January 4, 1943. They were present while the goods were being loaded at their home in Mill Valley on January 4, 1943. Shortly before defendant’s van left, and while plaintiffs were in the house, their son Floyd Fitch, at the request of one of defendant’s employees, affixed his own name to a bill of lading as the owner of the property and after the van left he told plaintiff Lester A. Fitch that he had signed some paper. No copy of the bill of lading was furnished to plaintiffs or their son at the time. After the van left, plaintiffs drove to San Francisco on their way to Los Angeles, paid defendant his charges of $173.61, received a receipt therefor, and requested a copy of the bill of lading. They were told that it would be mailed to them but this was not done and they had no knowledge as to its contents. The evidence was that the son had no authority to make any agreement for them and that they did not believe that he had affixed his name to anything more than a receipt which evidenced delivery of the goods. Plaintiffs denied that they had authorized the stoppage of the goods in transit or given any directions other than for their transportation directly to Los Angeles. There was evidence that it was defendant’s custom to bring small loads of goods to his dock in San Francisco and to unload them there for the purpose of transfer to a larger van, thus combining the shipments of several owners into a single load for a long haul. This was done with the goods of plaintiffs. The dock was destroyed by fire, the cause of which was undisclosed, and plaintiffs’ goods were thereby lost.

Defendant, who is appearing in propria persona, lists sixty-five points of law or fact which, when assembled, constitute his argument that plaintiffs entered into a special contract for the shipment of their goods and are bound by the limitation of liability therein declared. He contends that the court should have held plaintiffs to the agreement on the theory that their son had authority to make it or upon the grounds of ratification and estoppel. There was no evidence that the son had authority to act for plaintiffs or that they held him out as their agent. The uncontroverted evidence was that *831 plaintiffs were present in their home at the time the loading was completed and that nothing was said to them concerning the issuance by defendant of a bill of lading. The finding that they did not execute the special contract is sustained by the evidence. The finding that plaintiffs did not ratify the act of their son is also supported by the evidence. They did not know he had signed a bill of lading; it was not furnished to them, although they asked for it, and the goods were destroyed on the following day. Being without knowledge of what their son had signed, plaintiffs did not ratify his act nor could they be held estopped under the circumstances to deny his authority.

There are no questions of law in the case which have not been decided contrary to appellant’s contentions. Unless limited by the special contract, his liability was that of an insurer. (American Fruit Distributors v. Hines (1921), 55 Cal.App. 377, 385 [203 P. 821].) It was held in McQueen v. Tyler (1943), 61 Cal.App.2d 263 [142 P.2d 466], that a contract purporting to limit the liability of a carrier is not binding upon the shipper unless it is entered into freely and fairly, citing Donlon Bros. v. Southern Pacific Co. (1907), 151 Cal. 763 [91 P. 603, 12 Ann.Gas. 1118, 11 L.RA.N.S. 811]. Although the shipper there had signed a freight bill which contained a limitation of liability similar to the one here involved, a finding of the jury that it did not constitute a contract fairly entered into by the parties limiting defendant’s liability was held to be sustained by evidence that it was signed by the shipper upon a representation that it was an authorization to take the goods and without reading the paper and without knowledge that it contained a provision purporting to limit the liability of the carrier. Section 2176 of the Civil Code provides that the acceptance of a bill of lading by a consignor with knowledge of its terms constitutes an assent to a limitation of liability as to property carried in packages, trunks or boxes when the value is not stated, but that the consignor’s consent to any other modification of the carrier’s obligation contained in such instrument can be manifested only by his signature of the same.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 P.2d 824, 70 Cal. App. 2d 827, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 1141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitch-v-carpenter-calctapp-1945.