Head v. Pacific Express Co.

126 S.W. 682, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 169, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 483
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 31, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 126 S.W. 682 (Head v. Pacific Express Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Head v. Pacific Express Co., 126 S.W. 682, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 169, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 483 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

WILLSON, Chief Justice.

Appellant, residing at Tyler, was the owner of a diamond ring worth $275 or $300, in the possession of a Miss James, at Bowie. Miss James placed the ring, with ceri-un photographs and letters, in a- pasteboard box about ten inches in width, fifteen inches in length and one inch in depth, and on November 5, 1908, after she had securely wrapped the box with paper, tied it with twine and addressed it, in compliance with appellant’s instructions to do so, delivered it to the Wells-Eargo & Co. Express at Bowie for transportation and delivery to appellant at Tyler. When the package reached appellant the ring was not in it. He brought his suit to recover the value of the ring against the Wells-Eargo & Company Express and the Pacific Express Company, alleging that the ring had “by the carelessness and neglect of the defendants, their agents, servants and employes, been lost, stolen or destroyed while in the custody and care of the defendants.” The Pacific Express Company answered, alleging, among other things, that the package when it was delivered to the Wells-Eargo & Company Express at Bowie had the appearance of a package of merchandise, and that Miss James represented the same to be of the value of $25; that said WellsEargo & Company Express received the same under the terms and conditions of a written receipt accepted by Miss James for and on behalf of appellant, and constituting a contract covering the shipment, containing, among other things, a recitation that the charge made by the carrier was based “upon a valuation not exceeding $50 unless *171 a greater value is declared,” and stipulating that it should “not be liable in any event for more than $50 unless a greater value is stated herein;” and further stipulating that it should not be liable “for any loss of money, jewelry or valuable papers, unless the same are separately packed, sealed, marked as such and so described herein.” Said Pacific Express Company further alleged that charges made by said Wells-Fargo & Company Express were made for itself and said Pacific Express Company, and were “based on the valuation of the article or articles to be transported, and articles of a greater value than $50 are charged for at a higher rate than those of less than $50 in value,” and that special precautions were taken to safely transport and deliver money, jewelry and small articles of high value. .And said Pacific Express Company further alleged that upon being questioned by the agent of the Wells-Fargo & Company Express at Bowie as to the value of the package when she tendered same for carriage, Miss James “falsely and fraudulently represented to the Wells-Fargo & Company Express that the package contained several articles, none of which were breakable or of special value, and that none of said articles required any special care or attention, and that altogether they were of a value not exceeding $25, thereby inducing the Wells-Fargo & Company Express and this defendant, its connecting carrier, to transport the package by ordinary waybill; that if she had stated that the package contained a diamond ring it would have been sent in the special manner used for transporting jewelry, diamonds and money, and the defendant receiving the same would have charged the sender more than the amount that was ■charged for the transportation of said package, and that by reason of the false and fraudulent representations as to the value of the articles to be transported if delivered to the Wells-Fargo & Company Express said contract is null and void as to this defendant, and it is not liable in any sum to the plaintiff herein.” Said Pacific Express Company further answered that if it was liable at all to plaintiff he was estopped by reason of the representations as to the value of the package made by Miss James as aforesaid from asserting its liability to be for a sum in excess of $25, or if for a greater sum than $25, then for a sum in excess of $50. Said Pacific Express Company further alleged that the stipulation in the receipt or contract aforesaid exempting it from liability for loss of jewelry, unless the same was “separately packed, sealed, marked as such and so described” in said receipt, was reasonable, valid and binding, and that had the package been marked and described as said stipulation required it would have been “kept in a separate package and transported in a safe, while in the care of defendants, its agents and employes, and the train messengers would have signed a special receipt for said package, and in the event anything had happened to said package to damage, injure or destroy the same this company as well as the receiving company could have checked and located the damage or loss sustained thereto, and by reason of the failure to so designate said package and to so send the same, this defendant has been deprived of the right to trace the package in accordance with its rules, which are reasonable, and plaintiff is estopped from *172 setting up and claiming said package contained jewelry or a diamond ring.” The pleadings of the Wells-Fargo Company Express differed little from those of the Pacific Express Company, and need not be here stated.

On the trial the agent of the Wells-Fargo Company Express at Bowie testified that when Hiss James presented the package to him for transportation he asked her “what the value of the package was and whether or not there was anything breakable or any reason why the package required special attention,” and that she replied “that there were several articles in the package, but that the whole valuation would not exceed $25, and that the package would not require any special attention, as there was nothing breakable in the package.” He further testified that he forwarded the package on a “freight waybill;” that he so forwarded it “because it was just a plain, unsealed package with valuation of $25;” that his company shipped all money, jewelry and small packages of high value on “money waybills;” that when a package was to be forwarded on a money waybill he always sealed it up in the presence of the shipper, held it in the safe in his office “until time to take it to the station,” when he would take it from the .safe and carry it to the station in a haversack and there deliver it to the messenger on the train, taking his receipt for it; that had Miss James informed him (the witness) that the package contained a diamond ring he would have forwarded it on a money order waybill—would have sealed the package in her presence, himself carried it to the train, delivered it to the messenger and informed him that it was a sealed package, and that the messenger would have carried it in the safe in the car provided by the company for such packages. Said witness further testified that the charges demanded of and received from Miss James for transporting the package amounted to twenty-five cents; and that the charges for transporting the package had he been informed that it contained a diamond ring valued at $300 would have been fifty-five cents. Other testimony in the record showed that an article shipped on a money waybill was kept by the company separate from ordinary packages, was carried in a safe, and was checked and receipted for separately by each employe handling it, and that one purpose of this practice was to enable the company to trace same in the event of a loss of the article. The receipt given by the carrier to Miss James recited as a fact that she had declared the value of the package to be $25.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 S.W. 682, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 169, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/head-v-pacific-express-co-texapp-1910.