Hoffman v. Metropolitan Express Co.
This text of 111 A.D. 407 (Hoffman v. Metropolitan Express Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The plaintiff has recovered a judgmént for injuries to a painting alleged to have been caused while in the defendant’s possession as a [408]*408common carrier. The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show an oral contract to carry the property by van without rehandling from her residence in the city of Hew York to' a place in Hew Rochelle. /The defendant admitted receiving the property for carriage, but denied the special contract, claiming that-it wag to be carried by van to the defendant’s station and there transferred to a car, as was done. The defendant disputed that the picture was injured while in its possession and sought exemption from liability under the' usual receipt or bill of lading claimed to have been delivered to the plaintiff upon the receipt óf the property. The plaintiff denied that any receipt or bill -of lading was given, claiming that she. received merely a duplicate of the tags placed on the different articles shipped, containing simply a description of the articles, which, however, she says she did not read. Heither the original nor duplicate receipt was produced at the .trial, but an alleged copy was produced which the witness admitted was only made a few days before the trial. By the charge of the learned trial court the verdict of the jury was made to depend upon two questions of fact, viz., first, whether the property was negligently injured by the defendant, and, second, whether the parties agreed upon the terms contained in the shipping receipt claimed to have been delivered by the defendant to the plaintiff. Respecting the latter question, the court charged the jury: “ So if you find that this woman agreed to the terms of this paper which the company produce, then she is bound by its terms, and she is defeated in this law suit. But if you find that she did not know the terms of the agreement,- that no steps were taken by the party who presented it to her to bring it to1 her knowledge, that the printed matter on. the paper was never 'called to her attention, - that it was given to her as a receipt only for the goods and she was unaware of the fact that it contained unimportant
The respondent also contends, under the authority of Maghee v. Camden & Amboy R. R. Co. (45 N. Y. 514), that-the defendant, 'having departed from the terms of the.orgl contract testified to by the plaintiff by conveying the property over a portion of the route" by car instead of all the way by Van without rehandling, became an insurer without regard to. the exemption-contained in the shipping receipt, but'the difficulty with this position is that we cannot know whether the jury resolved that question in ..favor of the plaintiff. The defendant denied the making of any such agreement and for. aught that we know the jury may have found that none was made. Indeed, that question was not distinctly presented to the jury by the learned trial court, and the .jury may never have passed upon it, at all. Were the question presented it might be necessary to ' determine whether the alleged parol agreement constituted a variance of the written instrument, and whether all the prior negotiations were merged into the written receipt.
Irrespective of the foregoing, this judgment will have to be reversed-for an error in the admission of evidence... Thé plaintiff was -permitted to prove as a part of her casé statements made by one of the defendant’s servants after the delivery of the property, to -the effect that the goods Were not in good condition- when, delivered. Manifestly this was reversible error, because upon no possible theory could the defendant be bound by the admission" of its employee after the transaction. -
The judgment and order must - be -reversed and a new trial granted, costs, to abide the event.
/ Hirschbérg-, P. J„ Woodward, G-atx.or and Bich, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial -granted, costs :to abide the event. ■ • -
Sic.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
111 A.D. 407, 97 N.Y.S. 838, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffman-v-metropolitan-express-co-nyappdiv-1906.