Humphreys v. Perry

148 U.S. 627, 13 S. Ct. 711, 37 L. Ed. 587, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2259
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 10, 1893
Docket167
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 148 U.S. 627 (Humphreys v. Perry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Humphreys v. Perry, 148 U.S. 627, 13 S. Ct. 711, 37 L. Ed. 587, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2259 (1893).

Opinion

Me. Justice Blatchfoed

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an intervening petition, filed May 28, 1886, in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Illinois, by John H. Perry, Arthur J. Perry, James K. Perry and Frank A. Perry, copartners under the firm name of Perry Brothers, in the suit pending in said court, of the Wabash, St. Louis and Pacific Railway Company against the Central Trust Company of New Tork and others, in which suit Solon Humphreys and Thomas E. Tutt had been appointed receivers of said railway.

The intervening petition ivas filed against the receivers by' leave of the court. It sets forth that the principal office of the firm of the petitioners is at Chicago; that on January 30,1885, Arthur J. Perry, one of the firm, in carrying on its business, bought and paid for a ticket for his passage from Springfield, Illinois, to Petersburg, Illinois, over and upon the railroad of ' the company running between those, two places, and at the same time checked with the company a trunk containing jewelry, watches and merchandise of the firm, such as was necessary for him to take with him in prosecuting the business of the firm, and such as is usually taken as baggage by travelling salesmen in prosecuting business similar to that of *629 the petitioners, for transportation by the company from Spring-field to Petersburg; that for the transportation of the trunk he paid the company a sum of money additional to that which he, had already paid for his ticket; that thereupon he entered the coach of the company, and the trunk was placed by its agents in the baggage-cár of the company en route for Petersburg; that shortly before reaching that place, by the negligence and carelessness of the company in constructing and repairing its roadbed and track, and in running that train, the cars containing said Arthur J. Perry and said trunk,were derailed, and the baggage-car containing the trunk was overturned and rolled down an embankment, and at the foot thereof, by the negligence and carelessness of the company in using in the car an unsafe, improper and dangerous kind of stove, and in having said stove unsecured or improperly secured, the baggage-car caught on fire and was totally consumed, together with said trunk, and the watches, jewelry and merchandise of the petitioners in the trunk were almost totally destroyed ; that the value of the trunk and its contents was $9818.46; that the petitioners recovered from the debris of the baggage-car a part of the merchandise, so that their loss amounts to $9218.46; that the receivers were appointed May 29, 1884, and had possession of and were operating said road from Springfield to Petersburg at the time of the loss of the trunk; and that they had refused to allow the claim of the petitioners. The prayer of the petition is that the receivers answer the claim for damages.

The answer of the receivers sets forth that at the time in question they were not prepared to carry articles of jewelry and,watches as baggage, and did not undertake or advertise themselves to the public as ready or willing to transport the same; that by the rules of the receivers, then in force and well known to the intervenors, the agents and servants of the receivers were not allowed to take trunks containing jewelry, watches and valuable'merchandise'as baggage; that on January 30, 1885, Arthur' J. Perry, one of the intervenors, presented to the agent of the receivers, at Springfield, Illinois, the trunk in question and demanded a check therefor, and- the *630 receivers then' and there undertook to carry the trunk as containing only the personal baggage of said Perry; thát he then5and there wrongfully concealed from the said agent the ■fact that the trunk contained jewelry, ’watches or valuable merchandise, -and by such wrongful conduct' and fraudulent concealment of the contents of- the 'trunk and’ their value, secured a: check for it from the agent as baggage; that, because it .was' so- checked, it was placed by the agent in-a baggage-car- and transported as ordinary baggage by the receivers over said line Of road; that, before reaching Peters-burg, on ‘ said day, ‘ the train containing the baggage-car' in which thó truñk had been placed-became derailed, without fault or negligence on the part of the receivers or their agents or servants ; and that, without any such fault or negligence, the baggage-car' caught fire after being so derailed, and a portion of the contents of the trunk, so wrongfully and fraudulently shipped as- baggage, was dest-royéd.- The answer denies that the interven ors are entitled to any relief. \

On June 30, 1S86, the court made an order referring- the intervening -petition to E. B. Sherman “ to take proof and report the'same, to the court.” Mr. Sherman was one of the masters 'in chancery of the court. He took -proofs and made a report to the court, accompanied by the proofs, and filed October 23, 1888. -In his report, he recites the order of reference as directing him to take evidence and report to the court “ with his findings'in the premises.” He did report the1"evidence and also' findings ■'by’him both of fact and of-'law. The receivers excepted-to'the report because (1) the findings were contrary to tire evidence, (2) the -findings were contrary to law-, (3) the’ -findings were contrary To the Jaw and the evidence, (d) the finding should have-been that the intervening petition be dismissed, (a) the interven ors were not entitled to the -relief prayed for, and (6) the amount found by the-master was excessive and not warranted by the testimony. The master found that , the intervenors were entitled to recover from the receivers '$7287.87, with costs. There -was no exception to the fact that the master had found the facts and the law, or had departed from the order cp reference, and neither *631 of the parties nor the- court took any objection in' that respect. 1 ' - * ' ■ ■

The case was heard before the Circuit Court, held by Judge Gresham, 39 Fed. Rep. 417, on the report of the. master, and the exceptions thereto; and a decree was made, July-29,1889, overruling the exceptions, confirming the report of tlie-master, and decreeing in. favor' of- the intervenors for $7287.87, and for the payment of that' sum to them by the receivers, with costs, and $150 for master’s fees. From this decree the receivers have appealed. • '

On January 30, -1885, Arthur J. Perry, a member of the intervenors’ firm, was in Springfield, ’Illinois, with a trunk • of jewelry containing a stock of goods from which he was to make sales and deliveries to their customers. r He.there bought a passage ticket from the agent of the receivers, for his transportation to Petersburg,' on their road, and presented-his trunk to be checked .to Petersburg as his personal baggage..' The trunk was of a dark color, iron bound* weighed 250 pounds, and as to size was described in the evidence as' being “ what a sample-man would call small.” The. agent gave him-acheck for the trunk and collected from him 25 cents on account of its extra weight, only 150 pounds of personal baggage being carried free for each passenger. ■ Nothing was said to the agent :by Perry concerning the contents of the trunk, nor did he make any inquiries of - Perry in regard to its contents. When the train had reached a point a. few miles from' Peters-burg, the car.

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Bluebook (online)
148 U.S. 627, 13 S. Ct. 711, 37 L. Ed. 587, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humphreys-v-perry-scotus-1893.