Lewis v. Ocean Steamship Co.

76 S.E. 1073, 12 Ga. App. 191, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 489
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 30, 1913
Docket4183
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 76 S.E. 1073 (Lewis v. Ocean Steamship Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. Ocean Steamship Co., 76 S.E. 1073, 12 Ga. App. 191, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 489 (Ga. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Russell, J.

In our opinion the learned trial judge erred in awarding a nonsuit and dismissing the plaintiff’s case. The case is virtually controlled by the ruling of this court in Atlanta Baggage & Cab Co. v. Mizo, 4 Ga. App. 407 (61 S. E. 844), although there is some difference between the eases in immaterial features. The defendants contend that the nonsuit was proper because the instant case is controlled by the ruling of the Supreme Court in Bridges v. Southern Ry. Co., 137 Ga. 107 (72 S. E. 892). As this court is bound to follow the rulings of the Supreme Court, as precedents, we will first consider this contention.

An examination of the opinion in the Bridges case, supra, shows that the carrier was held to be not liable, not merely because there was no direct evidence that the plaintiff’s trunk was ever in its possession, but because it is perfectly evident from the record that the trunk was never in its possession. In other words, the plaintiff himself proved (what w'e think a carrier who has issued and delivered a check for baggage should prove by way of defense) that no check which could properly purport to represent the baggage was in fact ever in his possession. Necessarily, in this state of facts, the ruling of the Supreme Court, that the evidence was insufficient to support a verdict for the plaintiff,, was correct. In the Bridges case (to quote from the statement of facts in the opinion) the plaintiff testified that “he purchased a round-trip ticket from Hawkinsville, Georgia, to Eichmond, Virginia, to return by way of Norfolk, Virginia, by rail. The defendant’s agent at Hawkins-ville gave the plaintiff a check for his trunk to Eichmond. He received his trunk at Eichmond, and left there for Norfolk over the Old Dominion Steamship Company’s line, receiving from that company a check for his trunk from Eichmond to Norfolk. The Southern Eailway Company’s line did not run into Norfolk. Upon his arrival at Norfolk he received from the transfer company, in return for the steamship company’s check, a transfer check. The trunk could not be found, and the transfer company then delivered to the plaintiff a check purporting to be a Southern Eailway Company’s check for the transportation of the trunk from Norfolk to Hawkinsville. Upon his return to the latter place the plaintiff presented the last-mentioned, check to the local agent of'the de[194]*194fendant company at that place, and demanded. Ms trunk. Tlie trunk could not be found there, and the agent took the check and endeavored to trace the trunk, but failed to do so, and subsequently returned the check to the plaintiff. There was no evidence that the transfer company at Norfolk was the agent of the defendant company, which denied that the trunk was ever delivered to it or its agent after the plaintiff had received it at Richmond.” As the plaintiff Bridges himself delivered his trunk at Richmond, not to the Southern Railway Company or its agent, but to an agent of the Old Dominion Steamship Company, and used that route in going to Norfolk, and as the Southern Railway Company’s line did not run into Norfolk, there was not only no evidence, circumstantial or otherwise, that the trunk went into the possession of the Southern Railway Company, but, on the contrary, every presumption of law and every reasonable inference from the facts supports the conclusion that the trunk remained in the possession of the Old Dominion Steamship Company, or had been lost by that company. When the transfer company could not find the trunk, Bridges accepted from its agent, who was not an agent of the Southern Railway Company, a check purporting to be a Southern Railway Company baggage-check. Certainly in that case the Supreme Court could well hold that the plaintiff could not recover, if for no other reason than that he accepted this check from one he did not know to be an agent of the carrier whom he sought to bind thereby, and at a time when he knew, or should have known, that the carrier whom he sought to bind by the check, then being delivered to him as a symbol of his trunk, was not in possession of the baggage which it was thereby contracting to deliver; and this, too, without inquiring whether the transfer company, in assuming to act as agent of the Southern Railway Company, or even if it was the agent of the latter, was doing an act beyond the scope of its authority. It is doubtful if the carrier would be' liable upon a check for baggage delivered by one of its duly authorized agents to a passenger who knew that the baggage was not in the possession of the carrier; but certainly a carrier would not be bound in such a case by the delivery of what purported to be its cheek by one who had no authority whatever to make a contract in its behalf.

The present case differs from the Bridges case in several important particulars. In the first place, in the present case the [195]*195baggage-check upon which the plaintiff bases her action was delivered to her by an agent of the defendants. This is not disputed. In the next place, so far from her knowing, or having the right to believe (as Bridges had the right to believe) that the carrier was not, as a matter of fact, in possession of the trunk at the time its agent handed to her the check, she had évery right to assume that her trunk was in the possession of the steamship company; becauserwhen she presented her transfer check, the porter, in the presence of the steamship company’s agent, took it for the purpose of locating the trunk, and he returned with the statement that he had found it; and thereupon, after surrender of the transfer check, the defendants’ baggage-check was delivered to her. Furthermore, there is no evidence in this case (as there is in the Bridges case) which would tend to show that the trunk was lost before it could' have come into the possession of the defendants. In the present case there is no presumption, • one way or the other, upon this subject, for the plaintiff traveled the route over which her baggage was checked; and it is no more to be presumed that the transfer company made a mistake in rechecking the trunk, for the purpose of conveying it from the depot of the Erie Railroad to the pier of the Ocean Steamship Company, than that the agent of the defendants made a mistake in rechecking which resulted in the shipment of a trunk other than that of the plaintiff. The- undisputed evidence of the plaintiff in this case establishes that she was a passenger of the defendants, and the payment of her fare-included payment for the carriage -of her baggage. The carrier delivered her a check as evidence of its undertaking to deliver the baggage, which it symbolized, at the destination to which she had purchased her ticket. She delivered to the defendant steamship company a symbol of the baggage, the identity of which it had an opportunity of fixing before the delivery to the plaintiff of its own baggage-check. Her baggage was not delivered to her, and the value of the contents of' the lost trunk was established by testimony which was not disputed. Upon its discovery of the loss the carrier did not return the transfer check which it had received from the plaintiff, nor did it offer to return the check until the trial, more than two years after the trunk was lost.

On this state of facts the question which arises is: Upon whom shall be cast the burden of establishing that the check which the [196]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 S.E. 1073, 12 Ga. App. 191, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-ocean-steamship-co-gactapp-1913.