Odom v. Pacific Northern Airlines, Inc.

393 P.2d 112, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 219
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1964
Docket386
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 393 P.2d 112 (Odom v. Pacific Northern Airlines, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Odom v. Pacific Northern Airlines, Inc., 393 P.2d 112, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 219 (Ala. 1964).

Opinion

AREND, Justice.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff below from a summary judgment and dismissal of an action sounding in tort. The principal question presented is whether an airline carrier’s traffic rule specifying that unchecked baggage or other personal property shall be carried at the risk of the passenger is invalid and unreasonable as an attempt to absolve the carrier from liability for its own negligence.

On June 14, 1960, Corinne Odom was killed when a plane of the defendant airline, in which she was traveling as a paying passenger, crashed into the face of Mount Gilbert about fifty miles east of the City of Anchorage. The plaintiff Milton W. Odom, executor of Corinne’s estate, ' instituted this action in the superior court to recover $8,079.98. This amount, he alleged, was the value of the jewelry and other personal property of the decedent, worn or carried aboard the plane by her and destroyed in the crash. 1

At the time of the ill-fated flight, the defendant was a duly licensed and certificated air carrier operating in interstate commerce and had on file with the Civil Aeronautics Board, hereinafter referred to as CAB, its schedule of tariffs as provided for by 49 U.S.C.A. § 1373(a). 2 The defendant’s tariffs, or portions thereof, pertinent to the issues here involved provided:

10 II. Articles Accepted as Baggage : Baggage shall consist only of wearing apparel, non-liquid toilet articles and similar effects for actual use which are necessary and appropriate for the comfort and convenience of the passenger for the purposes of the journey * * *. Money, jewelry, silverware, samples, negotiable paper, securities and similar valuables or business documents will be carried only at the risk of the passenger.
10 III A. The passenger having been offered a choice of rates according to value, any liability of a carrier in respect to baggage and other personal property is limited to its declared value (or its actual value if less) which shall not exceed one hundred ( 100.00) [xic] per passenger, unless a higher valuation is declared in ad- *114 vanee and additional charges ■ are paid pursuant to the carrier’s tariffs.
10 III E. * * * Unchecked baggage or other personal property shall be carried at the risk of the passenger.

In support of its motion for summary judgment, the defendant airline contended below that its tariff rules as an air carrier, filed with the CAB, were binding upon the plaintiff’s decedent, thus absolving the defendant from any liability for its negligence or, in the alternative, limiting its liability, if any, to the amount of $100, which it had tendered into court. Additionally it argued that the reasonableness and validity of its tariffs could not be attacked in the courts in the first instance, because the CAB has exclusive primary jurisdiction to hear and decide such an issue.

The plaintiff responded that defendant’s tariff rules were unreasonable and invalid in that their effect was to absolve the defendant of its common law liability as a common carrier for the consequences of its negligence. I-Ie conceded that a carrier may limit its liability as an insurer of checked baggage by making declared value baggage tariff regulations, but insisted that the carrier may not relieve itself of all liability for damage, caused by its own negligence, to personal belongings taken aboard the airplane by the passenger and clothing and accessories worn by the passenger without affording him a minimum valuation of such property and a right to declare a higher valuation and secure coverage therefor.

With reference to the defendant’s claim that CAB has exclusive primary authority to pass upon tariff rules filed with it, the plaintiff pointed out to the trial court that the statutory power of the CAB to hear complaints pertaining to tariff rules is a remedy limited to future practices 3 and does not appear to be intended to be used in circumstances such as the subject case where the rule is no longer in effect 4 and a decision must be secured pertaining to its reasonableness as to a past transaction. The plaintiff then concluded that, since the CAB is not empowered to rule as to the past transaction involved in this case, jurisdiction must be exercised by the courts. The defendant agreed that the court should not hold the case in abeyance pending an administrative hearing, both for the reasons stated by the plaintiff and for the further reason that the CAB has never decided in the past that a tariff rule such as defendant’s rule 10 III E is invalid.

After reviewing the briefs filed by the parties and hearing their oral arguments, the court gave summary judgment for the defendant, dismissing the plaintiff’s action and ordering the clerk to pay to the plaintiff the $100 in the court registry. While the court did not state the rationale for its decision and none was required by rule, 5 *115 it would seem that the court must have considered itself to be without jurisdiction to determine the reasonableness or validity of the applicable tariff rules.

The parties come before us with much the same arguments which they advanced in the court below. We regard the decisive issues on this appeal as being purely legal and shall dispose of them accordingly.

The authorities have uniformly held that in litigation growing out of the interstate shipment of personal property with a common carrier by air, such as we have under consideration here, the rights and liabilities of the parties are determined by the federal law. 6

Within the framework of both federal and state law there is also recognized and applied the common law principle that a c-ommon carrier may not exempt itself from liability for its own negligence or that of its servants. 7 Speaking of that principle, the Supreme Court of the United States stated in 1952:

“There is a general rule of law that common carriers cannot stipulate for immunity from their own or their agents’ negligence. While this general rule was fashioned by the courts, it has been continuously accepted as a guide to common-carrier relationships for more than a century and has acquired the force and precision of a leg- , islative enactment. ⅜ * * ” 8

While common carriers cannot absolve themselves completely from liability for the consequences of their own negligence, they can lawfully limit recovery to an amount less than the actual loss sustained by granting their customers a fair opportunity to choose between higher or lower liability by paying a correspondingly greater or lesser charge. 9 For example, a carrier by air may lawfully provide in its tariff rules that its liability is limited to the value of $100 unless a higher valuation is declared in advance and additional charges paid. 10

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Bluebook (online)
393 P.2d 112, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odom-v-pacific-northern-airlines-inc-alaska-1964.