Southern Express Co. v. Crook

44 Ala. 468
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 44 Ala. 468 (Southern Express Co. v. Crook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Express Co. v. Crook, 44 Ala. 468 (Ala. 1870).

Opinion

PECK, C. J.

Express companies were originally formed for the purpose of carrying and transporting, mainly, money, treasure, and other valuables, and the value, rather than the weight or size of the parcel or package, was looked to in determining the price to be charged for the transportation, and the risk thereby incurred.

There was, therefore, great propriety in having the value of the articles known, that the carrier might understand the extent of his responsibility, and also have some reasonable data to govern him, as to the compensation to be charged for the care and dangers he took upon himself.

Of late years, however, these companies have greatly increased in number, and in the nature, character and extent of the business in which they are engaged.

They are now competitors and rivals with the other great transportation enterprises of the day, and are engaged not only in the transportation of comparatively small parcels and packages, and articles of value, properly so-called, but also in the carriage of goods, wares and merchandise, and of the great staples and products of the country.

Consequently they have become, in every just sense of the term, common carriers, and must be held to the liabilities that the law imposes upon such persons.

These liabilities, it is well understood, may be reasonably limited by special contract, but public policy will not permit a common carrier, in this way, to be exempted from damages for losses occasioned by the negligence or misfeasance of himself, or of his servants. — Mobile & Ohio R. R. Co. v. Hopkins, 41 Ala. 486.

In a note on page 302, 1 vol. Redfield on Railways, it is said, “mere general notices in regard to the liabilities of [474]*474carriers are of no avail, unless reduced to the form of special stipulations, and signed by the party sending the goods, and be also, in the opinion of the court before whom the case shall be tried, just and reasonable.”

In the present case, the action is brought to recover damages for the loss of two bales of cotton.

The defendant’s agent, at the time of the shipment, gave to the plaintiff, the appellee in this court, a receipt, consisting of a printed form, and filled up and signed by said agent.

The cotton was shipped, at Blue Mountain, and was to be delivered in Selma to plaintiff’s consignees, named therein.

The following portion of said receipt is found in the printed part thereof, to-wit; “ It is further agreed,, and is part of the consideration of this contract, that the Southern Express Company is, not to be held liable or responsible for the property herein mentioned, for any loss or damage arising from the dangers of railroad, ocean, steam or river navigation, leakage, fire or any other cause whatever, except the same be proved to have occurred through the fraud or gross negligence of its agents, or servants, unless specially insured by it, and so specified in this receipt, which insurance constitutes the limit of the liability of the Southern Express Company, in any event; and if the value of the property above described is not stated by the shipper, at the time of shipment, and specified in this receipt, the holder hereof will not demand of the Southern Express Company a sum exceeding fifty dollars for the loss or detention of, or damage to each package herein receipted for, nor shall said company be responsible for the safety of said property after its arrival at its place of destination. All articles of glass, or of liquids, will be taken at the shipper’s risk only, and the shipper agrees that the company shall not be held liable for any injury or loss, by breakage, leakage, or otherwise.”

It does not appear that the attention of the shipper was drawn to the printed parts of said receipt, which have reference to many matters in no wise connected with the [475]*475shipment of the cotton, and if it had, he would not probably have supposed that by the word packages, bales of cotton were thereby intended to be embraced.

The evidence shows that the cotton arrived in Selma, the place of its destination, and on its arrival the defendant’s agent, instead of delivering it to the consignees, named in the receipt, delivered it to a stranger, and thereby it was lost to the plaintiff.

The appellant, the defendant below, insists that as no value was put upon the cotton, and expressed in the receipt, the plaintiff could not recover more than fifty dollars a bale for its loss.

In the first place, we hold that bales of cotton are in no proper sense packages, and for this reason it was unnecessary to state their value in the receipt.

There is, in our opinion, no more reason in calling a bale of cotton a package than there is in holding a hogshead of tobacco to be so. Packages, as here used, must be interpreted to mean small parcels or bundles, whose appearance would give no adequate information of their value to the carrier.

In such cases there would seem to be great propriety in having their value named, to enable the carrier to make a charge answerable to the responsibility he would assume, and, at the same time, inform him of the care required to be taken of them.

Fair dealing and common honesty would seem to require this; but where the appearance of the article, itself, indicates its value, and advises the carrier of the care usually taken in the transportation of such articles, the necessity of having its value stated is not perceived. In such cases the carrier is liable, although nothing is said by the ship ■ per about the value. —Beck et al. v. Evans et al., 16 East, 244. It may, no doubt, be safely said that the value of cotton is as well, and, perhaps, as a general thing, better known to the carrier than to the shipper. Its value depends upon the public markets, the knowledge of which is alike open to both parties; there is, therefore, no real danger that any deceit or fraud will, or can be practised upon the carrier. •

[476]*476In such a case, then, if the carrier does not insist upon the statement of a value, we think the fair inference is that he does not consider it to be a package, or that the statement of a value is waived, and, in either case, the shipper should not be prejudiced by the omission.

What would be considered proper care in the transportation of the common products of the country, or of goods and merchandise, packed in the usual way, would be gross negligence in relation to small parcels or packages of value, that might be easily purloined or lost.

In this case the loss was occasioned by the delivery of the cotton to a stranger, at the place of destination, and not to the consignees of the plaintiff, whose names were written in the receipt; the'defendant, therefore, was clearly liable for its loss. Under the circumstances, it seems to us, the delivery of the cotton to a wrong party may well be held to be an act of gross negligence.

The complaint is in the form given in the Revised Code against a common carrier. The trial seems to have taken place without any plea being, in fact, filed.

Under our system of pleading and practice, this form of a complaint is sufficient to authorize a plaintiff to recover against a common carrier, whether the cause of action be ex-contractu or ex'-delicto.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Ala. 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-express-co-v-crook-ala-1870.