Southern Express Co. v. Frink

67 Ga. 201
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 67 Ga. 201 (Southern Express Co. v. Frink) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia 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. Frink, 67 Ga. 201 (Ga. 1880).

Opinion

JACKSON, Chief Justice.

The Southern Express Company brought suit against their agent and the sureties on his bond, to recover three thousand dollars entrusted to him at Cochran for delivery at Hawkinsville, and which he failed to deliver. The jury found for defendants and the company excepted to the refusal of the court to award a new trial.

1. The liability of the agent of the company and his sureties to thecompany turns on the contract between them, and that contract is the bond on which the suit is brought. The counsel for plaintiff in error contended that the liability of the agent is the same as that of a common carrier; that he was employed by the company to carry goods, money, etc., from Cochran to Hawkinsville regularly on the Macon and Brunswick branch railroad between those points, and thus became a common carrier under section 2066 of the Code, and therefore, under the same section, no excuse availed him but the act of God or that of the public enemy.

It was conceded that his liability and that of his sureties was measured by the obligation they signed,, but it was insisted that by the terms of that obligation the legal liability of the agent as a common carrier was not varied, but was fixed to be that of a common carrier.

The liability fixed in the bond is in these words: “I will at all times well and truly perform all the duties required of me in any position or place to which I may be assigned in said employment, and well and truly account for all money and property of every description which may come into my possession or control, or for which I may have given my receipt, by reason of said employment, and make good all loss or damage which may happen to such money or property while under my control, [205]*205for which I may be legally responsible, and indemnify and save harmless the said company from all liability on account of ,my fault or neglect.” It is urged that the words “for which I may be legally responsible” make the agent liable as a common carrier, and that he can protect himself from incurring it only by the act of God or the public enemy. We cannot so hold.

The following words, “and save harmless the said company from all liability on account of my fault or neglectf would be without meaning if such construction were put on the former words. The liability is not to indemnify the company against all accidents and the fault of the whole world, except the acts of the Almighty and of the enemies of the State, but it is to indemnify the company for any loss incurred by reason of “my fault or neglectf the agent’s own fault or neglect, and that of nobody else. If the parties had intended to bind the agent as a common carrier, how easy to have said so in the bond. The truth is that the bond is given, not as a common carrier at all, or in the capacity of any sort of carrier, but as agent of the express company in any business in which that company might place him; for the bond recites that “this obligation shall not be impaired by a change of place, position or duties of said James S. Frink’s employmentand also that “whereas James S. Frink is about to be employed by the Southern Express Company for a. period that may be terminated by said company at will, without notice, now, therefore, know all men by these presents, that I, the said James S. Frink, in consideration of the said employment, and the compensation which I am to receive from said company for my services therein, do hereby covenant with said company and bind myself,, my heirs, executors and administrators, that I will at all times well and truly perform all the duties required of me in any position or place to which I may be assigned in said employment.” His position might have been changed to that of a clerk or a stationary agent, and yet this obli[206]*206gation would bind him. How and to what extent ? Surely not as a common carrier; for he would then carry nothing, but as the agent of the company for any loss incurred by his fault or neglect. The common carrier is the Southern Express Company; to that corporation the public looks for security. It is bound for every loss, except it befall by act of God or the public enemy; but the agents of this corporation are bound only by the terms of their respective obligations — their contract with the company: — and that obligation in this case is limited to losses occasioned by the fault or neglect of this agent by the very terms of the contract.

The question, therefore, to be determined is, was he at fault or neglectful of his business when this package of $3,000.00 was taken from the box or safe in the baggage-car of the Macon & Brunswick branch train while it stood at Cochran for several hours in the afternoon and night, until ten or eleven o’clock in the night ? He was the conductor of the Macon & Brunswick Railroad Company as well as the agent of the express company. He left the baggage car and box with this money in it, to go to Buzzard Roost, a station twelve miles off, on the engine with the engineer after water ; he did not lock the car himself when he left, but told Carroll to do so, who was baggage-master to the railroad company, but also the agent or servant'of Frink, receiving half the wages the express company paid him. There was no baggage in the baggage-car, and nothing but this box, so far as the record shows; a boy, the servant of Frink and Carroll, had the key to this baggage car arid slept in it. When Frink returned from the water expedition he did not examine the car and box to ascertain if all was right; nor did he look at it or open it till he was close to Hawkinsville, but left the box with the money where this boy had access till ten o’clock at night, without opening it once; he was about the town drinking beer and eating oysters and playing cards; he .showed the key of the box where this money was to sev[207]*207eral persons, or in their presence, and said it was a check for money, but not his money, and that it was the key of that box. The legal question is, did he use that diligence about this large sum of money, thus so long in this box, which was a common iron box with a common key to it, which a prudent man would have taken of it had it been that prudent man’s property ? Code, §§2185, 2061.

It seems that the express company knew of his employment by the railroad company when it employed him, and if it was his duty to leave the train of cars and go for water on the engine alone with the engineer, and without the baggage car, it may excuse that absence from his charge ; but conceding this, was he excusable for all that he did, and all that he did not do, after his return and until ten o’clock that night ?■

The question of negligence on the facts is peculiarly for the jury, and we do not wish to take its unbiased consideration from them. Therefore, we do not express any opinion on the facts made here, further than to repeat the question at issue, would a prudent man have acted as this agent did had his own money been in that box in the baggage car ?

2. We will say further, that the case required a clear and full presentation of this issue before the jury by the court, without the slightest cloud or omission on his part; and on examining the exceptions taken to the charge in the motion for a new trial, we cannot say that it was so presented.

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Related

Hodges v. Mayes
242 S.E.2d 160 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1978)
Taylor v. Jones
181 S.E.2d 506 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1971)
Frink v. Southern Express Co.
3 L.R.A. 482 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1889)

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Bluebook (online)
67 Ga. 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-express-co-v-frink-ga-1880.