United States Express Co. v. Keefer

59 Ind. 263
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 59 Ind. 263 (United States Express Co. v. Keefer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Express Co. v. Keefer, 59 Ind. 263 (Ind. 1877).

Opinion

Howk, J.

— This action was commenced by the appellees, against the appellant, before a justice of the peace of Cass county, Indiana, by filing their complaint, as follows:

“Come now Joseph S. Craig and William B. Keefer, under the name -and style of Craig & Keefer, and complain of the United States • Express Company, and say, that, on the 14th day of December, 1872, said plaintiffs delivered to said defendant, through said defendant’s agent, at the city of Logansport, a certain package containing one overcoat and one pair of pants, all of the value of fifty-four dollars, marked ‘ C. O. D.,’ consigned to Harrison Burkhalter, in Monticello, Indiana; that • said package was securely packed and delivered to said defendant, through their said agent, in good condition ; that said plaintiffs have demanded of said defendant said goods, or the value thereof. Said defendant refused to account therefor, to the damage of plaintiffs in tlíe sum of seventy dollars. Wherefore plaintiffs demand judgment for seventy dollars, and all other proper relief.”

Before the justice, judgment was rendered by default, in favor of the appellees, and against the appellant, for fifty-four dollars and costs, from which judgment the appellant appealed to the court below. In the latter court, [265]*265the appellant appeared and filed an answer in six paragraphs. The appellees demurred to each of the paragraphs of answer, except the first, for the want of sufficient facts therein to constitute a defence to their action, which demurrers were sustained as to the third, fourth, fifth and sixth paragraphs, to each of which decisions the appellant excepted. The demurrer to the second paragraph was overruled.

The first paragraph of the answer was a general denial.

In the second paragraph of its answer, the appellant alleged, in substance, that it was not liable for the goods charged to have been destroyed while in its possession, if so destroyed, because the consignee, by contract with the appellees, the consignors, knew of the shipment of said goods and of the time of their arrival at Monticello, by the usual modes of transmission from Logansport, Indiana, the appellees’ place of business, and Monticello, the consignee’s residence; and that the consignee was absent from Monticello, the place of consignment, at the time the goods would arrive there, by the consignee’s contract; that the appellant, by its agent, made every possible effort to deliver said goods to the consignee, by sending him word by his brother, who agreed to deliver the message, that the goods were there for him; that the appellant’s agent also sent said goods to the consignee’s last place of business, to wit, his father’s residence in Monticello, and then and there offered to deliver them to the consignee by his agent, his father; that, upon failure so to do, the appellant, by its agent, placed said goods in a room in the depot building in Monticello, which was a good, safe, sufficient and secure building, and took the best possible care of said goods until the morning of the 23d day of December, 1872, when the depot building, without any fault of the appellant or its agents, and said goods were entirely destroyed by fire; that, for the past ten years, and ever since the appellant had established an office at Monticello, it had been the appellant’s custom to [266]*266deliver all express goods at the depot in said town, and not to deliver at the consignee’s place of business or residence, of which custom the appellees were well informed and had notice; and the appellant charged the appellees with negligence on their part, in this: in not conveying and receiving the goods, or authorizing the consignee’s agents to receive the same, and by sending said package “ C. O. D.,” and preventing the appellant from delivering the same, unless the charges were paid. Wherefore, etc.

To this second paragraph of answer, the appellees replied by a general denial.

The issues joined were tried by a jury, and a verdict was returned, for the appellees, assessing their damages at fifty-four dollars.

The appellant’s motion for a new trial was overruled, and to this decision the appellant excepted; and the appellant’s motion in arrest of judgment having also been overruled, and its exception saved to this ruling, the court below rendered judgment on the verdict.

In this court, the appellant has properly assigned as errors the several decisions of the court below, in sustaining the appellee’s demurrers to the third, fourth, fifth and sixth paragraphs of answer, and in overruling the appellant’s motion for a new trial, and its motion in arrest of judgment.

The alleged error of the court below, in overruling the appellant’s motion in arrest of judgment, calls in question, to a very limited extent, the sufficiency of the facts stated in appellee’s complaint to constitute a cause of action. As we have seen, this action was commenced before a justice of the peace. In such a case, the statute requires that the plaintiff shall “file with the justice a statement of the grounds of his complaint, or the written instrument which is the foundation of his suit.” 2 R. S. 1876, p. 614, see. 35.

In suits originating before a justice, it is the settled law of this State, that the statement by a plaintiff of “ the [267]*267grounds of his complaint ” will be sufficient, if it will inform the defendant of the nature of the plaintiff’s cause of action, and be so explicit that a judgment in the suit may be used as a bar to another action for the same cause. Milholland v. Pence, 11 Ind. 203; Clark v. Benefiel, 18 Ind. 405; and Powell v. DeHart, 55 Ind. 94. Testing the appellees’ complaint in this case by the law laid down in the cases cited, it seems clear to us, that said complaint was amply sufficient. It clearly informed the appellant of the nature of the appellees’ claim, and it can not be doubted that a judgment in this suit could be used by the appellant as a complete bar to any other suit for the same cause or claim.

It is said in argument by appellant’s counsel in this court, that the appellees’ complaint in this cause is defective and insufficient, because “ no averment is made of the meaning of the term, ‘ C. O. D.’ ” • These letters are by no means cabalistical. They have no occult nor mysterious meaning, as used in appellees’ complaint. In the ordinary commerce of the country, these letters have acquired such a fixed and determinate meaning, that courts and juries, from their general information, will readily understand what is meant thereby when they are used as the appellees have used them in their complaint. If the complaint were defective, for the want of an averment of the meaning of those letters, the defect would be one which could only be reached by a motion to make more specific, and which would certainly be cured by the verdict A motion in arrest of judgment would not reach such a defect in the complaint, if it were conceded to be defective in this particular.

Appellant’s attorney says: “ The general rule is, that a suit against a common carrier for the loss of goods must be in the name of the consignee.” So it is; but, like all other general rules, this one hath its exceptions. Where, as in this case, the goods are marked “ O. O. D.,” the contract of the common carrier, in connection therewith, is [268]

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Bluebook (online)
59 Ind. 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-express-co-v-keefer-ind-1877.