237 Mass. 580 | Mass. | 1921
This is an action of contract to recover $259.17, with interest from August 20, 1917, and is before this court on an appeal from the Appellate Division of the Municipal Court of the City of Boston.
A concise statement qf the facts, as shown by the reported testimony and agreed facts, is as follows: On August 20, 1917, the plaintiff made a signed written application to the defendant for a foreign cable transfer of money to his sister at Erivan, Russia. The defendant received from the plaintiff $250, which was the then equivalent of eleven hundred and thirty-six Russian rubles, and $9.17 for the expenses and charges of the transfer, — a total of $259.17, for which the defendant gave its receipt to the plaintiff. The application and receipt contained the following provision: “It is understood and agreed that this transfer is to be made without responsibility on the part of the American Express Company or its correspondents, for any loss occasioned by errors or delays in the transmission of the message by telegraph or cable
The sister of the plaintiff, the payee named in the money order, testified that she had never received the money; that about September 1, 1917, she received a cablegram from the plaintiff notifying her of the transmission of the money to her; that she visited various banks in Erivan in an effort to get the money but was unsuccessful; that about May 1, 1918, she fled from Erivan; that she wrote four times to her brother before leaving Erivan.
Erom the admitted facts, it indisputably appears that the plaintiff knew that the defendant did not undertake itself through its own agents to deliver the purchased rubles, but did agree to transfer them through corresponding sub-agents to the payee atj the place of destination. There is no evidence or claim that the selected sub-agents in Russia were not in every way suitable persons to receive and transmit the money, and there is evidence that the defendant transferred the money of the plaintiff to the sub-agent in Petrograd, that that agent in turn transferred the money to Odessa, and that the money has not been returned as undelivered to the plaintiff.
In these circumstances the plaintiff was not entitled to his first and second requests for rulings, that "On all the evidence, the plaintiff is entitled to recover under his first count, [and] . . . under his second count.” Darling v. Stanwood, 14 Allen, 504, 507. Dorchester & Milton Bank v. New England Bank, 1 Cush. 177. Britton v. Niccolls, 104 U. S. 757. Katcher v. American Express Co. 94 N. J. L. 165.
The agreement above set forth exonerating the defendant “for any loss occasioned by errors or delays ... or for the acts or omissions of the correspondents or agencies necessarily employed ... in the transfer of this money, all risks for which are assumed by the sender,” upon the evidence precludes any recovery by the
The requests numbered 4, 5, 6 and 7 are not applicable to the facts in evidence, and were denied rightly.
Order dismissing report affirmed.