223 F. 1018 | E.D. Mich. | 1915
On June 3, 1913, the intervening petitioner, then residing in Chicago, Ill., employed the Bristol Express Company of that city to take two packages of goods for him to the depot of the Pere Marquette Railroad Company in Chicago, for shipment to St. Louis, Mich. The express company was authorized by the intervening petitioner to pay the freight charges on this shipment, but was not authorized by him to declare the valuation of the goods for the purpose of shipment, or to sign any release of the common carrier’s liability in respect to the shipment. The agent of the express company took the goods to the Pere Marquette depot in Chicago and shipped them as directed, signing a shipping order and procuring a bill of lading from the railroad, and signing also a “household goods release,” declaring that the value of this shipment did not exceed $10 per hundredweight. The agent of the receivers of the Pere Marquette Railroad Company, receiving such shipment, had no knowledge of any lack of authority on the part of the agent of the intervening petitioner to sign this household goods release.
This shipment was properly classed as household goods, and the rate of 37 cents per hundredweight assessed and paid thereon was assessed in accordance with the tariff of the receivers of the Pere Marquette Railroad Company didy published and on file with the Inter - state Commerce Commission. If the agent of the shipper had not signed the household goods release above mentioned, a late would have been, assessed upon the shipment equal lo 114 times the rate that was assessed; such increased rate being duly published and on file with (he Interstate Commerce Commission and assessed on household goods in all eases where the aforesaid releases were not signed.
When this shipment arrived at destination, a package described on the bill of lading as “one crate,” weighing 100 pounds, and which the inter veiling petitioner now claims to have been worth $141.50, was missing, and the receivers of the Pere Marquette Railroad Company have never delivered the same to the intervening petitioner. The issue in this case is as to the validity of the household goods release above described, assuming to limit the amount of recovery by the shipper,
. In the O’Connor Case a transfer company in Minneapolis was employed by the plaintiff to take her goods to a railroad station and ship them. The transfer company signed an agreement declaring the value of the shipment to be $10 per hundredweight. The goods were destroyed in transit, and plaintiff sued for a sum much in excess of the declared valuation. The court said:
“At the trial the plaintiff testified she did not know that there had been any valuation of her goods, as the agent of the Boyd Company in soliciting the shipment had stated that it had a through car, but said nothing to her about' shipping her effects as household goods, and she understood that they were to be shipped as a,separate consignment. She testified that she had stated to the transfer company that her goods were new, and, as she had no insurance, she was willing to pay the regular rates. * * * But the transfer company had been intrusted with goods to be shipped by railway, and, nothing to the contrary appearing, the carrier had the right to assume that the transfer company could agree upon terms of the shipment, some of which were embodied in the tariff. The carrier was not bound by her pri*1021 vate instructions or limitation on the authority of the transfer company, whether it be treated as agent or forwarder. If there was any undervaluation, wrongful classification, or violation of her instructions, resulting in damage,- the plaintiff has her remedy against that company.”
This decision in my opinion controls the case at bar. An order will he entered authorizing the receivers of the Pere Marquette Railroad Company to pay the intervening petitioner $10.37 in satisfaction of liis claim; such payment being based on the declared value of the portion of the shipment lost, plus the freight charges prepaid on that portion.