25 Ind. 492 | Ind. | 1865
Fletcher and Sharpe, who were bankers at Indianapolis, sued the appellant for the loss of a package of paper money which the latter undertook to carry from Indianapolis to Areola, Illinois, and deliver to one J. O. Riley, in person. It so appears by a receipt given for the package, a copy of which is made part of the complaint. The complaint is in two paragraphs, in the usual form as against a common carrier, the first charging a loss by negligence, and the second that the package was carelessly delivered to another person than Riley, and thereby lost. It is alleged in both paragraphs that the defendant was a foreign corporation, and a common carrier of goods, money, &c. It is not alleged that it had complied with the provisions of our statute concerning express companies. 1 G-. & H., § 2, p. 327. But no question arises as to that.
The answer was, 1. The general denial. 2. That the agent of the express company at Areola was also the operator of the telegraph line communicating with Indianapolis, and that a person pretending to be J. O. Riley dispatched through said operator to the plaintiffs, a telegram requesting them to send him $1,900 by express; that in due time the same agent received by express a package purporting to contain valuables, addressed to J. O. Riley, whereupon the same person who had dispatched the telegram demanded said package, and it was thereupon delivered to him, and that this was the same grievance mentioned in tbq complaint. 3. That upon the arrival of the package at Areola, a person presented himself claiming to be J. O. Riley and demanded the
The paragraphs are the same in legal effect, and were, in \^our opinion, not good. The express undertaking of the appellant was to deliver the package to J. O. Riley in person. The utmost that the answer alleged was that the delivery was to another person, who pretended to be Riley. t He identified himself merely as having so pretended on the Í' day before, fey transmitting a telegram in Riley’s name. This was no better evidence that his name was Riley than if he had so stated to the express agent, or any third person. That the package had been sent in response to a telegram purporting to be from J. O. Riley, simply proved that Riley had credit, or some arrangement with the plaintiffs to furnish him money, and that the package was sent to him, not that he was the person who-sent the dispatch, or that any man pretending to be him was to receive it. The electric fluid was not capable of transmitting the man’s autograph, so that the plaintiffs could have an opportunity of detecting an imposition. This the defendant was bound to know, and should have acted accordingly. The failure to act with proper caution was such negligence as clearly rendered the defendant liable for its consequences, even though its liability be limited to that of a forwarder, as was attempted to be done by the receipt given. That liability holds the defendant to ordinary diligence, that is, such care as every prudent man commonly takes of his own property. The payment of $1,900 of a man’s own money to a stranger, without requiring him to identify himself as the person
Without considering whether the facts pleaded in the second and third paragraphs of the answer would have been admissible in evidence under the general denial, we are of opinion that those paragraphs were justly held bad on demurrer. The cases cited in the argument for the appellant, being cases where payment had been made on forged orders, and it was held that money thus paid to an innocent party could not be recovered back unless notice of the forgery had been given on the same day, we do not deem applicable to a case like this. The reason upon which those decisions rest does not exist here.
The judgment is affirmed, with two per cent, damages and costs.