187 A.D. 564 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1919
Appeal from a determination of the Appellate Term, affirming by a divided vote an order of the Municipal Court denying plaintiffs’ motion to strike out the affirmative defense as insufficient in law on the face thereof.
This suit is brought to recover $286.20 damages to a shipment of pears consigned from Rochester, N. Y., to Scranton, Penn., over the line of the defendant’s railroad, as initial carrier. The pears were unreasonably delayed in transit, the car was not properly placed for delivery, and several of the barrels and baskets containing the pears were broken open and the contents crushed and bruised.
The defense is that the suit was barred because not brought within two years. This defense is based upon the allegation that section 3 of the bill of lading had been amended by a supplement to the official classification, so that the section, as amended, read: “ Except in cases where the loss, damage or injury complained of is due to delay or damage while being loaded or unloaded, or damaged in transit by carelessness or negligence, claims must be made in writing to the carrier at the point of delivery or at the point of origin within four months after delivery of the property, or, in case of failure to make delivery, then within four months after a reasonable time for delivery has elapsed. Suits for recovery of claims for loss or damage, notice of which is not required, and which are not made in writing to the carrier within four months as above specified, shall be • instituted only within two years after delivery of the property, or, in case of failure to make delivery, then within two years after a reasonable time for delivery has elapsed. No claims not in suit will be paid after the lapse of two years as above, unless made in writing to the carrier within four months as above specified.”
This bill of lading provision was promulgated pursuant to the provision of the first Cummins Amendment to the Inter
It will be noted that both the Cummins Amendment and the bill of lading provision make a double classification of claims, to wit, (1) those for loss due to delay or damage while being loaded or unloaded, or damaged in transit, which we will call transit claims; and (2) those for loss otherwise sustained, which we will call non-transit claims. The Cummins Amendment permitted the carrier to require as a condition precedent to recovery the filing of a non-transit claim within four months, and in such cases to require suit to be instituted within two years. In the case of transit claims it forbade the carrier to require the filing of a claim as a condition precedent to recovery but authorized a requirement that suit be instituted within two years.
In the bill of lading provision adopted under the authority of the amendment, we find first the requirement for the filing of a claim in non-transit cases within four months, which is a condition precedent to recovery. No provision whatever is made limiting the time within which suit may be instituted in the case of non-transit losses where claims are filed. The next sentence has for its purpose the fixing of a two-year hmitation for the institution of suit in transit cases, and prescribes the period-as two years. It reads:' “ Suits for recovery of claims for loss or damage, notice of which is not required, and which are not made in writing to the carrier within four months as above specified, shall be instituted only within two years,” etc. It is obvious that the claim in
The determination of the Appellate Term should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Smith and Page, JJ., concurred.
Determination affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.