88 N.J.L. 254 | N.J. | 1915
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The suit was for injury to and loss of household goods and wearing apparel delivered by plaintiffs to defendant company, at Bayonne, New Jersey, for carriage to Englewood, New Jersey, where plaintiffs and their family
First, that the trial court should have nonsuited on the ground that there was no evidence that the goods claimed to have been lost were ever in the box, nor anything to justify the inference that nothing had been removed from the box after packing and before delivery to defendant; the box having been intrusted to a local expressman for such delivery. A sufficient answer is that no such point was made at the trial. Van Alstyne v. Franklin Council, 69 N. J. L. 672; Thornton v. Fay, 81 Id. 427; McCloud v. Illinois Surety Co., 83 Id. 572; Osborn v. Gartner, 75 Id. 224; Corcia v. Giuliano, 85 Id. 369; Chess v. Vockroth, 75 Id. 665, 676. Apart from this, there was evidence that the goods alleged to be lost had been in the box when packed, and the presumption would be against the hypothesis that the box had been opened while under the charge of the local expressman, especially as defendant receipted for it “in apparent good order.”
The next point' is that the trial court refused to nonsuit and to find for defendant on the ground that there was no evidence that the goods were lost while defendant had the custody of the box. As to this the evidence was meagre but we think sufficient to raise a question of fact. Defendant receipted for the box in apparent good order. The proof showed that it went to Englewood, was found there by the
The last point is that the contents of the box were misrepresented as “blankets” and a lower rate thereby secured. We find no evidence that the shipper knew of any difference in the rates. Such difference was testified to, but the classification containing the rate appears to have been that of the interstate commerce commission, and was not notice to the shipper in an intrastate case. Ho clause in the bill of lading has been pointed out either as limiting liability or warranting the character of the contents of the box for the purpose of fixing a rate. The printed part of the bill of lading says, “contents and condition of contents of package unknown” and
The judgment will be affirmed.
For affirmance—The Chancellor, Chief Justice, Garrison, Swayze, Parker, Mtnturn, Kata sc h, Yredenburgh, White, Terhtjne, Heppenheimer, Williams, Taylor, JJ. 13.
For, reversal—None.