15 W. Va. 812 | W. Va. | 1879
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This case presents no difficulty. If we were to exclude from consideration the plaintiff’s evidence, which was objected to by the defendant’s counsel on the trial, and all of the plaintiff’s evidence which was in conflict with the defendant’s evidence, the judgment of the municipal court would still be clearly right. Such a mode of considering the evidence by this Court would of course as a general rule be unjust to the plaintiff; but in this case it would make no difference, for on the admitted facts in this case the defendant was responsible for the full value of the diamond it lost. While perhaps a contract,
But really the Pennsylvania doctrine, that the effect
If the common carrier, as in the case before us, fails to prove how the loss occurred, he fails to bring himself within any common law exemption from responsibility, or any possible exemption provided for in any special contract. To require more of the consignor in order to make out a grima facie case on his part, than that he delivered the goods to the common carrier, and he failed to deliver them according to his contract to the consignee, would be practically to relieve the common carrier from all responsibility; for in ninety-nine out of a hundred cases it would be in the nature of things impossible for the consignor to prove how the loss of the goods occurred.
We have thus far discussed the case as if there was a special contract, for the sake of argument, but in point
To reach a correct conclusion on this question, it is necessary to keep in view the rights conferred in such a case by the common law on the consignor. If we fail to do this, we are liable to err in deciding Avhether he has assented to waive these rights. The duties of the private and common carrier, as well as their responsibilities, and the rights of the consignor against them were strikingly different by the common law. The private carrier has a right to carry for whom and on whatever terms he pleases; and if the consignor does not assent to any terms which the private carrier chooses to prescribe, he is under no obligation to carry his goods. Indeed he may arbitrarily refuse to carry them at all for the consignor. The consignor has no right to complain though he refuses to carry his goods unless he will assent to unreasonable terms prescribed by the private carrier, or because he arbitrarily refuses to carry them at all on any terms. It must therefore follow as a matter of course, that if the consignor in any manner has acquired knowledge of the terms, on which alone a private carrier will transport his goods, and having this knowledge delivers his goods to him to be transported, he thereby agrees to the terms of transportation which the private carrier has prescribed. The law would necessarily imply a contract on these terms, though nothing was said by the parties at the time of the terms on which the goods were to be transported,
As the consignor has a right to have his goods transported by the common carrier on reasonable terms, and .a right to require that the common carrier should deliver them safely to the consignee, unless he is prevented from so doing by the act of God or the public enemy, unless he agrees that the common carrier may be exempted from this obligation in certain contingencies agreed upon by .the parties, it follows that, if he pays the price of trans
If the common carrier means to insist that in transporting these goods for the consignor he means to insist on the modifications of his common law responsibilities, mentioned in his public advertisement, he should tell the consignor so at the time the goods are offered for-transportation. The consignor then could accept his-terms or decline to have the goods transported, or if he deemed the terms on which the common carrier proposed to transport them unreasonable, he could insist that they should be transported by the common carrier on reasonable terms, and if he refused, he could sue him, and the-courts would have to determine whether the common carrier had refused to transport the goods without a reasonable excuse. But if instead 'of informing the con
I conclude therefore that if the common carrier has advertised publicly that he will transport no goods except upon condition that his common law responsibilities are modified in a certain manner, and the consignor reads such advertisement, and knowing its terms applies to have his goods transported, and pays the price demanded by the common carrier, and nothing is said at the time about the responsibilities of the common carrier, he will be subject to all his common law responsibilities, and the consignor cannot be considered as having assented to his advertised terms of transportation, though he knew them, but the common carrier must be inferred to have receded from his advertised terms, and from his silence when he accepted the goods for transportation he must be inferred to have assented to transport them and to hold himself subject to all his common law responsibilities.
The English courts, apparently ignoring the acknowledged difference between a private carrier and a common carrier, decided not only that a common carrier might modify his common law responsibilities to any extent he chose by express contract, but that if he gave public notice of his modifying or even relieving him.self entirely from these responsibilities, that a consignor, who had read such public notice, became bound thereby, and if he transported goods, without he had an understanding to that effect, he could not hold the common carrier to his common law responsibilities, and that he must be held to have ássented to the terms of transportation of which the common carrier had given public notice, and of which he knew. See Walker v. Y. & N. M. Railway Company, 2 El. & Bl. (75, Eng. C. L. B,.) 750; Leeson v. Holt, 1 Stark. 186, (2 Eng. C. L. R. 249); Lord Abinger’s opinion in Walker et al. v. Jackson et al., 10 M. & W. 173.
The extent, to which these modern English cases went in holding that a common carrier might modify to any
The extent, to which these English cases were followed in America, so far as they authorized common carriers by special contract to dispense with or modify their common law liabilities, when the goods were lost by the negligence of them or their servants, was also pointed out in the case of Maslin v. The B. & O. R. R. Co., 14 W. Va. 180. It was in that case shown that the English decisions were very generally repudiated in America. The English decisions too, as above stated, with reference to the implication of a contract to modify the common law responsibilities of a common carrier also received some countenance from decisions and dicta of judges in a few cases in America. See Singleton v. Hilliard & Brooks 1 Strob. 214; Laing v. Colder, 8 Barr 484; Ordorf v. Adams Express Co., 3 Bush 194; Camden & Amboy Railroad Co., v. Baldauf, 16 Pa. St. 67; Brown v. Eastern Railroad Co., 11 Cush. 99. But the great weight of American authorities is opposed to the views of the English courts on this point, and is in accord with the views I have expressed above. See Steel and Burgess v. Townsend, 37 Ala. 247; The Farmers and Merchants Bank
Whether a contract to modify a common carrier’s responsibilities can be implied from the acceptance by a consignor or passenger of a receipt or bill of lading, a ticket or check, or other writing which purported by what was written in it or on it, has been differently decided according to the varying circumstances under which it was accepted. See Rea v. Hogan, 12 B. Mon. 63; Burgess v. Townsend, 37 Ala. 347; Brown v. The Eastern Railroad Co., 11 Cush. 97; Falvery v. Northern Transportation Co., 15 Wis. 129; Blossom v. Dodd, 43 N. Y. 267; Orndorf v. Adams Express Co., 3 Bush 194; Belger v. Dinsmore, 51 N. Y. 166; The Adams Express Co. v. Stettaners, 61 Ill. 184; Wescott v. Fargo, 61 N. Y. 542 The Michigan Southern & Northern Indiana Railroad Co. v. Heaton, 37 Ind. 449.
But we need not consider what -would be the effect of the plaintiff’s accepting in this case a receipt in the form of the printed receipt used by the defendant as agent, as no receipt was received by the plaintiff or tendered by the defendant. The fact, that the plaintiff had frequently seen the printed form of receipt used by the defendant, and knew its contents, could of course have no more'effect than his seeing and knowing the contents of a public advertisement of the defendant, setting out the terms and conditions on which the defendant would transport goods to be those specified in this receipt. And had this been the case, we have seen no special contract modifying in any manner the defendant’s com- ' mon law reponsibilities could have been implied.
The judgment of the municipal court of Wheeling in this case must therefore be affirmed ; and the defendant in error must recover of the plaintiff in error his costs in this Court expended, and damages according to law.
Judgment Affirmed.