21 Pa. Super. 583 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1902
Opinion by
The plaintiff brought this suit against the defendant to recover the value of certain articles of wearing apparel and an embroidered table centerpiece of her own, and also the value of a dress, or gown, belonging to her mother, all of which were in the plaintiff’s dress suit case at the time of its loss. After suit brought, the plaintiff accepted payment for all of her claim except the embroidered table centerpiece and the dress belonging to her mother; the company denied any liability for the loss of the latter articles. The plaintiff had a regular ticket, duly issued and paid for, and became a passenger of the defendant railroad company from Wilkes-Barre to New Milford, and received from the agent of the company a check for her dress suit case which contained the articles named. When she arrived at her destination the dress suit case could not be found, and it never was delivered to her. The defense to the action is that a table centerpiece is not an article of personal baggage for which a passenger may recover in case of loss while it is in the custody of the carrier, and that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover the value of the dress, or gown, which was not her personal property. The act of April 11,1867, provides that, “ each passenger upon a railroad shall have the right to have carried in the car, or place provided for that purpose in the train in which he or she may be a passenger, his or her personal clothing, not exceeding, inclusive of the trunk or box in which it may be contained, one hundred pounds in weight, and three hundred dollars in value.” It is conceded in this case that a fair value of the table centerpiece was $10.00, and that of the dress was $50.00; that the defendant had no notice of the fact that these items of property were carried by the plaintiff as baggage; that her mother did not accompany her on the train; and "that the dress belonging to the mother was not intended for the plaintiff’s personal use. The word, bag
The assignments of error are overruled, and the judgment is affirmed.