21 Wis. 582 | Wis. | 1867
Lead Opinion
Since this case comes up on a demurrer to the complaint, it may be well to give the principal allegations of the complaint, to see if they show a cause of action against the defendant.
It is alleged in the complaint that the several railroad companies therein mentioned formed one continuous and connecting line of road for the transportation of passengers and baggage -from the city of Milwaukee to the city of New York; that
It appears to us that there is not enough set forth to show that the defendant is liable for the value of the articles lost. According to our understanding of the matter, the ticket and check given by the Chicago and Milwaukee Railway Company imply a special undertaking by that company to safely transport and carry, or cause to be safely transported and carried, the plaintiff and her baggage over the roads mentioned in the complaint, from Milwaukee to the city of New York. This, we think, must in legal contemplation be the nature and extent of the contract entered into and assumed by that company when it sold the plaintiff the through ticket, gave a through check for the trunk, and received the fare for the entire route. This is the doctrine of the case of the Illinois Central R. R. Company v. Copeland, 24 Ill., 332, and we are disposed to follow it as laying down á safe, sound and reasonable rule on this subject. In the case of Peet v. Chicago & Northwestern R. R. Co., 19 Wis., 118, this court affirmed an analogous principle, by holding that where a railroad company contracted as a carrier to transport goods for the whole line, it became liable for any injury which might happen to them beyond the terminus of its own road, while under the control of other carriers. So here. The Chicago and Milwaukee company received the whole passage money from Milwaukee to New York city — fare which covered the carriage of both the plaintiff and her baggage safely to the latter city. It assumed to give a through check for the trunk, and a through ticket which entitled the holder to a first class seat in the cars passing over the successive roads. It seems to us, therefore, perfectly reasonable and proper to hold that company to the full meas-
It seems to have been supposed that the defendant company, rendered itself liable for the loss in this case, because at Harrisburgh it took the baggage check originally given by the Chicago & Milwaukee company, and gave its own through check for the trunk to New York, by the way of Philadelphia. But this exchange was made simply in accordance with the terms of the contract entered into at Milwaukee. By that contract, the plaintiff had the option of using her ticket over the “ Allentown Line,” or to go by the way of Philadelphia. True, her trunk had been checked by the way of Allentown ;
In anticipation that we might hold, upon the facts stated in the complaint, that the defendant contracted to carry the plaintiff’s trunk beyond its own road to the city of New York, the counsel for the appellant contends that the defendant had no power to make such a contract. This objection, that a railroad company cannot incur liability beyond its own route by an express contract, is overruled by what has been already said in this opinion, as well as by what (if not expressly) is at least by implication decided in Peet v. Chicago & Northwestern R. R. Co., supra. It is unnecessary to enter upon any discussion of this question at this time. The remarks already made dispose of this appeal. My own opinion, however, is, that the great weight of authority, not only in England but in this country, holds that it is competent for a railroad company to contract for the transportation of passengers and goods beyond the terminus of its road, and I am disposed to follow these decisions. But I leave the discussion here for the present.
It follows from the views we have expressed, that the order of the circuit court overruling the demurrer to the complaint must be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the opinion that the defendant cor
By the Court. — Order reversed, and cause remanded.