113 Ga. 514 | Ga. | 1901
This action was founded on the provisions of the Civil Code, §§ 2317, 2318, which were codified from the act of October 16, 1891, commonly called the “tracing act.” . See Acts of 1890 —91, vol. 1, p. 156. In their petition the plaintiffs alleged facts bringing the case within the sections cited. The “ freight ” involved was a car-load of grapes, consigned to Omaha, Neb., which •the plaintiffs delivered to the defendant at Barnesville,in this State. The bill of lading embraced a special contract, was signed by the ■plaintiffs and an agent of the defendant, and contained a stipulation that the company was to carry the grapes tó the destination indicated, “if on its road, or to deliver to another carrier on the route to said destination, subject in either instance to the conditions below, which are agreed to in consideration of the rate named.” Among the “conditions below” was one that the “several lines [over which the grapes were to be transported] will not be held liable for injury to, or decay of, fruit, vegetables, or melons, or any
In C. & N. W. Railway Co. v. Chapman, 133 Ill. 96, s. c. 23 Am. St. Rep. 587, a case in which there was an express contract, it was held that: “ A common carrier can not arbitrarily fix the value of the goods delivered to him for transportation, and thereby limit his liability in case of loss.” It was also in that case laid down that “if a value be fixed by the carrier, and the contract of shipment is based thereon, the amount thus fixed will ordinarily determine the liability of the carrier.” An examination of the opinion of Chief Justice Shope will show that the idea intended to be conveyed by the words last quoted was that there must be an actual and bona fide agreement as to value between the shipper and the carrier, and
Take our present case. The property delivered to the defendant company, as described in the bill of lading, was: “ 1 car grapes — 2,000 baskets.” The paragraph of the document relied on as embracing an agreement as to value merely stipulated in the most general and comprehensive terms that “the value of fruit shipments under this bill of lading shall be taken at not exceeding $500.00 per car-load; vegetable shipments,$200.00 per car-load; melon shipments, $85.00 per car-load.” Could any fair and reasonable mind, ever reach the conclusion that there was between the plaintiffs and the defendant any agreement at all respecting the value of this particular car-load of grapes, or that there was even a remote intention to make such an agreement ? The bill of lading was evidently printed and prepared for use in any shipment of fruit, vegetables, or melons, and its manifest purpose was to limit liability and not to fix or agree upon values. It limited the value of all “fruit” shipments, whether consisting of grapes, peaches, apples, pears, or other fruits, or of portions of some or all of them. It declared that the value of a car-load of any kind or kinds of fruit should be “ taken at not exceeding $500.00 ” — not that the value of the plaintiffs’ carload of grapes should be fixed at $500.00 or any other specified sum. Surely, further comment as to the nature and purpose of this bill of lading would be superfluous. We find in some of the cases holding that the value was in fact definitely agreed upon (notably that of Hart v. Railroad Co., 112 U. S. 331, in which Mr. Justice Blatchford delivered the opinion quoted from by Mr. Hutchinson, as appears above) that the figures in the bills of lading expressing values had evidently been printed before their actual use, and were not inserted at the time of issuing such bills to shippers. In the case just mentioned, the bill of lading stipulated “that the carrier assumes a liability on the stock to the extent of the following agreed valuation: If horses or mules, not exceeding two hundred dollars ' each. If cattle or cows, not exceeding seventy-five dollars each,” etc., etc. With the utmost respect to the memory of the eminent Justice, this does not, in view of the printed words “if” and “two hundred,” to our minds much resemble a fixed and definite agreement as to the value of the identical horses shipped hy Hart; but much stress was laid on the words “ agreed valuation,” and the con
Judgment in first case affirmed ; in second case, writ of error dismissed.