120 Va. 71 | Va. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the court.
We have here under review a judgment of the Circuit Court of Craig county in favor of Rebman and Clark against the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company, the defendant below, rendered on demurrer to the evidence.
Plaintiffs’ damages were assessed by the jury at $350, which was less than $5.00 per head for the lambs lost, for which sum the trial court rendered the judgment under review.
1. The main defense pressed in argument is that by the terms of the live stock agreement the liability of the defendant was limited to the $5.00 valuation placed on each of the animals delivered for shipment, which it is said has been discharged from the proceeds of sale of other lambs; but the decision of this court in the' recent case of Norfolk & Western Railway Co. v. Steele, 117 Va. 788, 86 S. E. 124, makes complete answer to that contention. It was there held that, “under a bill of lading fixing a value upon live stock and providing that in no event shall the shipper
If that be the correct rule with respect to damages arising from mere delay in delivery of live stock, with all the more reason should it apply where from the negligent exchange of animals by the carrier there has been a total failure to deliver.
2. The remaining contention is that plaintiffs should be denied a recovery because “they did not present their claim within five days from the time the animals were removed from the cars, or within a reasonable time thereafter.”
If it be conceded that plaintiffs were under obligation to give notice of their demand under the circumstances of this anomalous transaction, the evidence shows that such notice was given without delay as soon as the negligence of the interstate commerce act, which interdicts agreements of defendant which occasioned the loss, was discovered.
Upon both propositions, therefore, the judgment is plainly right and must be affirmed.
Affirmed.