51 Neb. 70 | Neb. | 1897
This action was brought in the district court of Adams county for the value of a horse alleged to have been injured so as to have been rendered worthless on the line of railway of plaintiff in error while in transit between Peoria, Illinois, and Hastings, in this state. There was a verdict against the railroad company in the sum of $650. To reverse the judgment thereon rendered the railroad company has prosecuted this proceeding in error.
The matters in defense will now be separately considered. The contract of shipment provided that in cases where no rate was expressly inserted therein the value of each horse was agreed to be $100, and in this connection was the following language: “And that the above rate of transportation is based upon the agreement that in case of loss or damage, whether resulting from accident or negligence of said railroad company or its servants, said
Plaintiff in error contended by its answer in the district court, as it does in argument in this court, that by the decisions of the courts of Illinois, introduced in evidence, the restriction of the liability of a common carrier to the value fixed in the contract of shipment was enforceable in that state, and consequently should be enforced in this state. In Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co. v. Witty, 32 Neb., 275, there was under consideration very much the same circumstances as are now under consideration, except that there was in that case no averment or proof as to the law of Illinois being different from that of Nebraska with respect to the right of a common carrier, by contract, to limit its liability for negligence. It was held that no such restriction could be made under the laws of this state, and this ruling has been followed and approved in Atchison, T. & S. F. R. Co. v. Lawler, 40 Neb., 350.
In Oscanyan v. Arms Co., 103 U. S., 261, there was involved the right of a Turkish consul to recover a commission agreed to be paid to him for recommending to his government certain supplies. This agreement, not enforceable in the United States, was valid in Turkey, yet the principle of comity was held insufficient to overcome the repugnance with which such a transaction is viewed in this country.
The syllabus of Lemonius v. Mayer, 14 So. Rep. [Miss.], 33, is as follows: “Act March 7, 1882, entitled ‘An act to prohibit the purchase and' sale of “futures” in the state of Mississippi’ (Acts, 1882, p. 140), section 1, made it unlawful to deal in contracts commonly called ‘futures’ ‘in this state,’ and prescribed a punishment for dealers therein. Section 2 provided ‘that no money advanced for the purchase of futures, nor any agreement for the payment of any sum for such purchases, shall be enforced in any court in this state.’ Held, that the contracts between purchasers of ‘futures’ and their brokers made without the state while such statute was in force cannot be enforced in Mississippi, though valid where made.”
In Dammert v. Osborn, 35 N. E. Rep. [N. Y.], 1088, it was held by the New York court of appeals as follows: “Where the courts of this state cannot give effect to testamentary dispositions of personal property in foreign wills without violating the laws or public policy of the state, the property should be remitted to the jurisdiction of the domicile, to the end that it may administer its own laws; but if there is no law or public policy here that forbids the execution of the purpose that the testator had in view, then the courts of this state will give effect to the disposition according to the law under which it was made.”
In Sheldon v. Blanvelt, 7 S. E. Rep. [S. Car.], 593, Blanvelt, a citizen of New York, had executed a general as
In the United States district court of the southern district of New York, in the case of Schulze-Berge v. The Guildhall, 58 Fed. Rep., 796, there was under consideration a stipulation in favor of a carrier entered into at Rotterdam, whereby said carrier was exonerated from liability for negligence in the transportation of certain merchandise to New .York, and it was held that such a stipulation, valid where made, was contrary to the public policy of this country and therefore would not be enforced.
The nuesticn intended to be illustrated by the analogies afforded' by the above quotations is whether or not the restriction of the liability of a common carrier in this case, though valid in Illinois, is illegal or so contrary to the public policy of this state that it should not be enforced on the principle of comity between states.
In Texas & P. R. Co. v. Davis, 2 Tex. App. (Civil Cases), 156, the statutory- inhibition was with reference to restrictive contracts by carriers in that state; hence that case throws no light on the question involved in this.
Affirmed.