138 P. 728 | Cal. | 1914
This is an appeal from a judgment against plaintiff on refusal to amend after demurrer was sustained to her complaint. *113
The judgment was affirmed by the district court of appeal for the first district and a further hearing granted by this court.
The action was to recover $414.35 as damages for the loss of a trunk and its contents delivered at the city of Oakland by plaintiff to defendant, a common carrier, for carriage to her address in the city of Berkeley.
The complaint alleged that plaintiff delivered the trunk to defendant who gave her a receipt therefor upon a printed form; that she did not read the receipt or form or know what was written or printed thereon, except that she read her name written thereon, until long after the loss of the trunk. It is then alleged that there was printed upon the said receipt a statement commencing with the words "Read Conditions of this Contract," and limiting the liability of the defendant for the loss of the trunk and its contents through the negligence of the defendant to the sum of fifty dollars unless otherwise specially agreed in writing and the extra risk paid for. The complaint further alleged: "That the said statement was entirely in fine print, and that each letter of each word thereof, including the said words `Read Conditions of this Contract,' was less than one-sixteenth of an inch in height and less than one-sixteenth of an inch in width; that the plaintiff had no knowledge or notice of, or any reason or cause to know, the terms of the said purported contract or any thereof, or the nature or purpose of the said terms or any thereof, or that said receipt contained or purported to contain the terms of said contract of carriage, or any thereof, until long after the said loss of the said trunk and contents by the defendant."
The demurrer was for want of jurisdiction and want of facts.
It is provided by section
The demurrer to the complaint was sustained on the theory that upon the facts pleaded in the complaint plaintiff must be deemed as matter of law to have had constructive notice of the *114
conditions of limitation in the contract and was bound by them. This conclusion was reached by applying to the facts pleaded the rules laid down in sections
It is conceded by appellant with respect to section
What she contends for however is that under the facts pleaded in the complaint the question of constructive notice was a matter for the jury and not a question for the court as a matter of law.
We think this contention of appellant is correct.
It is true as a general rule, that a shipper or consignor who accepts a bill of lading or receipt containing the terms of a contract of carriage from the carrier without objection assents to it and is bound by its terms whether he has knowledge of them or not under the rule of constructive notice. But we do not think this general rule has any application under section
While citing a number of cases from other jurisdictions to sustain the general rule relied on that knowledge of the terms of a contract is to be imputed as matter of law under the rule of constructive notice from its acceptance by the consignor, it is conceded by respondent that this rule has been departed from in cases where a traveler delivers his baggage to a local express company and receives a receipt or contract embodying terms of limitation in favor of the company; that it is then a question for the jury to say whether the circumstances of the acceptance of the receipt or contract by the traveler were such as to put him on notice of the contents of the receipt. Several cases are cited which are claimed to recognize this departure from the general rule, among others, our own case of Merrill v. PacificTransfer Co.,
As to the Merrill case we deferred referring to it until considering the distinction which respondent assumes it declares as to the application of the section between travelers and other consignors. It not only does not make any such distinction but is authority directly to the proposition that the question whether a consignor, under the section, has either actual or constructive notice of the terms of limitation, is one of fact for the jury, to be determined from all the circumstances of the case.
The judgement is reversed with directions to the trial court to overrule the demurrer to the complaint and allow defendant to answer.
Melvin, J., Henshaw, J., Shaw, J., and Angellotti, J., concurred.