157 N.Y.S. 177 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1916
Lead Opinion
The action was brought to recover $7,000, as damages for the defendant’s failure to deliver a wooden box weighing 200 pounds, containing sketches, drawings, notes, etc., valued at that amount, alleged to have been delivered to the defendant for shipment from Portsmouth, N. H., to New York city. The fact is not disputed that the box in question was delivered to the defendant as a common carrier, and that it failed to deliver the same either to the consignee or to the plaintiff. At the conclusion of the trial the court held that the plaintiff’s recovery must be limited -- irrespective of the value of the contents of the box — to the sum of twenty dollars by reason of a provision in the bill of lading given by the defendant, which in case of loss prohibited a recovery in excess of ten dollars on each 100 pounds. Judgment was accordingly entered in plaintiff’s favor for that sum, from which she appeals.
There is little or no conflict in the evidence as to the material facts involved. In September, 1911, the plaintiff, who resided in New York city, was at her father’s home in Portsmouth, N. H., and as she was about to return to her home, she pre
If the box were shipped under the bill of lading then the decision of the trial court is undoubtedly correct. (Pierce Co. v. Wells, Fargo & Co., 236 U. S. 278.) Indeed, this is not disputed by the appellant. She, however, insists, and a recovery is claimed upon that ground, that the missing box was not covered by the bill of lading. The bill of lading specifies fif
After a careful consideration of the record I am unable to find any evidence whatever to sustain the finding, unless it be the possible similarity of the figures. The agent who made out the bill of lading is no longer in the employ of the defendant and was not produced by either party, and the plaintiff’s father died some time before the trial of the action. The witnesses who handled the bill when the shipment was made and delivered were unable to state whether or not the alteration was then upon it, and the possible similarity of the figures is not, in my opinion, sufficient to support a finding that the alteration was made by the same person who made out the body of the. bill of lading, and before the same was delivered. But assuming that the possible similarity of the figures—taken in connection with the making and delivery of the bill of lading — is sufficient to sustain such finding, I do not think it aids the appellant, since no inference, either favorable or unfavorable to her, can be drawn from the unexplained fact that a line had been drawn through the figure 6 and the figure 5 inserted. The determination of the question presented must, in any event, be predicated upon the fact that only five boxes were enumerated in the bill of lading, entirely irrespective of the alteration. If this be true, then the plaintiff is in this situation—she delivered six boxes to the defendant for shipment and it billed and delivered only five. It is from this fact, and this fact alone, that she claims, as she must, that the missing box was either intentionally excluded from the shipment or lost by the defendant before the bill of lading was made out, and that it only covered five of the boxes actually delivered. There is no evidence in the record to show that the missing box was not in
The defendant’s schedule of rates, as we have already seen, varied according to the nature and value of the.shipment and there is no evidence that anything was ever done to forward this box, unless it was covered by the bill of lading, which concededly covered all the rest of the goods shipped. Unless, therefore, this box was shipped under and subject to the terms of the bill of lading given, it was never shipped at all, and so far as the record shows, no contract or negotiations for its shipment were entered into. Upon this evidence, or lack of it, the trial court found that the bill of lading was intended to cover all the goods delivered to the defendant, including the missing box, which was shipped subject to its terms, and I am unable to see how a different decision could have been reached. The most plausible theory advanced by the plaintiff is that the box was lost between the time when it was delivered to the defendant and the time when the bill of lading was signed; that the bill of lading was made out from the so-called bill of lading which she prepared, showing six boxes, which was changed to five when the boxes, then in the possession of the railroad company, were counted. Upon that theory it is possi
Plaintiff also suggests another theory, inconsistent with the one just referred to, that her father may have intentionahy excluded this box from the rest of the shipment. But this theory is based, like the other one, not upon evidence, but upon conjecture. The so-called bill of lading made out by the plaintiff was not produced or accounted for, although it appeared from her testimony that it was in her possession about the time the goods were delivered in New York. There is not a particle of evidence as to whether the lost box was with the rest of the goods when the bill of lading was made out and signed, or as to what transpired between plaintiff’s father and the agent at that time.
While the theories suggested by the plaintiff may present a possible explanation for the lost box, they are no more persuasive than another which might be suggested, viz., that defendant’s agent, finding that one of the six boxes was a paper box, containing only newspapers, decided it ought not to be classed with the five wooden boxes, containing household goods, and for that reason altered the bill of lading, and either neglected to list the paper box elsewhere on the bill, or tied it up with some of the other articles, some of which were only roughly fastened together.
I am of the opinion that the judgment is right and should be affirmed, with costs.
So much of the finding of fact No. XV as finds that the defendant’s agent inserted in the bill of lading “ an item reading 5 X boxes H. H. G-.” is reversed on the ground that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the same, and so much of the finding of fact No. XI in the decision as finds that the defendant’s agent inserted in the bill of lading “ an item 5 ^ H. H. Gr.” is also reversed for a similar reason.
Clarke, P. J., and Scott, J., concurred; Laughhn and Page, JJ., dissented.
Since amd. by 38 TJ. S. Stat. at Large, 1196, 1197. chap. 176.—[Rep.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent. Six boxes were delivered to the railroad company for shipment. It only shipped and delivered five to the plaintiff. The failure of the defendant to deliver to plaintiff all the boxes delivered to it for shipment is prima facie evidence that what was not delivered was lost through its negligence; and as
Laughlin, J., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs. Order to be settled on notice.