The defendant is a common carrier, running a line of steamships between Italy and the United 'States. The plaintiff, who is a dentist,
Even if the act was thus committed, the defendant corporation was liable for its consequences. A common carrier of passengers
The case is quite different from Cohen v. Frost (2 Duer, 335, 340), where the trunk of a steerage passenger had been taken by him into the steerage, placed under his bed and fastened with ropes to his berth — all the circumstances indicating, in the opinion of the court, that he relied upon his own care and vigilance to protect him against its loss. The ropes were cut at night and the trunk was stolen by some person unknown, and it was held that the passenger could not recover against the vessel owners, because the trunk was never placed in their charge or custody as common carriers. The case would be more analogous to that before us if it had appeared that an officer of the ship had entered the steerage, withdrawn the trunk from under the plaintiff’s berth and cast it into the ocean.
No doubt, in the case at bar, the plaintiff by electing to keep his valise on the ship’s deck assumed the risk of its being washed overboard by the waves or of its sliding into the sea in consequence of the motion of the vessel. It may well be that under the circumstances his action relieved the steamship company of all responsibility for mere negligence in respect to this piece of baggage. As a common carrier, however, it still remained bound by its undertaking to protect the passenger against any active misconduct on the part of its servants; and I think it clear, as I have already intimated, that the act of the second captain in throwing the valise overboard constituted such misconduct.
I advise an affirmance of this judgment.
Present—-Bartlett, Woodward, Hirsohberq-, Jenks and Hooker, JJ.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.
