67 S.E. 332 | N.C. | 1910
The plaintiffs sued to recover the value of goods lost in transportation and the statutory penalty for nonpayment of claim in ninety days. The shipment in which the shortage was discovered was received at South Boston, Va., on 11 July, 1906, from the Stebbins-Lawson-Spraggins Company, at that place, to be carried to the plaintiffs at Tarboro. The initial carrier was the Norfolk and Western Railway Company. The claim in writing for the lost goods was filed 17 March, 1907, the value being $139.31. The shipment seems to have been promptly forwarded, and reached Tarboro without apparent delay. The goods were checked up upon arrival and the shortage discovered. The defendant denied liability, because of the unreasonable delay in filing claim. The (172) bill of lading contained the following provision: "Claims for loss or damage must be made, in writing, to the agent at point of delivery, promptly after arrival of the property, and if delayed for more than thirty days after the delivery of the property, or after due time for the delivery thereof, no carrier hereunder shall be liable in any event." His Honor charged the jury that the thirty-day limit of the bill of lading in which to file claim was void, but the plaintiffs must give notice to the carrier of loss of goods from box in a reasonable time, and that if they should find that the plaintiffs gave notice of the loss within sixty days, this would be in reasonable time; but if they should find that notice of the loss was not given to the agent within sixty days by the plaintiffs, then it would be an unreasonable time, and they should answer the issue "No." The jury answered the issue of indebtedness "No," and judgment was rendered for defendant, and plaintiffs appealed to this Court.
The only error assigned is the charge of the learned trial judge, which we have quoted in the statement of the case. The stipulation of thirty days as the time limit in which the notice of loss, to be available to plaintiff, should be given, was properly held by the trial judge to be unreasonable and void. Mfg. Co. v. R. R.,
No error.
Cited: Forney v. R. R.,