Felmet v. Southern Express Co.

31 S.E. 722 | N.C. | 1898

The plaintiff delivered to the defendant, the Southern Express Company, at Marshall, a package of goods to be transported to a consignee in New York City. The receipt for the package contained the contract of shipment between the parties, and in the same there were conditions which limited the liability of the defendant for loss or damage to the property to its own line. The goods were found to be short, in weight, by the consignee, and this action was brought to recover damages for the loss.

The defendant requested the court to instruct the jury that if the defendant company delivered the goods to the Adams Express Company at Washington, D.C., for the purpose of having them forwarded to their destination, the defendant would not be liable for the loss (501) after the goods were received by the Adams Express Company, unless there was a special contract to that effect, and that the burden of proof was on the plaintiff to show such contract. The court refused to give the instruction.

The question sought to be presented by the defendant's appeal we cannot consider for the reason that it nowhere appears in the statement of the case that there was any evidence tending to show that the goods were delivered by the defendant to the Adams Express Company, a connecting express line; nor is such delivery admitted as a fact in the case. No part of the evidence is sent up with the case, and the only admitted facts were the delivery of the goods at Marshall to the defendant company, the receipt to the plaintiff for the same, and the shortage in the weight of the goods discovered by the assignee in New York.

It is always to be desired that appeals should be heard on their merits, but this cannot be done at the expense of sacrificing important and necessary rules of practice. Instructions of law given by the court to the jury must be founded on some phase of the evidence or on the admitted facts when there is to be an application of the law to facts admitted or found by the jury, and unless there appears in the statement of the case on appeal the admitted facts or the evidence upon which instructions were asked, we cannot tell whether the instructions are merely theoretical propositions of law or not. *354

From what we have said, the second and third exceptions of the defendant need not be considered, for if it should be conceded that the defendant's views of the law, as set out in the instructions to which those exceptions were made, be the correct views, they can avail (502) the defendant nothing. The rulings of his Honor would only be a dissertation on the law, and, even if erroneous, could have no bearing on the case as it is constituted on the appeal. The appellant must show to this Court, that there has been error in the court below, or the judgment of that court must be affirmed; and if error is shown, but the error is harmless, the judgment will not be disturbed.

Affirmed.