86 S.E. 24 | S.C. | 1915
August 24, 1915. The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This was an action to recover the alleged value of $350 for alleged loss of household goods by defendant shipped over its road by the plaintiff. The case was heard before Special Judge C.M. Efird, and a jury, in December, 1914, for York county, and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for $285.40. On motion of defendant, his Honor granted a new trial and set the verdict aside. From this order plaintiff appeals and alleges error on the part of his Honor. This Court will not sustain an appeal from an order granting a new trial unless it can give judgment absolute, but the Court will consider an appeal from an order granting a new trial where the order is based on an error of law. Daughty v. Ry. Co.,
We think that his Honor was in error in ruling as he did during the progress of the trial, and should have allowed the plaintiff to introduce evidence to show what he did in consequence of what defendant's agent told him — that the goods were lost, if he acted on this statement to his injury; and if so, what was done. The defendant had the right to show that it had tendered the goods to plaintiff, as the complaint alleged a failure and refusal to deliver the goods. Under this allegation defendant had the right to show offer, or tender to deliver; and his Honor was in further error in not allowing plaintiff to show conduct on the part of the defendant to estop it from contending that the shipment was delayed and not lost, if defendant's agent made such an emphatic and positive statement to plaintiff, that the shipment was lost and could not or would not be found, that induced plaintiff to act on this assertion, and plaintiff did and procured other goods, then it was for the jury to determine whether plaintiff had been damaged under the particular circumstances.
While it is true "where goods reach their destination in a damaged condition it is the duty of consignee to receive and sell them at the nearest market price, deduct the amount from the value of the goods, and file claim against carrier for the balance, but whether the value of the goods in their damaged condition is so small that it could be probably consumed in the handling, a judgment for their full value is sustained after refusal to charge the above stated doctrine." McGrath Bros. v. C. W.C. Ry.,
The evidence shows that the shipment was secondhand household and kitchen goods, shipped by plaintiff from Lemon Springs, N.C., to Waxhaw, N.C., on November 26, 1913, and from December 1 to December 17, 1913, he was advised by defendant that the shipment was lost. Plaintiff then moved to Rock Hill, S.C. and heard nothing further from the shipment until February 12, 1914. The goods are not such articles of merchandise that can readily find a market at same price. It was for the jury to say if it was of such value as to be worth handling at all, or if it could have been handled at any profit, or whether in handling it the value would have been practically dissipated by the expenses of marketing and disposing of the same. The evidence shows that all of the shipment was secondhand, and had been moved several times, and while of service and value to the plaintiff and served his purposes, it should be for the jury to say whether it is of such value, as when put on the market it could find a purchaser for any more than a nominal or trifling sum, and after deducting expenses of handling and sale it would leave any sum of money that would amount to anything. We think his Honor was in error in his rulings during the progress of the trial, but committed no error in granting a new trial.
Appeal dismissed. *7