108 Minn. 257 | Minn. | 1909
Plaintiff and appellant gave to the St. Louis Express Company, at St. Louis, Missouri, one sewing machine, crated, and one box, for delivery to the defendant at said St. Louis, to be by it transported over its lines and the lines of its connecting carrier or carriers to Minneapolis, Minnesota, and there delivered to a named consignee.
The aggregate value of said shipment, including said sewing machine and attachments, at the point of shipment, was' $175. The value of the sewing machine and attachments was $50, and the value of the books in the box was $5. In the said tariff, the articles in the box bore the classification of household goods and personal effects, and carried a rate of 94% cents per hundredweight, instead of 63 cents per hundredweight, for books. The articles shipped were lost through what is for present purposes the admitted neglect of defendant. Neither the defendant nor any person or persons employed by of connected with it had, at any time before the same became lost and written claim was made by the plaintiff thereforj any knowledge, information, or belief that the said box contained anything more than books. The marking of said box as containing books was done by the said St. Louis Express Company, and without the knowledge of the said plaintiff, and without direction from him. The trial court found as a matter of fact “that plaintiff, through his agent, fraudulently misrepresented the contents cf the package containing all the household goods except the sewing machine, stating that they were books.” Plaintiff was allowed $55 as damages.
This rule was approved in Bottum v. Charleston, 72 S. C. 375, 51 S. E. 985, 2 L. R. A. (N. S.) 773, 110 Am. St. 610. It was there held that “A misdescription, without fraudulent intent, of a package of pictures as containing glass, in a shipment of household goods, will relieve the carrier from liability for their loss above the value of a package of glass, where the freight rate is much higher on pictures than on glass.” And see cases collected at page 776. So in Savannah v. Collins, supra, it was held that, in an action against a railroad company for the loss of goods shipped by it, defendant’s agent testified that, at the time of the shipment, plaintiff’s husband, with whom the agreement for shipment was made, stated that, if the goods were lost, the company would have to pay him $25. The court charged, in substance, that unless it appeared that both the husband and the agent had authority to make such valuation, and ac
That in some of these cases knowledge on the part of the shipper that his goods were given a rate less than they should have been charged is not material, in view of absence of any necessity to show actual intention to defraud. As opposed, plaintiff refers us to Rice v. Indianapolis, 3 Mo. App. 27 (in which an instruction favorable to this position given at the request of the railroad company was affirmed on an appeal by the railroad company), and to Atchison v. Goetz, 51 Ill. App. 151. It is certain that the authorities rule this case for defendant. Plaintiff was properly limited in damages to the value of the crated machine and to the value of the books shipped.
Affirmed.