73 N.Y. 351 | NY | 1878
The decision of this court in the recent
case of The Germania Fire Ins. Co. v. The Memphis and Charleston R. R. Co. (72 N. Y., 90) is decisive in this case that the receipt or bill of lading delivered to the plaintiff is to be regarded as the contract between the parties, instead of the parol agreement alleged to have been made previously, but on the same day, between the plaintiff and the person ha charge representing the agent. The decision in Bostwich v. The Baltimore and Ohio R. R. Co. (45 N. Y., 712) was not
In this case the receipt was made immediately upon the receipt of the property, and delivered very soon after, the intervening time being while the plaintiff was getting his team preparatory to starting home. By accepting the contract without objection, the other party had a right to assume that he assented to its terms, and the fact of not reading it cannot be interposed to prevent the legal effect of the transaction. (Long v. N. Y. C. R. R. Co., 50 N. Y., 76; Belger v. Dinsmore, 51 id., 166; Steers v. L., N. Y and Phil. S. S. Co., 57 id., 1; Maghee v. C. and A. R. R. Trans. Co., 45 id., 514.) It appears that in this case the plaintiff did in fact read the paper on the next day, and knew and understood its contents. If he was not satisfied with its terms, he had then abundant opportunity to reclaim his property or insist upon a modification of its provisions, but he did neither. If he relied upon the statement of the agent, that the property would be shipped within two weeks, it must have been upon faith in the opinion of the agent, and not as a binding contract with
Another embarrassment is that the refusal to the several requests to charge which were intended to present the point as to the binding force of the two contracts was excepted to in such a general form that it is doubtful whether in strictness it is available in this court. If the trial judge had ignored the parol agreement, the verdict could not be disturbed unless the case is destitute of any evidence to sustain the finding of negligence, because the defendant is liable if the injury was produced by its negligence. Nor is it necessary to establish gross negligence as the General Term seems to have supposed. A want of ordinary care by a carrier, if it causes injury, is sufficient.
We think that there must be a new trial. The charge of the judge that the parol contract was the contract between the parties may have had a material influence upon the jury, upon the question of negligence, and although the exception to the request is not sufficiently specific, the same question was presented d uring the trial, and an exception properly taken. If an
The judgment must be reversed, and a new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.
All concur, except Allen, J., absent, and Andrews, J., not sitting.
Judgment reversed.