32 Fla. 77 | Fla. | 1893
The appellee sued the appellant in assumpsit in the -Circuit Court for St. Johns county, the declaration being as follows: “For that the plaintiff, at the defendant's request, on or about the oth day of December, A. D. 1885, delivered to the defendant, then being a common carrier of passengers and their baggage for hire, and for which baggage the defendant gave to the plaintiff a receipt therefor in the form of a metal check, the plaintiff being a passenger for hire at the time from Jacksonville, Fla., to St. Augustine, Fla., on a regular passenger train of the defendant, baggage of the plaintiff to be taken care of and safely and securely carried by the defendant as such common carrier from Jacksonville, Fla., to St. Augustine, Fla., and then to be delivered by the defendant to the plaintiff for reward in that behalf; yet the defendant did not take care of and safely and securely carry and deliver the said baggage or any part thereof for the plaintiff, but through negligence and want of care and skill, failed to carry and deliver the same, to the plaintiff’ s damage of $300, and therefore he brings suit.” The bill of particulars attached to the declaration, as an exhibition of the contents of the lost trunk, showed that it contained chiefly the wearing apparel of the wife and child of plaintiff. To this declaration the defendant pleaded: 1st. Non-assumpsit. 2d. Not guilty. The trial resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of $167.24, inclusive of costs. From this judgment the defendant appeals.
The errors assigned present practically but one point for decision. The suit is brought in the name of Henry Mitchell and is in form, we think, ex contractu, for the breach by the defendant railway company o
Our statute (sec. 6, p. 754, McClellan’s Digest, sec. 2071. Rev. Stat.), while it permits the separate and independent ownership by the wife of all kinds of property, real and personal, expressly provides that her property shall remain in the care and management of her husband. In this case the proof shows that while the wife, with her baggage, was traveling over the defendant’s road in the company and under the care of her husband, the defendant carrier contracted with the husband, he paying the fares therefor, to carry him and his wife and. their baggage, and their baggage safely to deliver; they have failed to comply with their contract in not carrying and delivering the trunk of the wife; under these circumstances the husband has such a special ownership in the lost trunk and its contents as authorizes him to maintain the action, as it has been instituted, in his own name alone. From this view of the case, there was no error in the instructions given to the jury, and none in the refusal of those discarded. From the proofs we do not think the damages found by the jury were excessive.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.