78 Pa. Super. 486 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1922
Opinion by
On July 30, 1917, the plaintiff company delivered to the defendant a package of books consigned to the Keystone Publishing Company, San Francisco, California. The initial carrier’s line did not extend to San Francisco and delivery was therefore made to a connecting carrier. The books arrived in San Francisco, August 29, 1917, and were removed from the car and stored in the freight house of the terminal carrier. The name of the consignee did not appear in the city directory nor in the telephone directory of San Francisco and the local address could not be found by the carrier’s agent. On
In undertaking the transportation, the defendant became liable “for any loss, damage or injury to such property caused by it” or by any connecting carrier to whom the goods would be delivered, but this merely connected the initial carrier with responsibility to the end of the route. The nature of its responsibility was established by the contract of transportation and the obligations existing under its common law duty. It does not appear from the evidence that the defendant omitted to perform any of the acts required by any federal statute, or at common law, or by its contract. Within a reasonable time allowed for the convenience of the consignee, the freight passed into the custody of the terminal carrier as a warehouseman and finally into a storage warehouse, and if any negligence is attributable in the premises, it should be imputed to the warehouseman not to the carrier. The case is one not of a refusal to accept the freight, but of an omission to receive and take it away. On the theory of an obligation to notify the consignor a considerable time necessarily elapsed before the custodian of the freight could reasonably have assumed that it would not be called for and at that time the relation of carrier had ceased. Thereafter the plaintiff’s redress was against the person or company into whose lawful custody the property came and whose duty could be made to appear to notify the consignor of the failure of the consignee to receive the goods. It should be noticed in that
The case was decided in the court below on the construction given to the provision of the bill of lading limiting the time within which action for damages thereon might be brought. The conclusion of the learned judge is not without support, but we have considered it advisable to dispose of the case on grounds which go to the foundation of the cause of action. Our consideration of the case leads us to the conclusion that the plaintiff’s action cannot be maintained.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.