28 N.Y.S. 577 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1894
A judgment for the plaintiff in an action for loss of baggage against an ocean carrier is challenged on appeal for alleged errors of the court in the charge, in the refusal to dismiss the complaint, and in the exclusion of evidence.
1. It is insisted that the action miscarried for failure of proof that
2. It is urged, furthermore, that the learned trial judge erred in excluding evidence that the Sorrento was not the property of the defendant. That may be, and yet the steamer might have been in the service of the defendant, and the identical vessel on which it undertook to carry the plaintiff. But defendant’s objection is avoided by a still more decisive answer, namely, that the evidence, the supposed rejection of which is the subject of criticism, was received, and from the very witness by whom it was offered, who said: “The Sorrento is not one of those vessels that belong to the defendant company only.”
Though altogether unnecessary, it may be added that the contract for plaintiff’s carriage was consummated when he paid, and the defendant accepted, the money for his passage; that, no terms of conveyance being then agreed, the law prescribed the conditions of plaintiff’s carriage; and that his after assent, even though express, to the limitation of liability claimed by defendant, would have been nugatory, because without consideration. The defendant was already bound to carry the plaintiff, and an agreement to do what one is already under obligation to do can be no consideration for a counter engagement. Bish. Cont. § 48; Tilden v. Mayor, etc., 56 Barb. 340. The law, no less than the justice, of the case, is with the plaintiff. Judgment affirmed, with costs. AE concur.