delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case concerns the extent of an interstate carrier’s liability for a passenger’s baggage loss. On October 5, 1949, Mrs. Nothnagle, respondent here, purchased a railway ticket from petitioner in Meriden, Connecticut, for a journey to Fall River, Massachusеtts, via New Haven, Connecticut. She boarded a train in Meriden at 11:19 a. m. and arrived shortly after 11:30 a. m. in New Haven where she alighted for transfer to another train. On the station platform her suitcase was solicited by a redcap employee of petitioner, and she handed it to him with orders to return it at the Fall River train departing at 12:40 p. m. No baggage check was given; no money was paid. The suitcase vanished, and respondent sued. At trial in the Meriden City Court the parties stipulated that the baggage and contents actually worth $615 wеre lost due to petitioner’s negligence. Petitioner insisted, however, that its liability as an interstate carrier was governed by a tariff schedule filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission which limited a recovery for baggage loss to $25 unless the passenger had in writing deсlared a higher valuation.
The state courts granted full recovery to respondent. The trial court found that although respondent had not declared a greater value, she had neither actual knowledge
We have little doubt that the transaction was incident to an interstate journey within the ambit of the Interstate Commerce Act. Neither continuity of interstate movement nor isolatеd segments of the trip can be decisive. “The actual facts govern. For this purpose, the destination intended by the passenger when he begins his journey and known to the carrier, determines the character of the commerce.”
Sprout
v.
South Bend,
With the enactment in 1906 of the Carmack Amendment, Congress superseded diverse state laws with a nationally uniform policy governing interstate carriers’ liability for property loss.
E. g., Adams Express Co.
v.
Croninger,
Clearly that limitation of liability is voided by the Act unless saved by the statutory proviso.
Adams Express Co.
v.
Darden,
But the facts here do not bring the case within the statutory conditions. There was no “value declared in writing by the shipper or agreed upon in writing”; in fact, not even a baggage check reciting a limitation provision changed hands.
11
Moreover, the actual value of respondent’s baggage exceeded $500; the tariff itself deems such highly valued property unacceptable for handling by redcaps. But only by granting its customers a fair opportunity to choose between higher or lower liability by paying a correspondingly greater or lesser charge can a carrier lawfully limit recovery to an amount less than the actual loss sustained.
Boston & Maine R. Co.
v.
Piper,
Affirmed.
Notes
It. 7-9. Thе decision of the Meriden City Court is not reported.
Neither here nor in Williams was the Commission’s ruling in the Stopher case challenged.
34 Stat. 595, 49 U. S. C. § 20 (11).
38 Stat. 1197, 49 U. S. C. §20 (11). The 1915 amendment was qualified by the following proviso:
“Provided, however,
That if the goods are hidden from view by wrapping, boxing,' or other means, and the carrier is not notified as to the character of the goods, the carrier may rеquire the shipper to specifically state in writing the value of the goods, and the carrier shall not be liable beyond the
39 Stat. 442, 49 U. S. C. §20(11). The Committee Report accompanying the 1916 legislation observed in reference to the 1915 proviso: “The construction put upon the proviso by the Interstate Commerce Commission has resulted in some vexatious requirements insisted upon by carriers and in some injustice. For instance, it has been held by the commission that under the proviso the carrier may compel the shipрer to state the value of the goods tendered for shipment and that if the true value is not stated the shipper is liable
See 49 U. S. C. §§ 1 (1), 1 (3), 1 (5) (a), 6 (1).
Cf. 49 U. S. C. § 22, referring to “free baggage” carried on passenger tickets. See also notes 7, supra, and 10, infra.
That distinction has long been recognized by the Commission.
National Baggage Committee
v.
Atchison, T. & S. F. R. Co.,
32 I. C. C. 152 (1914);
In re The Cummins Amendment,
33 I. C. C. 682, 696 (1915);
Ellison-White Chautauqua System
v.
Director General,
68 I. C. C. 492, 495 (1922). In fact, only recently the Commission disallowed a proposed tariff of charges for passenger baggage because of “the long and universally established practice of permitting a reasonable amount of a passenger’s baggage, whether in the baggage
See
Caten
v.
Salt City Movers
&
Storage Co.,
Boston & Maine R. Co.
v.
Hooker,
