130 Md. 106 | Md. | 1917
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is the second appeal in this case.
In the former appeal the main question arose on the. provision of the bill of lading which required claims for loss, damage or delay to be made in writing to the carrier within four months after delivery of the property, etc., and provided that unless claims “are so made the carrier shall not be liable.”
The proof in the ease was that the shipment was made on the 26th of May, 1910, and that the claim of loss ivas prepared at the office of the plaintiff company on July 2nd following, but, this Court said, “there was no evidence as to when it was transmitted to the defendant.” The officer of
The record of the second trial and of the present appeal from a judgment in favor of the defendant contains three exceptions to the rulings of the Court below on the evidence, and a fourth exception to the overruling of the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.
It appears from the record that the strawberries were shipped on the evening of May 26th, and delivered to the consignee on the morning of the 28th of May, 1910. The plaintiff called W. C. Cullen, the president, treasurer and general manager of the plaintiff, who testified that the plaintiff’s claim for loss was made out in July, 1910, and was sent to R. B. Cooke, traffic manager of the defendant, at Norfolk, Virginia, but that he did not know when it was mailed to him; that he received a letter from Mr. Cooke, which was read to the jury, dated January 4th, 1911, returning the claim, and stating that as the carload of strawberries was delivered at 5 :»5 A. M. on May 28th, the defendant would not pay the clahn. Counsel for the defendant required the plaintiff to produce the claim sent to the traffic manager and returned by him to the plaintiff with the letter of January 4th, and when it. was produced it bore the impression of a rubber stamp containing the following memorandum: “N. Y. P. & N. R. R. Co., received Oct. 28th, 1910. Traffic Manager, Norfolk, Ya.” On cross-examination the witness stated that he did not put the memorandum on the claim, but that it was on the claim when it was returned to the plaintiff by Mr. Cooke. The defendant offered the claim and memorandum in evidence. The plaintiff objected to the admission of the memorandum, and the first exception is to the ruling of the Court permitting the claim and the memorandum to be read to the jury.
Challes E. White, a witness for the defendant, testified that he was chief claim clerk for the defendant, and that the claim of the plaintiff was first received on the 28th of October, 1910; that claims are stamped as' soon as they are received at the office. He was then asked if he could say when the “stamp” was put on the plaintiff’s claim. The plaintiff objected to the question, but the 'Court permitted him to answer it, and he said it was “put on there October 28th, 1930.” He further testified that he had a record of the claim, and that he could testify from the record when the claim was received; that as soon as he received the claim he sent it to the agent at Costen, and as soon as the agent returned it to the witness he sent it to the superintendent, and that he sent the claim of the plaintiff to the superintendent on October 31st, 1910. The witness did not see the claim stamped, and the entries in the book from which he testified were not in his handwriting. The third exception is as follows: “The testimony of Mr. White as to who put the rubber stamp on the notice or claim or when it was put on, and the offer of the contents of the said rubber stamp to the jury and also the entry on the Claim Book of the date of receiving the notice of the claim were objected to by the plaintiff, but the Court overruled the objection and permitted the same tO' go to the jury, to which ruling the plaintiff excepted and prays to sign and seal this its third bill of exception, which is aooordingly done,” etc.
At the close of the case the Court granted the plaintiff’s prayers and rejected all of the defendant’s prayers. By the plaintiff’s first prayer the jury were instructed that if they
The first exception is the only one in the three exceptions mentioned pressed by the defendant in this Court, and it is apparent that the plaintiff could not have been injured by either of the rulings referred to. In the briefs of the appellant and appellee considerable space is given to the discussion of the question whether the bill of lading imposed upon the plaintiff the burden of showing that the claim was made within the time specified, as a necessary part of its ease. The
The fourth exception is, as we have said, to the action of the Court, below in dverruling the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial. This Court has repeatedly said, "That the action of
We must therefore affirm the judgment.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
s. c. 122 Md. 232.
Act of 1906; 34 Stat. at Large, 584, Ch. 3501, U. S. Comp. Stat. Supp. 3911, p. 3288.
24 Stat. at Large, 379.