41 Pa. Super. 141 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1909
Opinion by
The assignments of error raise but a single question: Did the court err in submitting to the jury the question of the existence of a contract, alleged to have been made by the freight agent of the defendant at Scranton, which was binding upon the defendant? Three carloads of strawberries, two of which had been shipped from South Carolina and the other from North Carolina, arrived at Scranton over the railroad of the defendant company; all of the cars had been long delayed in course of transportation, and when they reached their destination in the freight yard of the defendant a large part of the fruit was rotten and all of it was in very bad condition. The plaintiff and Mr. Payne, who was the freight agent of the defendant at Scranton, examined the strawberries, and both testified that the fruit was in very bad condition. All of the facts above stated were undisputed. The verdict of the jury determined the following'facts, viz.: the plaintiff declined to accept the cars unless the company would agree to make good any loss; whereupon Payne, the freight agent*of the company, agreed that if the plaintiff would pay the freight and take the berries and sell them at the best price he could get, that the defendant company would pay any loss sustained by reason of the condition of the berries. The plaintiff accepted this proposition and paid to the agent of the defendant freight amounting to $608.82. The plaintiff was only able to realize from the sale of the berries the sum of $771.50. The plaintiff then brought this action upon the alleged contract of the company made by Payne, the
The evidence produced by. the defendant disclosed that Payne was the freight agent of the defendant at Scranton, and that he had rather extensive powers. He was the head man in his department at that place. He testified that when goods of a perishable nature arrived in a damaged condition, which was not satisfactory to the consignee, “We first tried to make some arrangement with the consignee to handle them. To handle them themselves, to accept them, take them and pay the charges in the regular way, and put in a claim. ... If they positively refused to accept them we turned them over to a dealer to handle them for our account, and in that case we tried to get another party entirely to handle the goods. Q. As I understand it you have charge of all the freight that is received here for delivery to any consignee? A. At the D. and H., yes, sir. Q. And that includes not only the delivery but the collection of freight charges? A. Yes, sir. Q. And the making of terms and conditions upon which the delivery will be made is wholly in your hands? A. If the goods, were re
The judgment is affirmed.