1 Ga. App. 766 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1907
At common law, as well as by the law of this State, no excuse avails a carrier for the loss of the baggage of one who sustains to-it the relation of passenger, except act of God, irresistible accident, or destruction by public enemy. Civil Code, §2280; Dibble v. Brown, 12 Ga. 217. A similar rule prevails in North Carolina. See Revisal of 1905, §2264. For baggage in possession of the carrier, and not within the protection of the above rule, the liability of the carrier is that of a depository for hire (warehouseman) , with the duty of only ordinary diligence; or that of a naked depository, with responsibility attaching only in a case of gross negligence, according to the circumstances of the case. Georgia R. Co. v. Thompson, 86 Ga. 328. See also Civil Code, §§2921, 2922, 2928. We presume that the same rule prevails in North Carolina, as it is a matter of general law. If there has been no delivery to the carrier, but his agent, without authority, agrees-to take care of the baggage as a matter of accommodation, the agent pro hac is the agent of'the owner of the baggage, and not of the carrier, and no responsibility against the latter attaches to the transaction. Georgia R. Co. v. Thompson, supra. A baggage clerk has implied authority to receive baggage on behalf of the carrier only for a reasonable time prior to the departure of the train on which it is to be carried. Hutch. Carr. (3d ed.) §1256; Lake Shore Ry. Co. v. Foster, 104 Ind. 315.
From the instructions to the jury, appearing in the record, it is manifest that the trial court entertained the view that because Adams had a mileage book, good on the defendant’s lines of railway, he was entitled to the rights of a passenger, as to these trunks and their contents. Let us see if any such relation was sustained. “The owner of the property must, of course, stand in
We think it manifest that Adams did not, under the facts, stated, place or intend to place himself under the obligations of a passenger, at the time he left the baggage in the depot. His intention to do so on the morrow did not place the carrier under the immediate duty. He did not ask for a check for his baggage
Judgment reversed.