132 N.Y.S. 428 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1911
The plaintiff, desiring to move the contents of her home fpom the country to the city, asked the defendant company for rates of transportation. The defendant wrote that the rate was “ Household Goods, released, car load minimum weight 12,000 pds. 18 -cts. per cwt.; not released, 22 cts. per cwt., to New York, Pier 68, Horth River.-” The plaintiff, after being informed that the defendant remained liable for damages for good® shipped under the “ not released ” rate, shipped her goods under that rate. The car was loaded by her agents, and the defendant’s agents had -no knowledge of what goods were placed therein. The plaintiff’s servant received a hill -of lading for “ Household Goods,” and the plaintiff paid the carrying charges at the rate of twenty-two cents a hundredweight. Among the goods
The sole question raised on this appeal is whether the defendant is liable for suehúnjury. In my opinion the judgment is clearly erroneous, if the words “ household goods ” do not include a valuable painting. The plaintiff failed to show any gross negligence on the part of the defendant, either in transporting or unloading the car, while the defendant affirmatively showed that the picture was .already injured when the oar was unsealed. The only basis of recovery for that injury must, therefore, .arise from the relation of shipper and carrier. The plaintiff claims that she is not bound by the provisions of the bill of lading, because she had not given her servant authority to make a contract for her. I am somewhat inclined to the view that plaintiff is bound by the provisions of this contract, bedause the servant had sufficient apparent authority to bind her; but I do not think that this point is material because, if the bill of lading is not the contract, then the contract was made by the acceptance of the rate quoted in the defendant’s letter, and that rate was for the'transportation of “ household goods ” at car load rates of twenty-two cents a hundredweight. If the plaintiff, without the knowledge of the defendant, placed in the car other goods not fairly included in that term and which she knew that defendant would not transport at car load rates, then the defendant is not responsible as a bailee, but is responsible, if at .all, only for the gross negligence of its servants. The carrier agreed to transport household goods, and the plaintiff impliedly represented that the goods loaded in the car were household goods. If this implied representation was false, then-the defendant -is not liable as a carrier for injury to these goods.
To prove that the term “household goods.” does not include valuable oil paintings, the defendant showed that it had filed a tariff of its rates with the Interstate Commerce Commission and that this schedule contains a note to the classification of household goods' which reads as follows: “Paintings,
It follows that the judgment must be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event, unless
Giegerich and Pendleton, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed, without costs.