The main question made at the trial, and the only one now argued here is, whether the case was within the St. of 1851, c, 147, respecting the carrying of effects of passengers by railroad corporations, steamboat proprietors and other common carriers, and especially section 5 of said statute
We lay no great stress on the facts, that on arrival of the train at Waltham the plaintiff requested the conductor to take charge of her luggage until she could send for it; that the conductor consented to do so, and directed the baggage master of the defendants to take charge of it. But this evidence was competent, and has a tendency to show that the plaintiff did not at that time take possession of her trunk, or intend to do so, but intended to leave it temporarily at the depot; that the proper officers and servants of the company had notice of it, and did in fact take the trunk to the baggage room, the proper place of deposit for that purpose. What we mean is, that we do not consider that this request to the conductor and baggage master, and their assent to it, were the basis of the obligation of the company.
We are then to inquire what was the duty of the defendant company, as carriers of passengers; and what is the ground on which it rests. The purchase of a ticket must be regarded, in law, as compensation for all the duties which the carriers undertake to perform, in respect to the person of the passenger, and in respect to the care and transportation of his baggage. When therefore the .baggage of a passenger is placed in their custody, to be carried with the passenger, they are bailees for hire, paid agents and depositaries, and their responsibility is to be tested accordingly. Now, whether a common earner of passengers, in respect to the baggage of a passenger, is like a common carrier of merchandise, liable for all losses except those caused by an act of God or a public enemy, and whether or not that larger responsibility terminates when the transit ends and the goods are unladen—which it is not necessary to decide—all responsi
And the court are of opinion that this was a case within the statute, so as to make the evidence of a descriptive list, sworn to by the plaintiff, competent evidence. The statute makes no distinction, if there be one, between the larger liability of carriers whilst the baggage is in trcmsitu and before they are unladen from the cars, and that more limited duty which devolves on them as bailees for hire, after it is received at the depot. The provision is, that whenever an action shall be brought by a passenger against any railroad corporation, &c., to recover damage for any trunk, &c. lost or damaged, and the plaintiff shall have made proof of the bailment, &c., and the loss of the same, by the fault of such carrier or his agents, the plaintiff shall be allowed to put in evidence a descriptive list sworn to by him, &c.
Whatever may be the nature and extent of the duties of carriers, whether they be liable for all losses, or only for such as proceed from negligence and carelessness of them or their agents, or from failure in the performance of all duties incumbent on all bailees for hire, the relation of passenger and carrier, in regard to baggage, continues until the carriers have performed their whole duty. The same reasons, therefore, for admitting the sworn descriptive list, to prove the contents of a lost trunk, apply to all cases in which the company may be responsible.
Exceptions overruled.
