Talcott v. Wabash Railroad

VAN BRUNT, P. J.

This action was brought by the plaintiff to recover on his own behalf and as assignee of various parties damages for the loss in transit of alleged baggage alleged to have been accepted by the Wabash Western Railway Company, the predecessor of the defendant at Chicago, in April, 1889, for transportation to the city of New York. The Wabash Western Railway Company, in combination with the Grand Trunk Railway Company and the West Shore Railway Company, formed a. through line from Detroit to Chicago and New York, tickets being sold from Detroit or Chicago to New York, in which case there are coupon tickets, the coupon of each company being for its own portion of the road. On the. 27th of April, 1892, one F. H. Cullom purchased at the Chicago office of the Wabash Western Railway Company a coupon ticket from Chicago to New York and return over the route of the Wabash, Grand Trunk, and. West Shore Companies. The through fare of $25 was paid, by Cullom at the time of obtaining his ticket. Cullom was a- commercial traveler in the employ of the plaintiff, and was returning to New York after a trip to the Pacific coast, California, and Oregon. The ticket purchased by him entitled him to have 150 pounds of personal baggage carried with him upon any train ■without extra compensation, while for his baggage in excess of that ■weight an excess baggage charge is made at a rate per 100 pounds according to the distance. When Cullom reached Chicago, he had four trunks, which he had brought from the Pacific coast. Three were the property of the plaintiff, and the fourth belonged to the American Hosiery Company and the New Britain Company, and he was bringing them for those parties, .to deliver to them when he got to New York. In the three trunks belonging to the plaintiff, Cullom had some of his personal effects. Soon after purchasing his tickets, Cullom took these trunks to the depot, and had them checked from Chicago to New York as his baggage. When he arrived at the depot he went to the baggage room, and had a conversation with a man marked “Baggage Agent.” He presented his ticket, and told where he wanted the baggage checked to. After weighing them, the baggage man said, “They weigh light, don’t they?” and he told him they were samples of underwear, and the baggage man made some reply which Cullom did not hear. He then figured up the excess of baggage, and told Cullom that it amounted to $16, ■which he paid. Cullom further testified that he did not tell the baggage man that the trunk contained samples which were not his own, or he was not using in his own business; that he merely told him they were samples of underwear; that he did not tell him he was a commercial traveler; that he knew it was a passenger depot, and not a freight •depot; that he took the trunks to carry with him as baggage on the train, and received a cardboard receipt or excess check dated on that day, showing the payment of $16 for the transportation of the baggage in question from Chicago. On April 28th an accident occurred to the *320train in which Cullom had taken passage, by which the baggage car was destroyed while on the Grand Trunk Railway. This action was brought to recover the value of the baggage and merchandise contained in the four trunks, the causes of action having been assigned to the plaintiff. Upon the trial the court directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the samples belonging to the plaintiff, and for the personal baggage of Mr. Cullom. Prior to such direction the defendant’s counsel asked the court to go to the jury upon the question whether there' was a special contráct made with the defendant apart from the contract made upon the purchase of the ticket; and also upon the question whether the defendant agreed by the contract upon the sale of the ticket to carry the baggage to New York, and deliver it in New York; and also whether the property shown to have been destroyed was not destroyed in the hands of the Grand Trunk Railroad upon its line of route. These requests being denied, an exception was duly taken, and from the judgment entered upon said verdict, and from the order denying a motion- for new trial, this appeal is taken.

We think, as far as the, personal baggage of Cullom is concerned, the plaintiff had a right to recover. Cullom purchased a ticket to be transported from Chicago to New York with his personal baggage, not to exceed 150 pounds in weight. This contract he made with the defendant’s predecessor, and he paid the price charged for the making of such a contract and the furnishing of the transportation. We cannot see that the passenger, under the circumstances stated, has anything to do with the private arrangements which have been made between connecting lines. The original sale of the ticket makes the contract. The question of its being a coupon ticket is entirely immaterial, as that is undoubtedly a regulation between the connecting companies themselves for the purpose of keeping track of the business done by each, and of the origin of the contract of transportation. The connecting railroads did not participate in the making of the contract, nor did they, as far as Cullom was concerned, assume any obligation in respect to his carriage, or in respect to the transportation of his baggage. The price paid was for the whole distance between Chicago and New York; and it would seem necessarily to follow that, the defendant’s predecessor having made this contract to transport Cullom to New -York, together with his baggage, he was not required to look to the agents of defendant’s predecessor in case of their failure to do their whole duty in the performance of this contract. This seems to be the principle which was’ enunciated in the cases of Burnell v. Railroad Co., 45 N. Y. 188; Cary v. Railroad Co., 29 Barb. 35; Burtis v. Railroad Co., 24 N. Y. 275; Condict v. Railway Co., 54 N. Y. 505; Sloman v. Railway Co., 67 N. Y. 211. The cases cited by the appellant in no way affect these authorities; that of Isaacson v. Railroad Co., 94 N. Y. 278, being substantially an authority in favor of the views above expressed. In that case the plaintiff purchased tickets from the defendant from Niagara Falls to New York and return. He also held return tickets from Niagara Falls to New, Orleans by the Mobile route,’ purchased at New Orleans; and there was no evidence that the defendant company was interested in that route. The -plaintiff took *321the tickets above stated, presented them, -with' his baggage, to the defendant’s baggage master at New York, and .requested him to check the baggage from New York to New Orleans. -The baggage master asked to see the tickets, examinedthem, and thereupon gave the plaintiff checks to New Orleans. The plaintiff put them in his pocket without examining them. On the same day the plaintiff and his family commenced his return journey to New Orleans. On his arrival it was ascertained that the checks given at New York were given for what is called the “Great Jackson Route from Niagara Falls to New Orleans.” It subsequently transpired that the plaintiff’s baggage was sent over the route indicated by the checks, and was substantially destroyed by an accident at Ingaloo, Miss. The delivery of the baggage by the defendant at Niagara Falls to the agents of the Jackson route was a direct violation of the plaintiff’s instructions, and of the undertaking of the baggage master on receiving the baggage. The court held that the request to check over the Mobile route, assented to by him, constituted an agreement between the company and the plaintiff, unless the plaintiff’s omission ‘to examine the checks was contributory negligence; and the court reversed a nonsuit. The court say that there arises on the sale of a ticket a contract to carry the passenger and his. baggage between the points indicated, and that the passenger has a right to assume that the baggage master possesses the requisite authority' to make all ordinary •and usual arrangements with passengers in respect to the transportation of their baggage. It would therefore seem to follow' that, by the sale of the ticket between Chicago and New York and the checking of the baggage between these two points, the defendant’s predecessor became liable to carry out . that contract, so far as the personal baggage tif Cullom was concerned.

But we think a different question arises with respect to the merchandise contained in these trunks. It is claimed that there was a special ■contract entered into for the carrying of this merchandise, and that the baggage master'Was informed that it was merchandise, and that, therefore, a recovery could be had. We think there are two answers to this claim. The first is that there is no attempt to show that the baggage master was informed that the property belonged to anybody else than the passenger, and the sole undertaking of the railroad company was to transport Cullom, the passenger, and his baggage, and not the merchandise of other people; and, furthermore, there was no undertaking whatever to carry merchandise as such. It is true, Cullom swears he stated to the "baggage master that these trunks contained samples of underwear; but it does not appear that the baggage master had any authority whatever to make any contract of affreightment, or to allow merchandise to be carried as freight, and it does not appear that he ever did exercise any such authority. In the case of Stoneman v. Railway Co., 52 N. Y. 429, the transportation company demanded and received from the passenger compensation as freight for the transportation of packages containing merchandise, find a recovery was had expressly upon the ground that the transportation was paid for as merchandise and pot as baggage, and there was no question raised in that case as to the authority *322of the agent of the transportation company. So in the case of Sloman v. Railway Co., 67 N. Y. 211, it was held that, where the company receives the trunks of a passenger with notice that they contain property other than personal baggage, and charges and receives extra compensation for their transportation, an agreement to carry the property as freight may, by the jury, be inferred therefrom. But the authority of the baggage master in that case to receive the trunks as freight was not raised, and upon the trial the court stated that the authority of the baggage master seems to have been assumed, he being in the receipt given for the trunks, as well as in the motion for the nonsuit, designated as the agent of the defendant; the simple question submitted to the jury being upon the claim that there was no evidence as to whether the defendant’s agent was notified that the baggage was other than ordinary baggage. This case clearly shows that, if the company undertakes to carry other people’s merchandise as freight, they are liable as any common carrier would be, and that is all; and that facts must appear from which it can be reasonably inferred by the jury that this contract of affreightment was entered into with knowledge of all the facts. In the case at bar there is no claim whatever that any statement was made that any part of this merchandise was owned by anybody else but by the passenger, Cullom; and there is nothing from which it can be inferred that the company undertook to carry this merchandise as. freight. On the contrary, it is taken as baggage, it is checked as baggage, it is paid for as baggage, and it was represented to the company by Cullom that it was his baggage. Therefore there was no contractual relation entered into by the predecessor of the defendant with Cullom, as the agent of the plaintiff, in respect to the merchandise belonging to him, giving the most liberal construction to the testimony possible. We think, therefore, that the court erred in directing a verdict, and that the complaint should have been dismissed in respect to the merchandise belonging to others than the passenger, and the question of notice as to any other merchandise which may have belonged to the passenger submitted to the jury. The judgment and order should be reversed, and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event. ■