Anniston Transfer Co. v. Gurley

HEAD, J.

We are satisfied from the testimony, which is practically without dispute on this point, that the contract between the parties was that the defendant company should carry the plaintiff’s trunk to the depot, and deliver it there to the baggage agent of the railroad company. The plaintiff herself testified that the trunk was delivered to the defendant’s driver “to.be deposited in the baggage room of the Ga. Pacific R. R.” ; and her-son-in-law, Robinson, who acted for her, says he informed the defendant’s general manager that he wanted the trunk carried to the Georgia Pacific depot, and, furthermore, that when he accompanied the plaintiff to the train.the next morning, he inquired for the trunk of the baggage agent of the Georgia Pacific Railroad, at the depot in Anniston where he had ordered the trunk to be taken.

*603We have only to decide whether the defendant performed that contract; and Ave are clearly of the opinion that it did perform it fully, both in its letter and spirit. The testimony shows without conflict that the driver, Joe Lindsay, immediately upon receiving the trunk, carried it to the depot, and put it on the covered platform between the passenger and baggage departments, in front of the .door of the baggage room at the place, and only place, set apart and especially designated by the baggage agent, for the deposit of baggage to be received by him for the railroad, and Avhere the railroad company had, for a long time, been accustomed to receive baggage. The driver, Lindsay, testifies that he called the attention of Crabtree, the agent, to the trunk, telling him who had sent it to the train, and when it Avas going off and that Crabtree said “all right,” or something of that sort. It is true that Crabtree testified that the trunk was not delivered to him and that he did not receive it, yet, on cross-examination, he shows, by stating that he so SAvears because he did not check the trunk, that he was merely expressing an erroneous legal conclusion. His further statements, that “the trunk was deposited at the proper place set apart and designated by me, as the railroad company’s baggage agent, for the delivery of baggage to me as baggage agent, and at the place at which I check all.baggage, and have received and checked all baggage continuously-for the railroad for the last three years and that “when Joe Lindsay put the trunk on the covered platform, near the baggage room door, he called my attention to it, and told me whose trunk it was, and what train it was going off on ; I do not remember what reply I made to him, but I did not object in any way to his leaving it there,” leave no room to doubt that there Avas a good delivery to and acceptance by him of the trunk, Avhich completed the performance of the defendant’s contract. It was expressly made known and understood at the time of the making of the contract of carriage, that the trunk could not be carried the next morning to meet the 8 o’clock train on which the plaintiff expected to take passage, for the reason that the driver had to go at that time to another depot to take the mail, and in view of this it was expressly agreed that he should go at once, that afternoon, and take the trunk to the depot'. The idea that after then taking it, the de*604fendant was to keep it in its custody until the next morning and then deliver it to the plaintiff, at the depot, when she was ready to take the train, is expressly excluded by the very fact, which rendered necessary its immediate carriage. The plaintiff’s agent and witness, Robinson, testifies that he knew the defendant had no place to store the baggage, that it had no warehouse, and that storing baggage was not a part of its business, so that we are convinced that the plaintiff received the very performance of the contract, which the parties understood would be made. — S. & N. Ala. R. R. Co. v. Wood, 65 Ala. 167. This case is- essentially unlike that of Southern Express Company v. Armistead, 50 Ala. 350, relied upon by appellee. There, the express company’s' agent knew that the railroad agent had refused to allow the express company to deposit goods in its depot, at the point of destination, and yet he left the package on the platform, merely calling the attention of the depot agent to it, as the property of the plaintiff. The railroad agent had no duty to perform in regard to it, and, under the circumstances, the action of the expressman was held to be gross carelessness, entitling plaintiff to recover for the loss.

The loss of the trunk, in this case, cannot be attributed to any fault of the defendant'. The plaintiff was not entitled to recover, and hence the judgment of the city court must be reversed, and a judgment here rendered for the defendant.

Reversed and rendered.