This litigation arose from the failure of the defendant to deliver to the plaintiff certain goods that were delivered to the defendant as a common carrier at Columbia, S. C., to be carried to Sumter, S. C., to be there delivered to the plaintiff, the consignee. The complaint is in code form. Code 1896, p. 946, form 15. The description of the goods in the complaint is sufficiently definite to put the defendant on notice as to the particular package on which defendant’s alleged dereliction was predicated. Hence the demurrer to the complaint was properly overruled.
It appears from the record that there was no controversy about the facts .that the goods were received by the defendant as alleged and that they were never delivered. In other words, the liability of the defendant was conceded, but it sought to limit its liability to f 50. Pleas 2 and 7 presented this defense. Manifestly the contract sued on is a South Carolina contract. For this reason it is insisted by the appellant that the contract with respect to the liability of the defendant should be construed as such contracts have been construed by the Supreme Court of that state; in other words, that in declaring the substantive law of the case we should be governed by the adjudications of that court. This insistence invokes the dictrine of lex loci contractus, a doctrine which is well established and adhered to in this state. “Parties are presumed to be conversant of the laws of the country in reference to which they contract, and to stipulate with regard to them; and it is a maxim, that ‘locus contractus re git actum’ unless the parties have manifested a contrary intention.” — Hanrick v. Andrews, 9 Port. 25; Peake v. Yeldell, 17 Ala. 636; Thomas v. DeGraffenreid, 17 Ala. 609; Camp v. Randle, 81 Ala. 240, 2 South. 287; So. Ry. Co. v. Harrison, 119 Ala. 539, 24 South. 552, 43 L. R. A. 385, 72 Am. St. Rep. 936.
But the doctrine and maxim can be invoked only by appropriate pleading, followed by proof, of the laws of *418the foreign jurisdiction. We cannot take judicial knowledge of the decisions of the courts of other states. — Cubbedge v. Napier, 62 Ala. 518; Varner v. Young, 56 Ala. 260. The South Carolina decision relied on by the appellant was not offered in evidence in the court below, and we cannot regard it as evidence here. “It can be consulted by us, as we could consult the opinion of any other reputable Suprexxxe Coxxrt of a sister state; but it does not bind us as an adjudication.” — Varner v. Young, supra. The contract, tíxen, xnust be construed by the principles of the common law, and iix the absence of pleading and proof to the contrary we will presume that the coxnxnon law on the subject in South Carolina is the same that it is in Alabama. — 2 Wharton on Conflict of Laws (3d Ed.) p. 1534; Crandall v. Great Northern R. R. Co., 83 Minn. 190, 86 N. W. 10, 85 Am. St. Rep. 458; Forepaugh v. Delaware R. R. Co., 128 Pa. 217, 18 Atl. 503, 5 L. R. A. 508, 15 Am. St. Rep. 672.
The point presented by the pleadings to be detexnnined is whether a carrier may limit the extent of his liability by an agreed valuation upon consideration of reduced charges for carrying a package, when the agreed valuation is greatly less than the real value of tlxe package, axxd the contexxts of the package or its value are not disclosed to the carrier. In the case of A. G. S. R. R. Co. v. Little, 71 Ala. 611, this coxxrt said: “The liability of a coxnmoxx carrier is sometimes said to be of a dual nature — the one, a liability for losses by his own negligence or oxxxission of duty, or that of his sexwaixts or agents, which is the liability of an ordinary paid agent or his bailee; the other, a liability for the losses by mistake or accident without any fault oxx his part, for losses accruing by unavoidable accidents, not within the. exception of ‘the act of God, or of the public enemy, or the fruit of the party complaining,’ which is of the nature of the liability of an insurer, having its origin and fouxxdation in the policy of the coxnmon law. — Davidson v. Graham, 2 Ohio St. 131. Whatever doubts may at any tixne have been entertained, it is now well settled that by special contract the carrier xnay limit or qualify the liability *419resting on him as an insurer, or his common-law liability, as it is most often expressed.- — Steele v. Townsend, 37 Ala. 247, 79 Am. Dec. 49; M. & O. R. R. Co. v. Hopkins, 41 Ala. 486, 94 Am. Dec. 607; M. & O. R. R. Co. v. Jarboe, 41 Ala. 644; S. & N. A. R. R. Co. v. Henlein, 52 Ala. 606, 23 Am. Rep. 578. The limitation of liability may extend, not only to the risks of accidents for which the carrier will he answerable, but to the amount of damages for which he will be answerable in the case of loss or injury, when the purpose appears to .secure a just and reasonable proportion between the amount for which he is liable and the freight which he is to receive. In the limitation of liability, the carrier cannot, in any event, stipulate for more than an exemption from the extraordinary liability the common law implies; the liability extending beyond that of ordinary paid agents, servants, or bailees, denominated the ‘liability of an insurer.’ Public policy and every consideration of right and justice forbid that he should be allowed to stipulate for exemption from liability for losses or injuries occurring through the want of his own skill or diligence, or that of the servants or agents he may employ, or through his own or their willful default or tort.”
In the case of Ga. Pac. Ry. Co. v. Hughart, 90 Ala. 36, 9 South. 62, goods were received for shipment packed in a box in apparent good order. A portion of the goods in the box were lost — were not delivered by the common carrier. The bill of lading contained a clause limiting the value of the goods to $5 per 100 pounds in case of total loss; and it was contended on the trial that, if the plaintiff was entitled to a verdict, his recovery should be limited to $5 per 100 pounds of the freight that was lost. The court said: “There is nothing in this contention; for the tendency of the testimony was, and is, that the goods were lost through the negligence or bad faith of the defendant’s employes.” Then follows the quotation from the Little Case that we have set out above, and the court said of it: “We fully concur in what was said in Little’s Gase, supra, and hold that the city court did not err in the matter of the measure of recovery;” The *420court further said in the Hughart Case: “It is not our intention to overrule or qualify what was said in S. & N. A. R. Co. v. Henlein, 56 Ala. 368, or in the later case of Central Ry. Co. v. Smitha, 85 Ala. 47, 4 South. 708. In consideration of special rates or privileges granted, a shipper may agree on values in case of loss or injury, provided such agreed valuations are not unreasonable or arbitrary, and provided, further, that no agreement exempting the carrier from the consequences of his perfidy or gross negligence is binding on the shipper. The rate expressed in the bill of lading before us — $5 per 100 pounds- — without any reference to the actual value of the thing shipped, is both unreasonable and arbitrary, and is not binding on the shipper.”
In L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Sherrod, 84 Ala. 178, 4 South. 29, the case most strongly relied on by appellant here, the bill of lading contained a stipulation limiting the value of the goods and the extent of the defendant’s liability in case of total loss. The agreed statement of facts showed that without such agreement as to the value a much greater rate of freight was charged on such shipments than was charged, which rate was reasonable, and that the limitation as to value was in consideration of a reduced rate of freight and was inserted in the bill of lading as a part of the contract of shipment. In that case this court, speaking through Judge Clop ton, said: “Limitations as to the value do not conie under the operation of the rule that a carrier cannot, by special contract, exempt himself from liability for the consequences of his own negligence, and ordinarily are not calculated to induce negligence. To the amount of the agreed valuation the carrier is responsible for loss so occasioned by his neglect, or by any of the risks or accidents for which he is answerable. No public good will be subserved by denying to the parties the right to make such contracts. The shipper and the carrier may lawfully contract as to the valuation of the articles to be transported. Such special contract is in the nature of an agreement to liquidate the damages, proportionately to the compensation received for the carriage and the responsibility of *421safely carrying and delivery. When the value has been fairly agreed on, the carrier cannot recover a greater rate, and the shipper should not be allowed to take benefit of the reduced rate, if there is no loss, and to repudiate the contract, if there is a loss.”
It would seem than in Sherrod’s Case, the distinction so clearly made in the Little and Hughart Cases with respect of the dual nature of the liability of the common carrier was lost sight of; for it is clearly held in those cases that, while a common carrier may by contract limit or qualify the liability resting upon him as an insurer, he cannot in any event stipulate for more than exemption from the extraordinary liability the common law imposes. In short, he cannot stipulate for exemption from or limitation-upon his liability for losses by his own negligence or omission of duty, or that of his servants or agents, which is the liability of an ordinary paid agent or bailee. The argument urged in the Sherrod Case makes the degree of care requisite in the handling of goods depend, not on the nature of the thing to be carried — which ought to be the test of degree of care to be used by all persons or corporations pursuing the business of common carriers, even where a lawful contract limiting liability exists — but on the amount of compensation to be paid. It is said in that case that contracts by common carriers limiting liability are not ordinarily calculated to induce negligence, but exact from the carrier the measure of care due to the value agreed on. But would it not be a very dangerous rule which permits care to be measured by value? It would lead to a holding that the carrier owes but a slight degree of care when the thing to be carried is of small value intrinsically or by an agreed valuation, and the rule would be as fluctuating as is the value of things carried.
We understand the rule to be universal that the carrier must, even when a valid contract limiting liability exists, exercise such care as prudent persons would ordinarily use for the safety of the thing shipped, looking to the nature of that thing. A different rule would make the measure of care to depend on the adequacy of the sum *422paid, for transportation, this to he determined by the value of the thing to be carried, and which cannot be a correct rule, unless it be true that the degree of care to be used by a common carrier is to he measured by the compensation to be paid. We do not understand that such a rule ever has been or ever ought to be established. Followed to its legitimate result, such a rule would require the holding that a carrier by agreeing to gratuitously transport freight might by contract relieve itself from liability entirely and from obligation to exercise even the slightest care. In the case, of a gratuitous mandatary, not charged with any public duty, we understand such rule to have been denied. It seems to us that such contracts do induce a Avant of care, for the highest incentive to the exercise of due care rests in a consciousness that a failure in this respect Avill fix liability to make full compensation for any injury resulting from the cause. The author of the American & English Encyclopedia of LaAv says: “By the clear Aveight of authority in England, Canada, the United States, and almost AAdthout exception in the states of the Union, the rule has been adduced that the common carrier can make no contract the effect of Avhiclx Avill be to exempt him from liability for negligence.”- — 2 Am. & Eng. Ency. LaAv, 822.
Is the limitation in the contract before us Avithin the prohibition of this eminently just and generally accepted principle? Manifestly the stipulation does not contemplate total exemption from liability. It only proA-id.es for partial or limited exemption. Upon that distinction the nice and important question arises: Can a stipulation of the latter character stand before the laAv when one of the former kind cannot? Or, to state the same question differently, and so as to apply it more directly to the facts of this case, the rule of Iuav being established, as we have seen it is, that the defendant company could not laAvfully have contracted Avith the plaintiff that it would in no event be liable for any part of the value of the property lost or destroyed, can the limitation of its liability to |50 be upheld in the court, if it *423should appear that its loss resulted from the negligence of the company and that it was in fact worth 30 times that amount, as the court found it to be? We think not. To our mind it is clear that the two kinds of stipulation — that providing for total, and that providing for partial, exemption from liability for the consequences of the carrier’s negligence — stand upon the same ground and must be tested by the same principles. If one can be enforced, the other can. If either be invalid, it would seem that both must be held to be so; the same consideration of public policy operating in each case. The last utterance by this court on this subject is in line with the foregoing views, and we think is sound. — Sou. Ry. Co. v. Jones, 132 Ala. 437, 31 South. 501. See, also, Railway Co. v. Wynn, 88 Term. 320, 14 S. W. 311; Coward v. Railway Co., 16 Lea. 225, 57 Am. Rep. 227; Moulton v. St. P., M. & M. Ry. Co., 31 Minn. 85, 16 N. W. 497, 47 Am. Rep. 781; Railway Co. v. Simpson, 30 Kan. 645, 2 Pac. 821, 46 Am. Rep. 104; Railway Co. v. Abels, 60 Miss. 1017; U. S. Ex. Co. v. Blackmon, 28 Ohio St. 144; Black v. C. T. Co., 55 Wis. 319, 13 N. W. 244, 42 Am. Rep. 713; Rosenfield v. Ry. Co., 103 Ind. 121, 2 N. E. 344, 53 Am. Rep. 500; M. P. Ry. Co. v. Fagan, (Tex. Sup.) 9 S. W. 749, 2 L. R. A. 75, 13 Am. St. Rep. 776; Boscowitz v. Adams Exp. Co., 93 Ill. 525, 34 Am. Rep. 197.
We have examined the authorities relied upon by the appellant, and some of them undoubtedly support its contention. But we think the true rule is, and should be, that a common carrier has the right to restrict his common-law liability by special contract; and this extends to all losses not arising from his own neglect or omission of duty. “He cannot, however, protect himself from losses occasioned by his own fault. He exercises a public employment, and diligence and good faith in the discharge of his duties are essential to the public interest. He is 'held to that degree of diligence which very careful and priident men take of their own affairs, and he is responsible for all losses arising from a neglect of that degree of diligence enjoined upon him by his *424public emplojnnent; and public policy forbids that he should be relieved by special agreement from that degree of diligence and fidelity which the law has exacted in the discharge of his duties. The degree of diligence required by law of a common carrier is a matter over which he has no control and in which the public is interested.” — Sou. Ry. Co. v. Jones, 132 Ala. 437, 31 South. 501; Ga. Pac. Ry. Co. v. Hughart, 90 Ala. 36, 8 South. 62; A. G. S. R. R. v. Little, supra; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Oden, 80 Ala. 38; Steele v. Townsend, 37 Ala. 247, 79 Am. Dec. 49; Davidson v. Graham, 2 Ohio St. 131, and authorities, supra; City of Norwich, 4 Ben. 271, Fed. Cas. No. 2761; Sager v. Portsmouth, 31 M. E. 228, 1 Am. Rep. 659; Railroad Company v. Lockwood, 17 Wall. (U S.) 357, 21 L. Ed. 627. “It must be understood, however, that where the shipper of goods practices a fraud on the carrier, either by his acts or omissions, as to the value of goods, fraudulently concealing their value from the carrier, such fraud operates to discharge the' carrier from liability. But a mere failure on the part of the shipper to inform a carrier as to the value of goods shipped would not per se be such fraud as would discharge the carrier. It is the duty of every person sending goods by a carrier to make use of no fraud or artifice to deceive him, whereby his risk is increased or his care and vigilance may be lessened; and if there is such fraud and unfair concealment, it will make the contract a nullity.”— Texas Express Co. v. G. M. Scott, 2 Willson, Civ. Cas. Ct. App. § 72; H. & T. C. Railroad Company v. Burke, 55 Tex. 323, 40 Am. Rep. 808.
The principle above stated with respect of fraud is not invoked by any of defendant’s pleas. The demur’rer to plea 5 was properly sustained. And there is no error in the rulings of the court with respect to the demurrers to replications to pleas 2 and 7. — Southern Express Co. v. Jones, supra. The demurrer to plea 6 was properly sustained on the authority of Southern Express Company v. Tupelo, 108 Ala. 517, 18 South. 664. Upon the evidence contained in the record, even if fraud on the part of the shipper had been set up by the pleas in accordance with *425the principle above stated, we could not say that the court in rendering judgment for the plaintiff erred
With respect to the nature of the property and its value the plaintiff was the only witness examined, and he testified: “I know the manuscript for the loss of which this suit is brought. There were 400 pages of legal cap paper in it, hand-written (written with pen and ink.) It was bound by a binder whom I had to bind it in a book form. It opened at the end and had a cover on it. In June, 1897, I decided to spend as much time as was necessary in preparing data and in writing the history of the development of South Carolina literature. I went into the libraries all over the state. I studied with older literary men in the state. I had access to the libraries belonging to these men, and can give you the' names if you like. In the manuscript I divided the development of literature into five periods — colonial, revolutionary, state’s rights, secession, and last quarter of the .nineteenth century. I wrote the history of each period,' and gave the lines of the representative writers of each period, and I annotated the choicest productions of these representative writers. I gave three years to the preparation of that manuscript. I closed the work in 1900, when I sent it to the school of graduate studies of the Columbia University, my alma mater. I spent most of my afternons, my time at night, and during most of the time I made repeated trips on Saturday when my college work was over for the week to libraries over the state, and spent as much time in these libraries as I could in order to get back to my woiik the following Monday morning.” After testifying as above, plaintiff was asked by his counsel this question: “From the time and labor devoted by you to the preparation of this manuscript, and the contents of it, the matter contained in it, what would you say was the reasonable value of that manuscript?” Objection was made to the question on the ground that it called for testimony that was incompetent, illegal, and irrelevant. The objection was overruled, and the witness answered: “Five hundred dollars for three years, or fifteen hundred dollars.” On cross-*426examination, -plaintiff testified: “It would be hard for me to say what the market value of the package was in open market, other than its value on the subject, as there was no such text-book written. When I speak of this $1,500 valuation I mean it was of that value to me. It is impossible for me to say what the market value of the package was, or what I could have gotten for it in dollars and cents. I never put it on the market as a manuscript, but had arranged to publish it as a textbook. I believe it had a market value, but it was never offered. I could not state any distinct market value, but I believe it had a market value. I do not know what market value it had.”
Ordinarily, where property has a market value that can be shown, such value is the criterion by which actual damages for its destruction or loss may be fixed. But it may be that property destroyed or lost has no market value. In such state of the case, while it may be that no rule which will be absolutely certain to do justice between the parties can be laid down, it does not follow from this, nor is it the law, that the plainitff must be turned out of court with nominal damages merely. Where the article or thing is so unusual in its character that market value cannot be predicated of it, its value, or plaintiff’s damages, must be ascertained in some other rational way, and from such elements as are attainable. — Trustees of Howard College v. Turner, 71 Ala. 429, 46 Am. Rep. 326; Cooney v. Pullman Car Co., 121 Ala. 368, 25 South. 712, 53 L. R. A. 690; Jonas v. Noel, 98 Tenn. 440, 39 S. W. 724, 36 L. R. A. 862; Masterton v. Mayor and Council of Brooklyn, 7 Hill (N. Y.) 61, 42 Am. Dec. 38; Sullivan v. Lear, 23 Fla. 463, 2 South. 846, 11 Am. St. Rep. 388; 3 Sutherland on Damages (3d Ed.) § 919. The case of Boucher v. Shewan, cited by appellant, involved the value of pamphlets that had been converted by the defendant. It was insisted that they were such as treated the Christian religion scoffingly, and, therefore, had no literary value. The court said: “Admitting it to be true that the pamphlets are of the character represented, it may be that they can*427not and ought not to Tbe valued as of the value of pamphlets.” But there can he no reason why the materials or paper contained in what are called “pamphlets” may not be held by the plaintiff as property, independent of what is printed in them. — 14 U. C| C. P 419. This is no authority for holding that, if the pamphlets had been legitimate ones, their value to plaintiff as literary productions could not have been assessed. Indeed, the opinion of the court shows that such damages might have been assessed.
Where the article lost has no market value, the rule of damages seems then to be its value to the plaintiff; and in ascertaining this value inquiry may be made into the constituent elements of the cost to the plaintiff in producing it. — Green v. Boston R. Co., 128 Mass. 221, 35 Am. Rep. 370; L. & N. R. Co. v. Stewart, 78 Miss. 600, 29 South. 394, and authorities, supra. The court seemto have followed the rule as above stated. The plaintiff in the case testified to the value, and his was the only evidence, and we have not been shown that the court erred in its finding as to the value. — Cooney v. Pullman Car Co., supra.
There is no error in the record, and the judgment must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Weakley, C. J., and Haralson and Dowdell, JJ., concur.