Judges: Bisohoee
Filed Date: 12/15/1896
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The plaintiff, through an agent, consigned a package containing a piece of jewelry to the defendant for transportation to his home at Seabright, Hew Jersey, under a contract the terms of which were éxpressed in a bill of lading, or shipping receipt, delivered by the defendant’s agent at the time when the package came into his custody for, shipment.
' The only provision of this contract now material was as follows: “ It is further agreed that this company is not to be held liable
• Yo value was stated at the, time, of shipment, and this shipping receipt,, which is not in any way .attacked for fraud, concealment or improper practice, must be held .to express the contract of the parties (Belger v. Dinsmore, 51 N. Y. 166), and to- have effected a limitation upon the defendant’s liability for loss' occasioned by reason of negligence to the sum of $50. Smhe Case, where the limitation clause was practically identical. • ,
The judgment rendered was for $100, the value of the package, as proven by the plaintiff, -and this recovery proceeded upon the ground that fraud in the treatment- of the- property when in the hands of the defendant’s agent appeared, and that -this fraud, being chargeable to the defendant, or his company, brought the case without the exemptions of the contract.
The shipment of this package was not disputed, nor that it came into the hands of the defendant’s agent at Seabright, together with other goods for delivery at the plaintiff’s home. ' These other goods: were delivered to a servant in the plaintiff’s household, -but this servant testified that the package in suit had not been delivered, and ,as to the situation of the package at this point there was a direct conflict" between this servant’s testimony and. that of the defendant’s servant, the driver of the delivery wágon, who testified " that hé had delivered to her this identical package, of which, m , view of its appearance of value, he had taken mental,note. There was, however, some corroboration of the plaintiff’s servant’s testimony— that given by the plaintiff’s mother.
The plaintiff’s servant had signed a receipt for this package, together with two others, but this receipt was so' framed by the-defendant’s agents that but two signatures- by the party receiving - the packages were called for, two items of receipt having been entered upon one line .and the signature being required at-the end of the line, according to the form of the paper. Thus, the-assertion of the plaintiff’s servant that she had received but two-packages and had given a receipt for' that, number only was* not,
The limitation of liability, it is conceded, does not apply in the case of fraud, and if the evidence supports an inference that the carrier or its employees kept the goods instead of delivering them, the company is liable for the full value of the goods without any limitation.
In this case it appears that the ring in question was given by the company to its driver to deliver to the plaintiff, and the finding of the justice establishes that it was not delivered. The driver swears that it was and is contradicted by two persons. This is, therefore, not merely a question of nondelivery. The goods are traced to the company’s agent and he does not account for them except by saying' that he delivered them, which the court finds is not the fact.
The proof shows that the bill of delivery, as made out in the office of the company and given to the driver, could be used, by reason of its form, to perpetrate a fraud and to render its immediate detection by the consignee difficult, if not impossible, while affording apparent protection to the driver and company.
As we have said, there were three packages to be delivered to the consignee, but only two entries were made on the bill which the consignee was asked to receipt. One of the.entries was obscurely worded so as to read for two packages while it might be easily mistaken as intending but one. The fact is found that two packages, only were delivered at the consignee’s house to his servant,-and the' bill was presented to be receipted only in two places. The two signatures were readily obtained and the driver departed with a receipt for three packages thus obtained by a means which readily lent itself to the easy perpetration of a fraud and offered a temptation to commit it.
The limitation of liability in the contract receipt relieved the defendant from liability for nondelivery but not from an affirmative act of wrongdoing, even if unintentional. Mangin v. Dinsmore, 70 N. Y. 410. It may be assumed that the act of the company in making out the way bill for the driver in the manner described was unintentional; that is, that it was not so made out with the purpose of enabling him to commit a fraud; but the act put it in his power to mislead the consignee into receipting for three packages when only two were delivered and into believing
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
Daly, P. J., and McAdam, J., concur.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.