Case Name: George W. Bennett, Appellant, v. The Virginia Transfer Company, Respondent
Court: New York Supreme Court, Appellate Term
Jurisdiction: New York
Decision Date: 1913-04
Citations: 80 Misc. 222
Docket Number: 
Parties: George W. Bennett, Appellant, v. The Virginia Transfer Company, Respondent.
Judges: 
Reporter: New York Miscellaneous Reports
Volume: 80
Pages: 222–224

Head Matter:
George W. Bennett, Appellant, v. The Virginia Transfer Company, Respondent.
(Supreme Court, Appellate Term, First Department,
April, 1913.)
Carriers—limitation of liability on back of receipt — contracts — transfer companies.
Where, on plaintiff’s delivery to defendant, a transfer company, of four baggage cheeks, he accepted a receipt on the back of which was a limitation of defendant’s liability to the sum of twenty-five dollars, which he neither read nor had his attention called to, there is no implied contract that he agreed to all the terms contained in the paper.
Where the trial justice, on holding that the limitation of liability constituted a contract between the parties, gave plaintiff a judgment for. twenty-five dollars, an order denying, plaintiff’s motion to set aside the judgment will be reversed, and the judgment set aside.
Appeal by the plaintiff from an order of the Municipal Court of the city of New York, borough of Manhattan, third district, denying a motion to vacate, set aside or amend the judgment herein entered in favor of the plaintiff.
Dennis F. O’Brien, M. L. Malevinsky (William J. Cahill, of counsel), for appellant.
Respondent filing no brief.

Opinion:
Lehman, J.
The plaintiff delivered to the defendant at its office four baggage checks and received from the defendant a receipt. On the hack of the receipt is a limitation of defendant's liability to the sum of twenty-five dollars. The plaintiff shows that he never read the receipt and had no notice that it contained any limitation of liability, and the defendant presents no evidence that the limitation was called to the plaintiff's attention. The trial justice, however, held that the limitation constituted a binding contract between the parties and gave judgment for the sum of twenty-five dollars. The plaintiff appeals from the order denying the motion to set aside the judgment.
It is now well established by a multitude of decisions that an express company may limit its liability for failure to deliver goods intrusted to it if the contract of carriage provides for its limitation. In every case where such limitation is urged the express company must establish that a special contract for this purpose was made. It is elementary that a contract arises only where both parties have assented to its terms. No contract can arise where one party did not manifest in some way his concurrence in the terms proposed. Consequently, where the limitation is contained in a receipt and the consignor accepts the receipt without knowledge or notice that it contains a contract of carriage, no special contract is accepted by him; on the other hand, where the consignor accepts a paper which he knows contains a contract of carriage he impliedly ag'rees to all its terms even though he does not read it. The test in all cases is not whether the consignor read the limitation, but whether he knowingly entered into a special contract of carriage and thereby impliedly agreed to all its terms. Noonan v. Wells, Fargo & Co., 68 Misc. Rep. 322. In this case the paper received by the plaintiff does not show that any special contract of carriage was made. It. does not on its face purport to be a contract but merely a receipt. It contains no statement of where the articles are to be delivered or any promise on the part of the consignee. It contains merely the number of the checks received, the signature of the agent, the name of the express company, and an advertisement of that company. There was nothing on the face of the paper to show that the printing on the back contained any part of a contract. On the contrary the paper itself and the manner in which it was •received repel any inference that the paper was anything more than a receipt. In accepting the receipt without reading the limitation on the back the plaintiff cannot be held to have impliedly agreed to all the terms contained in the paper.
The order should' be reversed, the judgment set aside, and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Gerard and Delany, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, judgment set aside and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.