Court Opinion

ID: 5603555
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-11 03:35:49.431192+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:36:51.942520
License: Public Domain

Powell, J.
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
The case having been submitted to the judge without the intervention of a jury, on an agreed statement of facts, the only question before this court is whether a verdict for a sum greater than $50 in favor of the plaintiff was demanded by the evidence. We can not say that it is. It is stipulated that the express company did not know of the value of the contents of the package, and. no valuation was given by the shipper. In the light of the general description of the nature of the contents of the package, contained in the receipt, the case does not fall directly within the rule in the Everett case, 37 Ga. 688, 46 Ga. 303, and in the other cases, cited as authority in Southern Express Co. v. Pope, ante, 689 (63 S. E. 809), in which it is held, as a matter of law, that the carrier is discharged by the constructive fraud arising from the shipper’s failure to reveal the value of the property. It was, however, an issuable question of fact whether the preparation of the receipt by the shipper, under its particular terms and phraseology, and the delivery of the package to the carrier without any statement as to its value, and the apparent attempt to get it carried at a less rate than would have been the proper charge in.the event the real value had been disclosed, did not amount to a fraudulent imposition upon the carrier. This being so, a verdict in favor of the plaintiff was not demanded. The proposition asserted by able counsel for the plaintiff, that the tender of the $50 estops the defendant from asserting this defense in this form, since the effect of the fraud of the shipper is not merely to reduce the right of recovery to the sum stipulated in the receipt, but to absolve the carrier wholly from liability, is fallacious. The fact that it might not have been necessary for the defendant to have tendered anything, and that a judgment against it for $50 is theoretically incorrect, does not help the plaintiff in this court, as the burden rests on the plaintiff of showing not merely that the judgment actually rendered was erroneous, but that a verdict for a greater sum is demanded. Judgment affirmed..