Court Opinion

ID: 6954559
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 01:36:08.420217+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:08:12.715766
License: Public Domain

Mr. Chief Justice Lawrence delivered the opinion of the Court: The plaintiff in this case had undertaken to furnish masquerade costumes to be used at a ball on the evening of December 25, 1868, at South Bend, Indiana. On the 24th she bought a passenger ticket on defendants’ road from Chicago to South Bend, and checked, as luggage, two large trunks containing the costumes, paying $1.Y5 for extra weight. One of the trunks did not arrive at South Bend in time for the ball, and the plaintiff lost the benefit of her contract. The trunk was returned to her, in a few days, at Chicago, with its contents wholly uninjured. This suit was brought to recover for the loss of profits, and the plaintiff recovered judgment for $500. This judgment can not be sustained upon the evidence in the record. In order to recover, it was necessary for the plaintiff to show she informed defendants’ servants of the contents of the trunks, and that they would be required the next day. Instead of doing this, the plaintiff checked the trunks as personal baggage. She is now endeavoring to hold the company responsible for a liability which it never consciously assumed. The company undertook to carry certain trunks as personal baggage, and to be accountable for their non-delivery in a reasonable time, but the plaintiff is seeking to charge it for the non-delivery of merchandise shipped to be used in the plaintiff’s trade, and in no sense whatever capable of being considered personal baggage. The case is in principle like the Cincinnati and Chicago R. R. Co. v. Marcus, 38 Ill. 223. An attempt was made in this case to charge the defendants with notice, but the evidence is wholly insufficient for that purpose. The plaintiff, by her own evidence, merely told the baggageman who checked her trunks,, in reply to his question where she was going, that she was going to the masquerade at South Bend. She does not state she gave the slightest information as to their contents, and the man himself swears he did not know their contents, or what business the plaintiff followed, although he knew her. We are wholly unable to see why he should have inferred, from what passed between them, that her trunks contained any thing besides personal baggage. The verdict is wholly unsustained by the evidence. Beversed and remanded.