Court Opinion

ID: 3858863
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 08:45:57.819327+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:41:15.815317
License: Public Domain

Argued December 14, 1925.
Defendant asks a reversal of the judgment in favor of plaintiff on two grounds: (1) That the schedule *Page 258 
filed by it with the Public Service Commission of this Commonwealth limits the recovery of damages for loss of goods delivered to it for carriage within the State — even though caused by its own negligence — to $100; (2) that evidence was improperly admitted as to the value of plaintiff's shawl and certain engravings.
The first ground has been fully considered by this court in the case of Ensign v. Union Transfer Co., 250 October Term 1925, ___ Pa. Superior Ct. ___, opinion by Judge HENDERSON filed this day, and decided adversely to the contention of appellant. For a further discussion of the subject we refer to that opinion.
The second ground we are obliged to sustain.
When the case was here before (84 Pa. Super. 273), the errors specially assigned and argued related, (1) to the refusal of the court below to strike off the plaintiff's statement of claim; and (2) to the instructions of the trial judge to the jury that the owner's valuation was "the best evidence of the value of personal property that she was the owner of." We sustained this second assignment relating to the charge of the court, and ordered a new trial. The rulings of the lower court on the admissibility of the testimony as to the value of the shawl and the engravings were not assigned for error, and were, therefore, not passed upon by us.
Counsel for the plaintiff and the learned court below apparently misunderstood the situation and regarded the action of this court as an approval of everything that had occurred on the first trial except the charge; whereas, our decision was determinative only of the matters complained of and passed upon.
We think plaintiff herself was properly permitted to testify to the value of the Chinese shawl which she owned. It was an article of apparel with which she was very familiar and which she had competently described *Page 259 
in detail to the jury. She had seen and compared it with other shawls of the same general character, and from her knowledge of the prices which such shawls sold for, as well as her general knowledge of fabrics, embroidery, etc., was competent to testify as to its value to her: Lloyd v. Haugh, 223 Pa. 148; Hofford v. R.R. Co., 43 Pa. Super. 303, 316; McGill v. Rowand, 3 Pa. 451,453; Whitesell v. Crane, 8 W.  S. 369, 372; Mish v. Wood,34 Pa. 451, 454. But there was no possible justification for permitting her to testify in chief as to the price asked by an Atlantic City Boardwalk dealer for a shawl smaller and inferior in quality to her own. The witnesses called by her did not fix the value of the shawl, but were allowed to testify on direct examination that they had examined shawls not as large or handsome as plaintiff's in Atlantic City and Philadelphia which were priced at $750 and $800 respectively. This was error. If they were competent to express an opinion as to its value — and this was for the court to determine after the preliminary examination and cross-examination as to their fitness and qualification in that respect — they should have testified as to its value. They certainly should not have been permitted to give evidence in chief of what an Atlantic City Boardwalk store and a Philadelphia dealer were asking for a similar but inferior article.
As to the engravings (there were one hundred of them, unframed), they were not wearing apparel or articles necessary and convenient for the traveler (Clark v. Spence, 10 Watts 335), nor did the plaintiff or her witnesses show any detailed or intimate knowledge of their quality, character or value. Plaintiff's description of them was meager and showed no fitness on her part to fix their value. It was not competent to appraise them with reference to the prices marked in shop windows for engravings, without regard to their *Page 260 
character and quality; and certainly not to introduce substantive evidence in chief of the fact that engravings in a well known gallery, as seen from the sidewalk, were marked at $36. If plaintiff and her witnesses familiar with the engravings are able to describe them in more detail, this description may be supplemented by the opinion of witnesses well-informed upon such subjects and competent to express an opinion as to their value: Mish v. Wood, supra. The difficulty of proving their value cannot justify the admission of wholly incompetent evidence.
The first, second, third, fourth, fifth, eighth, ninth, tenth and eleventh assignments of error are sustained. The judgment is reversed and a new trial is awarded.