Carroll v. Southern Express Co.
Carroll v. Southern Express Co.
Opinion of the Court
The oxiinion of the court was delivered toy
This action came on to be heard before his honor, Judge Norton, and a jury at a term of the Court of Common Pleas for Auderson County. Verdict being in favor of plaintiffs, judgment thereon was duly entered, and the defendant now ax>peals to this court.
Now, it is certain that the Southern Express Company held out to the world Colyer as its agent, and thereby assumed responsibility for all the acts of Colyer in the course of his agency for such company. But Horton was the person entitled to receive the package of money, and he was apprised by Colyer, the agent, of the rules of the express company, and to enable him to obviate the delay of the receipt of his money by a compliance with such rules of the company, he agreed with Colyer at his (Horton’s) request, to do that which he himself said would relieve such agent (Colyer) from responsibility. The difficulties are now apparent; for here is Colyer, as the agent of the express company, receiving this package of money, that by the rules of the. company he is to deliver to Horton on his receipt therefor on. the books of such company prepared for that purpose. Can that agency of Colyer to the express company be terminated by an arrangement with Horton, whereby, upon Horton’s receipt upon such company’s books, Colyer no longer holds such package as the agent of the express company, but, on the contrary, as the agent of Horton, to whom the package of money was sent? If it should be held that Colyer could not be regarded as Horton’s agent in this transaction, then the express company would be required to assume all the consequences of Horton’s prevailing upon their agent to depart from what he knew were the rules of such company, by an
It is the judgment of this court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and that the cause be remanded to such Circuit Court for a new trial.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CARROLL v. SOUTHERN EXPRESS COMPANY
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Evidence—Relevancy.—On the issue of whether the consignee received a package of money, which the a'gent of the carrier threw to the consignee as he stood on the platform of a departing railroad coach, testimony was admissible to show the position of the consignee on the platform, and who else was there, and the order of time in which these several persons went into the coach. 2. Requests to Charge.—It is not improper to frame a request to charge, based upon hypothetical findings of fact by the jury. 3. Agency—Rules or Principal—Estoppel.—II. told C., the agent of an express company at a way station, that he was looking for a package of money by the next train, and wanted to board the same train and carry the money with him. The-agent said his company’s rules forbid him to deliver except on receipt signed in the company’s books, and that the train would not stop long enough to permit that. H. replied that ho would sign the receipt in advance, and that would relieve the agent; and this was done. On the arrival of the train, H. got on the platform of the coach, and as the train moved off, 0. called to H., and threw the package of money to him, but II. did not receive it, and it was lost. Held, that the express company was released by the act of II., the consignee, from its liability to the consignor for the safe delivery of this money, as 0. became the agent of H. so soon as the money was received by 0.