109 P. 216 | Okla. | 1910
That the defendant in error received the car of organs, consigned to an Oklahoma point, which were damaged about June 10, 1903, on account of the inundation of the east bottom of the Mississippi river opposite the city of St. Louis, resulting in the destruction of much property, and afterwards in such damaged condition reached the consignee is not controverted. That said flood was so extensive as to comprise a superhuman agency is not disputed. It is claimed, however, that on account of the proximate negligence of the carrier it should not be excused from answering for the damages sustained. The facts in this case are practically the same as those in Grier et al. v.St. Louis Merchants' Bridge Terminal Railway Co., 108 Mo. App. 565, 84 S.W. 158. That action arose out of the same flood.
The car of organs reached East St. Louis over the defendant's line, which terminated at that point, on the morning of June 4, 1903. It was handled in the usual manner, and on June 5th, with 74 other cars, in due course of business, tendered to the Terminal Railway Association, its connecting carrier, which accepted 48 of them, and refused the others, including the one in question, stating that it was unable to handle all of the business on account of the flood. On the next day (June 6th) it, with 164 cars, was *354 again tendered to the Terminal Railway Association, and was again refused on account of its tracks being under water, and not being able to handle it. On June 7th, it, with 219 other cars, was offered, but it was impossible to either exchange traffic or work construction trains on account of water having flooded the tracks of said association, etc. Thereupon, the car was taken to defendant's yards where the other cars were taken for protection from the high water, and levees were also erected by the use of dirt and sacks of sand to protect such yards. The uncontradicted evidence shows that such yards were safe and secure against any ordinary flood, or any flood which could reasonably be expected, and that the car in question among others in the possession of the defendant, on account of the congestion of the traffic resulting from the flood, could not be moved from East St. Louis to any safer place. On June 5th, the water beginning to rise rapidly in the Mississippi bottom, and that portion of the city where the tracks of the Illinois Central Railroad Company lay appearing to be dangerous as well as all other portions of East St. Louis, it being protected mainly by the embankments of the railroads leading into the city, the mayor of said city called a meeting of the officials of the various railroads for the purpose of taking concerted and immediate action toward saving the city from being inundated, and the request was made of all railroads to render all the aid and assistance they could, by furnishing to said municipal authorities their engines, cars and dirt, as well as all the men they could, for the purpose of bringing dirt into the city to raise the embankments and make temporary levees to keep the water out of the city. The defendant company complying with this request, as a result during such time, it could not bring any freight or passenger trains in or carry any out of said city over its tracks. Those trains only hauling dirt for embankments to protect the city were permitted by the municipal authorities to be operated. On June 5th, 1903, the mayor forbade the defendant from running any trains into or out of the city except for such purposes, this order remaining in force until June 15th. On the 9th or 10th of *355 June, a washout occurring on the Illinois Central Railroad embankment in the southeast part of the city, after that date, it was unable to get trains of any kind or character into the city or resume operation until about the 15th of June, 1903. This flood was the most extraordinary since the year 1844.
If the conclusion reached in Grier et al. v. Merchants'Bridge Terminal Co., supra, is correct, the judgment rendered in favor of the defendant in error by the trial court should be affirmed. We are referred to the case of A., T. S. F. R. Co.v. Madden, Sykes Co.,
Our attention is also called to the case of Michaels v. N YCent. R. Co.,
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed.
All the Justices concur.