90 Minn. 36 | Minn. | 1903
Action to recover damages which the plaintiff sustained by the alleged negligence of the defendant, as a common carrier, in the transportation of two carloads of apples. At the close of the evidence the defendant requested the trial court to direct a verdict in its favor. The motion was denied, and the cause submitted to- the jury, and a verdict returned in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant appealed from an order denying its motion for judgment or a new trial.
The principal question on this appeal is whether the verdict is sustained by the evidence.,, The facts were stipulated by the parties^ except certain facts to- which an expert testified. The facts, as stipulated, were, in effect, these: The plaintiff shipped from Plymouth, New Hampshire, two carloads of apples, consigned to himself at St. Paul. The apples were in good condition when delivered to the initial carrier, and were placed in refrigerator cars, and forwarded at owner’s risk of freezing, and arrived at their destination with .the seal to the cars intact. When the apples were delivered to the plaintiff at St. Paul by the defendant, the la“st carrier, they had been injured by frost, and the plaintiff was damaged thereby in the sum of $236.25, for which sum, with interest, it was stipulated he should have judgment in this case, if entitled to recover. The cars reached Lancaster, New ITamp-shire, December 9, 1900, and remained there some nineteen hours. During this time the thermometer ranged from six to sixteen degrees below zero. It does not appear whether anything was done to- protect the apples from frost while the cars were at Lancaster. The cars came into the possession of the defendant at Manitowoc on December
It is the claim of. the defendant that it conclusively appears from the evidence that the apples were frozen before they came to the possession of the defendant. It may be conceded that the evidence would sustain a verdict to that effect, but we are of the opinion that the verdict against the defendant is not so decidedly against the preponderance of the evidence as to justify us in interfering with it. The apples were in good condition when accepted by the first carrier, and damaged by frost when delivered to the consignee by the defendant, the last carrier; hence the burden was pn it to show that the loss did not result from any cause for which it was responsible. Shriver v. Sioux City & St. (P. R. Co., 24 Minn. 506; Shea v. Minneapolis, St. P. & S. Ste. M. Ry. Co., 63 Minn. 228, 65 N. W. 458. This rule is not modified, as defendant claims, by the fact that the apples were transported in through sealed cars. Leo v. St. Paul, M. & M. Ry. Co., 30 Minn. 438, 15 N. W. 872.
The defendant sought to show that it was not responsible for the loss by showing that the weather was colder while the apples were in the hands of the initial and intermediate carriers than it was while the defendant had control of them, and that for nineteen hours the cars were detained at Lancaster when the weather was severely cold. It cannot, however, be presumed, in the absence of evidence, that no measures were taken to protect the apples from frost during this delay. The evidence was not conclusive that the apples were in the same condition when they came to the hands of the defendant as they were when it delivered them to the plaintiff, for the inference to be drawn
Order affirmed.