176 Mo. App. 257 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
This suit in replevin was instituted against the defendant in a justice’s court, the plaintiff alleging that he was lawfully entitled to the possession of a box containing two pieces of plate glass and some copper all valued at one hundred dollars, and that defendant wrongfully detained the same. The plaintiff prevailed both in the justice’s court and in the circuit court on trial anew without a jury.
There is much testimony in the record ’ concerning a purchase of some plate glass' and copper by plaintiff from the Hadley-Lean Glass Company of St. Louis, Mo., the.same to be used in a building which plaintiff' was erecting in the town of Ozark. It is sufficient here to 'merely state that part of the glass was broken when received at its destination and that plaintiff immediately notified the glass company, demanding* that said company “make it good,” which it refused to do because plaintiff had given the defendant railroad' company a receipt showing that the order when received by him was in good shape. However, the glass company notified him, as the correspondence shows, that it would ship another order of glass and copper .provided he would pay for same, and that it would , assist him in getting, a claim for damages allowed against the railroad company for the broken
The sole question to be determined is, whether a purchaser of goods has a right to maintain replevin against a common carrier to obtain possession of- the goods which were shipped subject to the consignor’s • order with draft and bill of lading attached before- he honors the draft. The decisions of this State conclusively show that such suit cannot be maintained, and - we therefore hold that plaintiff’s action was entirely without merit. This ruling is sustained by the following cases: Bergeman v. Railway Co., 104 Mo. 77, 15 S. W. 992; Burrton State Bank v. Milling Co., 163 Mo. App. 135, 145 S. W. 508; Hunter Bros. Milling Co. v. Stanley, 132 Mo. App. 308, 111 S. W. 869; Strauss, Pritz & Co. v. Hirsch & Co., 63 Mo. App. 95; A. J. Poor Grain Co. v. Franke Grain Co., 157 S. W. (Mo. App.) 840; Howard v. Haas, 131 Mo. App. 499, 109 S. W. 1076. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to the circuit court to enter judgment in favor of the defendant for the return of the goods or their value.