64 Mo. 440 | Mo. | 1877
delivered the opinion of the court.
The action in this case originated before a justice of the peace, and was for the recovery of damages alleged to have been occasioned by the loss of some hogs shipped on the freight cars of the defendant.
The petition filed with the justice stated that the plaintiff delivered to the defendant, a common carrier, one hundred and two hogs, which the defendant undertook to convey from Harlem to St. Louis; that only eighty-five hogs were delivered at St. Louis ; that seventeen hogs were not delivered, worth ten dollars and thirteen cents each, making in all the sum of one hundred and seventy-two dollars and twenty cents, for which amount plaintiff sues.
Judgment by default was rendered by the justice against the defendant, from which an appeal was taken to the special law and equity court of Jackson county.
Upon the trial in the appellate court the defendant insisted that the statement of facts before the justice was insufficient, but the court overruled this objection, and the plaintiff proceeded vith his evidence. It appeared in the course of this testimony,
“S. L., K. C. &N. R. R. Co.
Kansas City Station,
September 23d, 1872.”
“Memorandum of an agreement made and concluded this day by and between the North Missouri Railroad" Company of the first part, by the station agent at the above named station, and A. Clark of the second part, witnesseth, that Avhereas the North Missouri Railroad Company transports cattle, hogs, horses, pigs, sheep, lambs, calves or other live stock at the rate of $40 per car load, or — cents per one hundred pounds, and advanced charges and other valuable considerations, the said party of the second part does in consideration thereof hereby agree to take the risk of injuries which the animals, or either of them, may receive in consequence of any of them being wild, unruly, weak, escaping, or maiming .each other, or from delays, or in consequence of any hurt, suffocation or other effects of being crowded in the cars, or on account of being injured by the burning of hay or straw, or any other material used by the OAvner for feeding stock or otherwise, and for any damages occasioned thereby, and also all risks for damages which may be sustained by reason of any delay in such transportation, and that he will see to it that the cattle, etc., are securely placed in the cars furnished, and that the cars are properly and safely fastened, so as to prevent the escape of live stock therefrom, and it is further agreed between the parties that the first party shall in no case be held liable for damages to stock shippers under this contract in a greater sum than $200 for each horse, $100 for each coav, bull or ox, .$50 for each sheep, calf or other animal; and it is further agreed that the said party of the second part is to load and unload said stock at his own risk, the North Missouri Railroad Company furnishing co-laborers to assist, who will be subject 'to the orders of the .owner or his agent while in that service, and that the said party of the second part who will also assume all risk for damage or injury to, or escape of the live stock, which may happen to them while in the stock yards aAvaiting shipment, and that the said*445 second party will assume the charge of feeding and watering and taking care of the stock enumerated herein, at his own expense and risk, while the same is in the stock yards of the first party awaiting shipment aboard the cars ; and it is further agreed between the parties hereto, that the person or persons riding free to take charge of the stock do so at their own'risk of personal injury, from whatever cause, and that the said person shall sign the indorsement on the back of this agreement; and this agreement further witnesseth that the said party of the second part has this day delivered to said North Missouri Railroad company two cars of hogs (one hundred more or less), to be transported to St. Louis station, on the conditions above expressed.
“S. P. Brown, Station Agent.
“A. Clark.”
The plaintifi’s evidence tended to show that the hogs were put into two cars, and that before the owner had time to close the door of the car the train started, and that he informed the conductor of that fact. He got into the caboose at Harlem and did not get out until he reached the R. & L. Junction, about sixty miles from there, at which point he observed that the door was closed. The seventeen hogs were missing at St. Louis.
Upon the introduction of the special contract, the court was asked to declare the law that the plaintiff could not recover, but the court refused to so declare, and gave the following instructions to the jury:
1. “All that is necessary to charge the defendant, who is a common carrier, is to prove the delivery of the hogs to defendant to be carried, and the burden of accounting for the hogs is then upon the defendant.”
2. “The burden of proof is on the defendant to show that the hogs were not lost by any want of care or skill and diligence on the part of defendant or its employees”5
3. “The defendant is liable for any loss occasioned by. the negligence of its agents.”
4. “If the hogs might have all been delivered at St. Louis by due and proper care of defendant or its employees, then defendant is liable for the loss.”
The verdict and judgment were for the plaintiff.
The point in regard to a variance, though of little practical importance, has been urged in this court with apparent confidence, and assumed to be based upon prior decisions of this court, which recognize the necessity of suing upon a special contract which supersedes an implied one.
At common law an action against a common carrier might be either in case, for a breach of duty, or in assumpsit based upon the implied contract. It is stated, that for four hundred years the usual declaration was in tort based upon the custom of the realm, and Mr. Angelí, in his treatise on the law of carriers, particularly points out the advantages and disadvantages of either form of action. Lord Littledale observes, in Burnett vs. Lynch (5 B. & C. 609), that “where, from a given state of facts, the law raised a legal obligation to do a particular act, and there is a breach of that obligation, and a consequential damage, then, although assumpsit may be maintainable upon a promise implied by law to do the act, still an action on the case founded in tort is the more proper form of action, in which the plaintiff, in his declaration, states the facts out of which the legal obligation arises, the obligation itself, the breach of it, and the damage resulting from that breach. For that is the most accurate description of the real cause of action, and that form of action in which the real cause of action is most accurately described is the best adapted to every case.”
In cases where there is a special contract with the carrier, by which the common law liability is restricted, and the action is in form ex contractu, it seems to b.e settled by the authorities that the special contract must be set out in the declaration; but where the action is in tort for the breach of a duty or obligation imposed by law, it is unnecessary to notice the special contract, although it may be under seal. Thus, in Kenlyside vs. Thornton (2 Blacks. Rep 1111), an action on the case for waste was maintained against the tenant, although covenant on the deed of
Mr. Angelí observes in his treatise on the Law of Carriers, that in an action on the case against a common carrier, it is not necessary to state what his duty was, it being sufficient to state that he is a common carrier, the delivery of the goods, and their loss through negligence. It is for the defendant to set up the special contract, where there is any. (Partington vs. South Water R. R. Co., 1 H. & N. [Exch.], 392.)
It seems to be settled, in this State at least, that a common carrier cannot relieve himself by special contract from the responsibility which he incurs at common law, for the exercise of due diligence. A diversity of opinion has prevailed as to the degree of negligence for which he shall be held responsible, but in this State he is required to exercise the highest degree of care exacted by the common law. (Michigan S. & N. I. R. R. vs. Heaton, 37 Ind. 448; New World vs. King, 16 Hen. W. S. 469; Welsh vs. P., F. W. & K. R. R., 10 Ohio, 65.)
The action in this case is based upon the common law responsibility of the carrier for negligence from which no special contract could relieve him. The liability of the defendant does not arise from a special contract, but in despite of it. It is not based upon contract either expressed or implied, but upon a neglect of a public duty. The form of the complaint before the justice is not in exact accordance with such as are required in actions on the "case, in a court where formal pleadings are required, but it may be considered as substantially an action ex delicto or founded in tort.
The case .of Davidson vs. Graham (2 Ohio St. 131), and Camp vs. Hartford and New York Steamboat Company, decided by the Supreme Court of Errors of Connecticut in 1876 (3 L. &
The instructions given by the court are abstractly correct, but not applicable to the facts in evidence. They do not call the attention of the jury sufficiently to the duty devolved on the plaintiff under his special contract of taking care of the stock and seeing that they were securely placed in the cars. The owner obligated himself to see that the cars were safely and properly fastened, so as to prevent the escape of the hogs. It appears from his own statement that this was not done, but he excuses himself by saying that the train started before he had an opportunity of shutting the doors. As the special contract imposed on the plaintiff this duty, it should have been left to the jury to determine whether the escape of the hogs was owing to the- negligence of the plaintiff, or of the defendant’s servants. And the burden of proving this negligence on the part of the defendant was, by the special contract, thrown upon the plaintiff.
In Louisville L. & R. R. Co. vs. Wedger (Am. Law Reg. for 1874, p. 149), which was a case where the contract was similar to the present, the Kentucky court of appeals observed : “When the owner contracts to load and unload his stock, and to take charge of them during their transportation, and does in fact do so, the burden of proof, when the company is charged with negligence for the loss or injury to the stock, is upon the owner, as the party who has the care of the property is presumed to know how the injury occurred, and must himself suffer the loss, unless negligence is shown on the part of the carrier or his employees.”
The decisive question in this case was, whether the admitted neglect of duty on the part of the owner was occasioned by the acts of the defendant’s officers, or was the result of his own negligence. It devolved upon the plaintiff to show that he was prevented from closing the doors of the cars by the acts of defendant or its agents, and that he did everything in his power to see to the fastening of the cars.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.