80 Mo. App. 164 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
This is an action in two counts for damages arising from defendant’s failure to carry and deliver in proper season two car loads of clover seed which plaintiff in September, 1897, shipped over defendant’s road from Columbia, Missouri, to Toledo, Ohio. One car load was shipped from Columbia on September 6, and the other September 16. Both arrived at Toledo in due season, but the cars were kept on a sidetrack in defendant’s freight yards — one about twenty days and the other two weeks — before being unloaded and delivered' at defendant’s freight depot or warehouse. During this delay in delivering the seed it declined in market price at Toledo, so that plaintiff suffered loss in disposing of the same. The case was tried by the court, "sitting as a jury, resulting in one general finding and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $303.90 and defendant appealed.
I. The only instruction asked was in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence. This was refused, and the principal question is therefore raised whether or not there was evidence to sustain the court’s finding and judgment. On a careful consideration of the record we find the judgment of the trial court well supported by the facts proved. Eor a moneyed consideration paid to it, the defendant, as a common carrier, undertook to transport over its own line the two car loads of clover seed belonging to plaintiff from Columbia, Missouri, to Toledo, Ohio. Plaintiff’s purpose was to place the seed on the good market then existing at Toledo. The seed was consigned to certain commission agents at Toledo who were to receive and sell it for plaintiff’s account. Within a day or two after
The evidence then tending to establish negligence on the defendant’s part, in that it failed, without just cause or excuse, to carry and deliver the goods within a reasonable time, it becomes unnecessary to determine whether or not the bills of lading issued by defendant qualified its common law liability. Eoi as already stated, the carrier can not contract for an exemption from the consequences of its own negligence. Dawson v. Railroad, 79 Mo. loc. cit. 300, and cases cited.
In our opinion this clause in the contract was not intended to apply to damages of the nature here sued for. The “loss or damage” there referred to was meant" to cover the loss or damage done to the goods themselves, and does not cover the owner’s damage sustained by reason of a mere failure to cany and deliver the goods in a reasonable time. The last sentence, providing that the carrier shall be entitled to the benefit of insurance taken, adds force to this construction.
No prejudicial error appearing, the judgment will be affirmed.