126 Mo. 69 | Mo. | 1895
— The plaintiffs began the present action, January 19, 1893, in the circuit court, city of St. Louis, upon a petition of which a copy will accompany this opinion.
The defendant made default, and took no steps in the action until after the final judgment. The February term, 1893, of the circuit court began on the sixth of that month. On the sixteenth of February, default for want of answer was entered. March 30, 1893, the cause was duly called for trial. Upon submission of plaintiffs’ proof the court found for them, assessed their damages at $6010.80, “and six per cent, interest from January 19, 1893, the date of the institution of the suit;” and gave judgment for the total, $6080.80.
No motion for new trial or in arrest was filed.
■ The writ of error now before us was sued out later by defendant from the supreme court to review the record proper.
Two main errors in it are assigned; the first, that the return of service on the summons is insufficient to confer jurisdiction over the defendant in the action; the second, that the petition does not state facts sufficient, etc.
The return in question we shall copy in juxtaposition to the words of the statute by, which it is governed.
“Executed this writ in the City of St. Louis, Missouri, on the twentieth day of January, 1893, hy delivering a copy of the writ and petition as furnished by the clerk to A. A. Poland, freight solicitor of the Jacksonville Southeastern Line, the within named defendant, who was in its business office and had charge thereof at the time of- said service; the president or any higher chief officer could not he found in the city of St. Louis, Missouri, at the time of said service. Fee, $1.00.
“Patrick M. Staed, Sheriff. “Joseph F. Schermen, Deputy.”
THE STATUTE'.
See. 2017 (B. S. 1889).
“A summons shall he executed, except as otherwise provided hy law. * * * Fourth, where defendant is a corporation or joint stock company, organized under the laws of any other state or. country, and having an office or doing business in this state, hy delivering a eopy of the writ and petition to any officer or agent of such corporation or company in charge of any office or place of business, or if it have no office or place of business, then to any officer, agent or employee in any county where such service may he obtained,” etc.
1. The question whether the court had jurisdiction to render the judgment it assumed to give, is. one which may be. raised for the first time upon writ of error. If the trial court was without the lawful power to act upon the defendant’s rights, because defendant had not been brought before the court in the mode required by law, the want of power would infect the proceedings with fatal weakness, which might be pointed out, even in a collateral action. For stronger reason, could such a vital blemish be used to get rid of the apparent judgment under appropriate reviewing process; for the judgment itself would be a mere fbrm, and simply null, wherever and whenever called in question in a court of law. Hannibal, etc., R. R. Co. v. Mahoney (1868), 42 Mo. 467.
2. Measuring the return, then, by the requirements of the statute, we see at a glance that the real question is whether service upon a named person, “freight solicitor” of the defendant, in charge of its business office at the time of said service, in the city of St. Louis, is good.
The return should receive a reasonable and natural interpretation. It must be fairly construed and effect be given to its plain intent and meaning. • Mikel v. Railroad (1873), 54 Mo. 145; Hill v. Ore & Steel Co. (1886), 90 Mo. 103; Pope v. Terre Haute, etc., Co. (1881), 87 N. Y. 137.
"We do not doubt that “freight solicitor” is a sufficient designation of an agent on whom service may properly be made, when in charge of the defendant’s business office. Palmer v. Pennsylvania Co. (1885), 35 Hun, 369; affirmed (1885), 99 N. Y. 679; Talbot v. Railroad (1890), 82 Mich. 66; In re Hohorst (1893), 150 U. S. 653; Cook v. Imperial Bldg. Co. (1894), 152 Ill. 638 (38 N. E. Rep. 914).
3. It is next urged that the petition does not state a cause of action.
In the judgment of the writer of this opinion, that point involves an issue of law, which should have been submitted first to the trial court to warrant the exercise of appellate jurisdiction by this court by way of review. It is not, however, necessary to repeat the reasons for that view. They have been given already. State ex rel. v. Scott (1891), 104 Mo. 32; Lilly v. Menke (1894), 126 Mo. 190.
My learned colleagues hold, a different opinion on that point of practice; and, in deference to their ■ruling, the merits of the question now raised by the defendant will be gone into.
4. It is claimed that the petition is fatally deficient in omitting allegations to show that plaintiffs had some
We think the petition meets the demands of the law in this particular.
Possession of such personal property is a fact which, unexplained, warrants an inference of ownership, or, at least, of some property in the goods referred to.
Plaintiffs had certainly such-an interest as would sustain the action under the rulings on that subject in Wolfe v. Railroad (1889), 97 Mo. 473, and 10 Am. St. Rep. 331.
Plaintiffs were also the consignees of the goods, according to the allegations; and as such, were entitled to receive them and to claim them as against defendant. Dyer v. Railroad (1892), 51 Minn. 345.
Moreover, the statements that plaintiffs caused the goods to be delivered to defendant at Pekin “to be carried by defendant over its said road,” etc., plainly imply an obligation to carry and to forward the goods as described.
It is settled law that the party with whom the contract of shipment is made may, prima facie, recover for its breach, irrespective of the question of title to the goods.
•'5. The most serious criticism of the petition is that it is said to omit any statement of a breach of contract, or of duty, on defendant’s part, either as carrier or forwarder. Defendant claims, in this connection, that “under the allegations of the petition, defendant’s duties ceased when it transported the bags to the terminus of its line at East St. Louis, and there forwarded them by a connecting line for transportation to St. Louis.”
One difficulty that defendant encounters, in attempting to maintain that line of argument, is, that it does not appear that the goods were either carried by defend
At the present stage of the action, plaintiffs are entitled to the benefit of every reasonable inference that may be drawn from the facts they have expressly alleged.
“In the construction of a pleading, for the purpose of determining its effect, its allegations shall be liberally 'construed, with a view to substantial justice between the parties.” R. S. 1889, sec. 2074.
If the petition is in any respects vague or uncertain, it was the duty of the defendant to have had it corrected by timely motion (R. S. 1889, sec. 2057); otherwise it must now be held good, as against any objection of that order, providing it states a substantial cause of action.
When it appears that defendant, as a common carrier, received the goods which plaintiffs caused to be delivered to it for carriage and that the goods, after a reasonable time for the transit, have not been delivered at their destination, aprima facie case of negligence on the part of the receiving carrier is made out, requiring the latter to present evidence, showing absence of fault on his part, either under his contract, or under the rules of law. Murphy v. Staton (1812), 3 Munf. 239; Adams Express Co. v. Stettaners (1871), 61 Ill. 184; Davis v. Railroad (1886), 89 Mo. 340.
“The liability of a carrier is discharged by a delivery of the goods. If he is an intermediate carrier, this duty is performed by a delivery to the succeeding carrier for further transportation, and an acceptance by him.” Pratt v. Railroad (1877), 95 U. S. 43.
“In all cases, however, there must be a delivery by the carrier, or something tantamount to a delivery,
The petition in this case certainly shows that defendant, as carrier, obtained possession of the goods consigned to plaintiffs.
It was not essential to aver a consideration for the assumption of obligation by the carrier. Hall v. Cheney (1857), 36 N. H. 26.
But it is insisted that a contract or duty as-forwarder only is alleged, as to that part of the journey between East St. Louis and St. Louis.
That depends on the meaning to be given to the words, “to be forwarded by defendant to plaintiffs, at the city of St. Louis,” as they appear in this petition.
If that language is susceptible of any latitude of construction, plaintiffs must receive the benefit of the most liberal interpretation that is reasonable and fair, under the statutory rule for the construction of pleadings, above quoted.
In St. Louis, etc., R’y Co. v. Piper (1874), 13 Kan. 505, Judge Brewer, speaking for the court, in construing the words “to be forwarded,” said:
“The company contracted ‘to forward the cattle from Kansas City to Chicago; ’ and the word forward, as here used, seems to us to mean the same as ‘transport,’ or ‘carry’ (Mer. Mu. Ins. Co. v. Chase, 1 E. D. Smith, 121). Having contracted to carry the cattle to Chicago, a contract it was competent to make even though the carriage involved transportation beyond its own line, it became responsible as a common carrier, except so far as it limited that responsibility by special contract.”
In the opinion of Johnson, J., in the court of appeals of New York, in Blossom v. Griffin (1856), 13 N. Y. 576, discussing the same phrase, we find these observations: “The terms ‘to be forwarded’ instead of
v In Anderson’s Law Dictionary (“Forwarder”) it is stated that “An agreement ‘to forward’ goods may still amount to a contract for carrying.”
The word “forward,” as applied to goods, has been judicially held to be equivalent to “carry” or “transport” in other cases, besides those already quoted. Read v. Spaulding (1859), 5 Bosw. 395; affirmed (1864), 30 N. Y. 630; Southern Express Co. v. Newby, (1867), 36 Ga. 635; Christenson v. Express Co. (1870), 15 Minn. 283.
It was entirely competent for defendant (though the line of its road, over which it was engaged in business as carrier, extended only to East St. Louis) to contract to carry to that point on its own line, and then to assume to deliver the goods at St. Louis or “forward them to plaintiffs” there, over the line of some other road.
“Forwarded by defendant” (which is the language of the petition) may reasonably mean this: in connection with the context; especially when it is immediately afterwards charged that, “defendant received said bags for said carriage and delivery, blit has failed to deliver the same to plaintiffs,” etc.
“While a railroad company can not be compelled to transport to a point' beyond its own line, it is well settled that it may lawfully contract to carry persons and property over its own and other lines to a destination beyond its own route; and when such a contract is made, it assumes all the obligations of a carrier over
If defendant received the .goods, in question here, for “carriage and delivery to plaintiffs at St. Louis,” it was bound to such delivery; and the words “to be forwarded” should be given an interpretation consistent with that duty, as charged upon defendant.
The petition was filed January 19, 1893, and process was served the next day, as the record shows. The judgment mentions the former date as the “institution of the suit.?’
The petition alleged that the goods were delivered to defendant at Pekin, Illinois, in May, 1892. The failure to deliver them to plaintiffs at St. Louis before the beginning of the action, at the time disclosed by the record, sufficiently indicates an unreasonable delay in the carriage on the part of defendant. Dawson v. Railroad (1883), 79 Mo. 296. Or, at least, it furnishes a substantial foundation for the inference, or a finding by the trial judge, that that delay was unreasonable.
The allegation that there was a failure “to deliver the same to plaintiffs in good order,” may mean either that they were not delivered at all, or were delivered in bad order; in either of which events, plaintiff’s action would be maintainable.
We conclude that- the petition states a cause of action, and accordingly affirm the judgment.