122 Mo. 258 | Mo. | 1894
This is an action against the defendant on its common law liability as a common carrier. The petition alleges that defendant “is a common carrier for goods for hire and as such received from plaintiff certain flour to be carried to New York and there delivered to plaintiff.” It also avers that defendant carried the flour to New York, but did not deliver it to plaintiff, but stored it; that it reached its destination on the twenty-seventh, twenty-eighth and thirtieth days of March, 1889, and was, on the nineteenth of April, 1889, while in defendant’s possession, by reason of the failure of defendant to exercise reasonable and ordinary care of the flour while so stored, destroyed and lost to plaintiff. The value of the flour, at the time of its destruction, is alleged to be $2,542.50.
Defendant, in its answer, admits the receipt and transportation of the flour; that it arrived at defendant’s terminal depot in- New York as alleged, and at the times mentioned in plaintiff’s petition, but avers that it was transported under a special contract. It then, by way of defense, alleges: That the contract exempted it from liability for loss or damage by fire while at depots; that on the next business day after the arrival of each shipment, defendant gave plaintiff notice of such arrival, and that the flour was ready for delivery to plaintiff’s order, and notified it that if the flour was not removed within twenty-four hours it would be stored at plaintiff’s risk; that plaintiff did not remove the flour, nor order it delivered within the twenty-four hours; that thereupon defendant stored the flour and held it without charge to plaintiff until it was destroyed by fire. The answer then denies all allegations of negligence, and then sets up, by way of counterclaim, its demand for freight on the flour amounting to $261, which it avers plaintiff has never paid.
The evidence showed the following state of facts: That the flour arrived at the sixteenth street station of the N. Y. Central & Hudson River Railroad Company, which was defendant’s terminal depot in New York, on the respective days mentioned in the petition; that, from and after its arrival, defendant was ready to deliver it, lighterage free, at any point where plaintiff might order it délivered, on either side of the Hudson river, or of the East river, or at Staten Island; that within twenty-four hours after the arrival of the flour, plaintiff was notified of its arrival, that it was ready for delivery, and that, unless an order were given for delivery within twenty-four hours thereafter, it would be stored at the risk of the owner, and defendant would no longer be liable as carrier; that by the custom prevailing in New York, goods coming over the railroad lines consigned to persons in that city were permitted by the companies to remain at their depots, without charge to the consignees, until the latter should order them delivered; that plaintiff gave no order for the delivery of this flour, until after its destruction by fire on April 19, though it was held by defendant awaiting such order from twenty to twenty-two days, and that no payment or tender of the charges for transportation was ever made.
The flour was all stored in the freight house on pier D. This pier was entirely destroyed by the fire, as well as all but a small portion of its contents. Such portion of its contents as was removed was taken from the eastern or entrance end, where a space of about forty feet was cleared, mostly on the north side. The freight house on this pier was a two story building. . The upper floor contained nothing but flour, a hundred car loads or more; and here two-thirds of
Between Eifty-ninth and Sixtieth streets there stood a double four story brick building owned by the N. W. C. R. R. Co., and divided by a three-foot party wall, the south half being occupied by the Rossiter Storage Company, the north half by the Wilcox Lard Company, a lessee of the railroad company, and an occupant of the building for seven or eight years prior to the fire; the evidence showed that this portion of the building was filled with fatty substances, the upper story containing tanks filled with oil, the floor being saturated therewith, and that fire had broken out in an upper story of this building about February, 1888.
The fire commenced between 3 and 4 o’clock in the afternoon, in the southern, or Wilcox half of this building, which was usually called, as a whole, the Rossiter building. The railroad company had no control of this building or any part of it. While the fire was burning in the southern half of this building it communicated to the shed situated on the pier at the foot of Fifty-ninth street, and consumed it with its contents. After that the fire broke out in the northern
When the fire was first discovered it was' not anticipated that it would extend as far north as Pier D. The officers of the fire department assured the officers of the railroad company that they would save the pier, and that they would have no need of moving the freight; that they would only be in the way, and if left alone they would save the pier. The fire chief expected at first to confine the fire to the building in which it had its origin. While Elevator A was on fire, and after Elevator B had caught, which was about three hours after the fire was first discovered, they expressed the conviction that there was no danger to the pier. Sparks and cinders, however, from the burning building were falling all over the yard. The danger from this source was met by defendant: first, by placing men with water and with brooms on the roofs of all the freight houses, and by running hose so as to play on the elevators and other buildings; secondly, by running the cars, which were standing in the southern part of the yard near the fire, up northwardly out of danger.
While elevator B was burning and after pier D was ■ threatened, as much freight as possible was removed. The company put all of its own men, and as many men as it could hire from the crowd of bystanders, at work
At the close of plaintiff’s evidence defendant asked the court to give the following instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence:
‘ ‘Upon the pleadings and the evidence offered by plaintiff, the jury are instructed that plaintiff is not entitled to recover.”
The instruction was refused and defendant duly excepted at the time.
The only instruction as to which any question is raised in this court is number 1, given at the instance of the plaintiff, and numbers 5, 6 and 7 for defendant. Instruction number 1, given at the. instance of the plaintiff, is as follows:
“1. The court instructs the jury that, though they may find from the evidence that the origin of the fire which destroyed the flour was' accidental, yet, -if they believe from the evidence that the flour might have been saved by reasonable efforts by defendant or its employees, then the defendant is liable for the loss; and thb jury are instructed that the degree of effort, care and foresight required of defendant was such as might reasonably be expected of persons of ordinary common sense and prudence, engaged in like business, and under the exigencies of the situation, as shown by the evidence.”
“5. The jury are instructed that the defendant was bound only to exercise such care with reference to all the property in its charge, as a man of ordinary prudence would have exercised under all the circumstances of the case as shown by the evidence; and it was not bound to exercise any more care to save the property of plaintiff than to save the property of other persons in its charge or its own property. And if the jury believe from the evidence that defendant did exercise proper care, as above explained, the verdict must be for the defendant.
“6. The jury are instructed that the defendant was not bound'to single out plaintiff’s flour and save it before all others.' The most that could be required of defendant was that it should use such diligence and make such efforts to save the property generally in its care as would under all the circumstances be reasonable. If, with such efforts and diligence, it could save only a part of the property in its care, plaintiff has no right to complain because its property was not a part of that saved.
UT. It is not for the defendant to prove that it did exercise due care, but for plaintiff to prove that it. did not; that is, the burden of establishing that defendant did not exercise proper care, as explained in the previous instructions, rests upon the plaintiff.”
Instruction number 8 was asked by plaintiff and refused, and reads as follows:
“8. The court instructs the jury that after the arrival of the flour in New York, and while in its warehouse, the defendant was under obligation to keep the flour in a reasonably safe place; and if you believe from the. evidence, in view of all the circumstances in evidence, that the railroad company did not keep it in a*269 reasonably safe place, and as a result thereof the flour was destroyed, then you will find a verdict for the plaintiff.”
Under the evidence and instructions of the court, the jury found a verdict against plaintiff for damages, and for defendant against plaintiff for the full amount of the counterclaim, $268.83. Plaintiff, in due time, filed its motion for a new trial, alleging the following grounds therefór:
“jFirst. The action of the court in overruling plaintiff’s request to be permitted to read the cross-examination of witnesses Haskell and Briggs.
“Second. The fact that defendant was allowed, on cross-examination of E. 0. Stanard, to bring out before the jury incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial evidence.
“Third. That the court admitted incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial evidence, offered by the defendant.
“Fourth. That the court erroneously sustained defendant’s objection to proper and competent evidence offered by the plaintiff.
“Fifth. That improper instructions were given by the court, and proper instructions refused.
“Sixth. That the verdict of the jury was against the law and the evidence, and the weight of the evidence.”
The motion was sustained, and the judgment on the verdict was set aside, on two grounds: first, that the bills of lading were improperly admitted in evidence; and, second, that the instruction numbered 5 was erroneous. To which action of the court defendant duly excepted, and in due time perfected its appeal.
This being an appeal from an order of the court' granting a new trial, nothing can be considered by this
That the court had the inherent power to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial for the causes assigned in the order, independent of the motion for a new trial, is now well settled law. Hewitt v. Steele, 118 Mo. 463; Lovell v. Davis, 52 Mo. App. 342, and authorities cited.
The first ground upon which the order granting the new trial was sustained as appears from the record, was that the court erred in admitting illegal evidence on the part of the defendant. This is, also, plaintiff’s third assignment in the motion to set aside the verdict. This action of the court was predicated upon its ruling in admitting in evidence over the objection of plaintiff, the bills of lading offered by defendant. One of them is here given in full, the two being exactly alike as to the number of barrels carried. It is as follows:
PAST FREIGHT LINE.
GENERAL FREIGHT OFFICE, CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, ST. LOUIS, MO.
That the liability of a common carrier may be limited or modified by express contract seems clear. Navigation Company v. Merchants’ Bank, 6 How. (U. S.) 382; Moses v. Railroad, 24 N. H. 90. But it is equally clear that losses or damages occasioned by negligence can not be stipulated against; and that, if there be a reasonable doubt as to the construction of the contract, it is to be construed strictly and most strongly against the carrier. As was said in Barter v. Wheeler, 49 N. H. 31: “We think, also, that, to justify the finding of the discharge of a common law liability by the assent or agreement of the consignor, and especially by means of a bill of lading, which is the act of the carrier alone, the terms ought to be explicit and unequivocal, and doubtful expressions ought to be taken most strongly against the carrier, and such, we think, has been the general doctrine both in the English and American courts.” 2 Redfield on Law of Railways [6 Ed.], p. 123, sec. 178, par. 17; Nicholas v. Railroad, 89 N. Y. 370; Holsapple v. Railroad, 86 N. Y. 275; Elliott v. Railroad, 11 N. Y. Supp. 691.
The bills of lading provide that the defendant-company “agree to forward with as reasonable dispatch as their general business will permit to-station and there deliver unto consignee or next common carrier, if destined to a point beyond the line of this company’s road, upon payment of freight and charges, the dam
It is by no means clear that the depots excepted included the depot at the point to which the flour was to be shipped and especially when taken in connection with the words “damages incident to railroad transportation,” which seem to have reference to damages incurred while in transit. Construing the bills by the rule announced by the foregoing authorities, we must hold that the words “while at depots” only refer to the depots at which the cars containing the flour might be stopped while en route to New York.
If, however, the bills of lading were admissible in evidence for any purpose there was no error committed in permitting them to be read in evidence to the jury. They were, we think, admissible in evidence in support of defendant’s counterclaim. In fact they were the best evidence at defendant’s command, as they showed the rate of freight to be paid defendant for the transportation of the flour. Defendant had the right to introduce all the legitimate evidence that it saw proper and that its counsel thought necessary in support of its counterclaim, and this, even though it may have'theretofore introduced other evidence in regard to the same matter; and if plaintiff thought the effect of the freight bills ought to have been limited, the court should have given an instruction so limiting them, if it had been asked to do so. Garesche v. St. Vincent’s College, 76 Mo. 332; Wright v. Gillespie, 43 Mo. App. 244.
Another cause assigned by the court for setting aside the verdict was, that it committed error in giving the fifth- instruction at the request of defendant. This instruction is criticised because it is argued that it is liable to the construction that defendant was under no more obligation to try to save the plaintiff’s property in
It was admitted by the stipulation filed that goods coming into New York over the lines of the various railroads, terminating at said city, and consigned, lighterage free, to persons doing business in said city, as in this case, were permitted to remain, without charge to consignees, at the depot and stations of said railroad company in said city, .until ordered by the respective consignees to be delivered to the railroad company, or until ordered by .the company to remove it. The liability of the defendant, as a common carrier, ceased after the arrival of the flour at its destination, and its discharge from the cars. Thus it was held in Holtszclaw v. Duff, 27 Mo. 394. “After the hemp (shipped over theH. & St. J. R. R.) reached the terminus of the road and was removed from the cars, a different and less onerous obligation was assumed, and they became liable as warehousemen and forwarding agents, and, as such, were only bound to take reasonable care of the property, and were only answerable for losses occasioned by their fault or negligence.” This is the rule announced in Gashweiler v. Railroad, 83 Mo. 112, in which the HolUclaw case is cited with approval. See, also, Cramer v. Express Co., 56 Mo. 528; Angell on Carriers [5 Ed.], secs. 302, 304.
When the flour was removed from the cars and stored, defendant occupied the relation towards plaintiff of warehouseman and was only answerable for loss occasioned .by the want of ordinary care and skill. Gashweiler v. Railroad, supra. The want of ordinary care is said to be gross negligence. McLean v. Rutherford, 8 Mo. 109; Gray v. Packet Co., 64 Mo. 47. Under the gratuitous bailment existing, the defendant was
Another cause urged why the court might and should have set aside the verdict and granted plaintiff a new trial, is that it committed error in giving instruction numbered 7, at the request of defendant, which imposed upon plaintiff the burden of proving defendant did not exercise proper care. Shearman & Eedfield in their work on negligence (4 Ed., vol. 1, see. 57), state the rule as follow?: “In an action founded upon negligence, the burden of proof, of course, rests upon the plaintiff. * * * It is certainly the duty of the plaintiff to prove affirmatively that the defendant has been negligent. It is not enough for him to prove that he has suffered damage by reason of some * * * act or omission of the defendant. He must also prove that the defendant in such act or omission violated a legal duty incumbent upon him.”
In a case where a bailee has neglected to deliver property to the bailor on demand, and no allegation is made by the plaintiff, in an action for a conversion of the property that it has been lost or destroyed by reason of the negligence of the defendant, the burden of proof rests on the defendant to account for the property. Goodfellow’s Ex’rs v. Meegan, 32 Mo. 280; Wiser v. Chesley, 53 Mo. 547. But if the plaintiff
In Read v. Railroad, 60 Mo. 199, which was an action against a carrier whose bill of lading exempted it from loss by freezing, the court says: “When the loss of the goods is established, the burden of proof devolves upon the carrier to show that it was occasioned by some act which is recognized as an exemption. This shown, it is prima facie an exoneration, and he is not required to go further and prove affirmatively that he was guilty of no negligence. The proof of such negligence, if negligence is asserted to exist, rests on the other party.” -
The doctrine in this case was reaffirmed in Davis v. Railroad, 89 Mo. 340, and again in Witting v. Railroad, 101 Mo. 631, 639. So far as this question is concerned, it is not easy to discover any distinction between the Witting case and the case at bar. The court in that case says: “It must, therefore, be taken as the established law of this state that, when the cause of action stands on the ground of negligence on the part of the carrier, the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff. The authorities cited are not all agreed as to the ground upon which the rule stands. The true reason, it seems to us, is, that negligence is a positive wrong, and will not be presumed, though it may be inferred from circumstances. When the carrier brings himself within the exception he need go no further to relieve himself from his liability as insurer. The party who founds his cause of action upon negligence must be prepared to establish the assertion by proof.” '
In Otis Co. v. Railroad, 112 Mo. 622, it was held, in an action against a railway company for the loss of property from fire, wherein it was agreed that the bill
On objection being made by defendant, the- testimony of witnesses for plaintiff, Gricquell and Haskell tending to prove the ownership by the railroad of the building in which the fire started; that it had been leased to the Wilcox Lard Company for seven or eight years; that it was so used and in such condition as to be very inflammable and dangerous in the freight yard; that it had caught fire about a year before the fire which destroyed plaintiff’s property; and that the lard company, after the last fire, moved its works some distance away; and that the storage house then stood where the old building stood, was excluded by • the •court, in which it is contended that error was committed. It is argued that this evidence was admissible for the purpose of showing negligence upon the part of the defendant in storing the flour in a place where it might reasonably have been apprehended that it was in danger from fire, and that defendant, by the exercise of reasonable j diligence, might have saved the flour after the fire started.
With respect to the first objection under this point, the cause of action is predicated upon the failure oí defendant to exercise reasonable and ordinary care of said flour while it was stored, by reason of which it was consumed by fire. The petition alleges that defendant “stored the flour in a warehouse owned and managed by the defendant” and “that defendant, failed and neglected to exercise reasonable care of said flour while so stored.” No place is to be found in the petition where it is averred that by reason of its prox
Nor was the evidence of the removal of the Wilcox Lard Company’s works, after the fire, and the rebuilding of a warehouse on the same site, immediately subsequent to the fire, competent to show that^ defendant knew it should never have permitted such business to-be carried on in its freight yards. Such evidence was-not admissible to show negligence on the part of the-defendant in failing to store the flour in a suitable-warehouse, for that must be made out by proof of the condition of the warehouse in which the flour was-stored., Brennan v. St. Louis, 92 Mo. 488; Mitchell v. Plattsburg, 33 Mo. App. 555; Alcorn v. Railroad, 108 Mo. 81; Mahaney v. The St. Louis & H. Railroad, 108 Mo. 191. And it is not claimed that it was not reasonably safe on account of any infirmities that it possessed.
Defendant under the evidence as disclosed by the record, was in no way responsible for the fire in the first place, and seems to have done everything possible, with the agencies at its command after it had broken out, to stay its progress, and to protect its own property and that which was under its control. We can not say that the verdict was not for the right party, nor do we-think that it was properly set aside for either of the causes assigned in the order of the court, or motion fora new trial. As there is nothing in the record which warranted the court in granting a new trial, its order-