117 Mo. App. 221 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906
Action for damages for negligent delay in tbe transportation of cattle to market. Plaintiff had judgment in the sum of five hundred dollars and defendant appealed. The shipment consisted of ninety-six head of fat cattle and was made under written contracts of affreightment providing for through transportation from Stanberry, Missouri, 'to the stockyards in Chicago, Illinois. It left the former place at noon one Saturday and, according to the evidence introduced by plaintiff, had it been forwarded with the usual expedition, would have reached the destination Sunday night in ample time for the best of M'onday’s market. The petition alleges, and there is substantial evidence supporting the charge, that the shipment was negligently and unreasonably delayed at various points to such an extent that delivery at the stockyards was not accomplished until about ten o’clock Monday morning. It required about an hour to put the cattle in the sale pens in shape for exhibition to buyers and, owing partly to' the fact that the best of the market for that day was then over and partly because the cattle were worn out from lack of rest, food and water, plaintiff was compelled to sell them at a reduced price and suffered further damages from loss in weight resulting from the negligent treatment they received.
We will not go into details in this branch of the case, but will content ourselves with saying that plaintiff pleaded and supported by proof a common law cause of action and the judgment should be sustained provided we do not find that plaintiff bargained away his right to recover in the stipulations appearing in the shipping contract. Defendant contends that he did, but the trial court held otherwise and in the instructions given, in effect, eliminated all of these special agreements from the consideration of the jury. Every question worthy of note presented by defendant depends upon their assumed validity and our discussion will be limited to that subject.
That the carrier may, with the assent of the shipper fairly obtained and upon a sufficient and lawful consideration restrict the common law liability to damages resulting from negligence is well settled both by the decisions of the courts of this State and those of the United States [Kellerman v. Railroad, 136 Mo. 177; Paddock v.
“It is well settled that the carrier may limit his common law liability [York Co. v. Central Railroad, 3 Wall. 107.] But it is urged that the contract must be upon a consideration other than the mere transportation of the property and an ‘option and opportunity must be given the shipper to select under which, the common law or limited liability, he will ship his goods.’ If this means that a carrier must take no advantage of the shipper or practice no deceit upon him, we agree. If it means that the alternative must be actually presented to the shipper by the carrier, we cannot agree. From the standpoint of the law, the relation between carrier and shipper is simple. Primarily, the carrier’s responsibility is that expressed in the common law and the shipper may insist upon the responsibility. But he may consent to a limitation of it and this is the ‘option and opportunity,’ which is offered to him. What other can be necessary? There can be no limitation of liability without the assent of the shipper and there can be no stipulation for any exemption by a carrier, which is not just and reasonable in the eye of the law. Inside of that limitation, the carrier may modify his responsibility by special contract with the shipper.” Stated in another form, the principles embodied in this statement of the law are these. The shipper has the right, of which he cannot be deprived except by his own voluntary consent, to have his property carried without any limitation of the liability imposed by the common law upon the carrier. Notwithstanding the carrier is not required to offer the
Further, the assent of the shipper must rest upon an actual and lawful consideration. As observed in the Cau case, “the carrier must take no advantage of the shipper or practice no deceit upon him.” Presumably, it is the reality of the consideration expressed that procures the consent of the shipper to part with substantial rights. By holding out the bait of a fictitious reduced rate to bring within its retractile reach special privileges and benefits, the carrier under the most elemental principles will not be permitted to enjoy the fruits of such deception. We have not overlooked the holding in the Cau case that the transportation of the goods was a sufficient consideration to support the agreement to limit the carrier’s liability, but that question is not before us, for here the release is expressly based upon the fact of a reduced rate and the contract must stand upon that consideration alone. [Fountain v. Railroad, 114 Mo.App. 676; Summers v. Railroad, 114 Mo. App. 452, 79 S. W. 481.]
Turning now to the facts before us, it is admitted by the witnesses for defendant that upon cattle of the value of $50 per head and under, there is but one rate from Stanberry to Chicago, 23 1-2 cents per hundred pounds. On cattle valued from $50 to $100 per head, the rate is twenty-five per cent higher and so on, as the value increases, the rate is correspondingly increased. There is but one form of contract — that before us, and a shipper cannot ship cattle of any value except under
The contention that the common law is not followed by the Federal courts except in cases controlled by State laws and that as this case falls within the purview of the interstate commerce law, the common law should not be followed, requires no further notice than the statement that the common law as affecting interstate shipments is distinctly recognized in the Cau case.
Under the views expressed, it follows that the special provisions of the contract invoked by defendant must be ignored and the rights of the parties determined under the rules of the common law. Judged by this standard, the case was fairly tried and submitted, and the judgment is affirmed.