80 Fla. 382 | Fla. | 1920
Action was begun in the Circuit Court for Dade County by the defendant in error against the Florida East Coast Railway Company, plaintiff in error here, in September, 1911, to recover special damages alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the railroad company’s alleged negligent failure to transport certain “carrier crates” from Jacksonville to Peters Siding on the line of the company’s railroad in Dade County, with reasonable dispatch. A judgment for the plaintiff in the sum'of $39,180.63, including principal, interest, and costs was reversed. See Florida East Coast R. Co. v. Peters, 72 Fla. 311, 73 South. Rep. 151. Thereupon another trial was had upon issue joined upon pleas to the plaintiff’s second amended declaration and a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff in the sum of $44,460, with interest from the date of the- action The judgment entered upon that verdict was also reversed. See Florida East Coast R. Co. v. Peters, 77 Fla. 411, 83 South. Rep. 559.
In June, 1919, the case came on again for trial upon the issue joined between the parties, and there was a verdict for the jdaintiff in the sum of $50,000.00, and interest from September 22, 1911, upon which judgment was entered.
When the case came on for trial in June, 1919, the plaintiff had abandoned the first ten counts of his declaration and materially amended the last or thirty-first count by striking out certain allegations. These amendments were in fact made four or five days before the verdict was rendered upon the second trial although the thirty-first count as copied in the opinion in the case as last reported contains much of the matter which was eliminated before that trial.
The thirty-first count as it stood after the amendments, was a composite count in that it comprehended all the material allegations which were made the bases of counts numbered from eleven to thirty inclusive.
It is alleged that the plaintiff having a large tomato crop made provision for shipping the tomatoes as they became ready in the field for picking, packing and shipment by ordering seventy-five thousand “carrier crates” to be prepared' for him in Jacksonville and to be shipped over the defendant’s railroad in accordance with shipping-directions to be given by the plaintiff. According to the declaration after it was amended by eliminating the first ten counts and striking out many of the allegations of the thirty-first count, the plaintiff ordered shipped only fifty thousand “carrier crates.” The crates were shipped so it is alleged in car lots of twenty-five hundred crates to each car. On March 16th, he ordered three cars shipped, on the seventeenth two cars, on the eighteenth one car and every day thereafter to and including the 27th, two cars, except on the 19th and 26th when no cars
It is alleged that the defendant had knowledge that when tomatoes become ripe and ready for packing and shipping, that they must be packed and shipped immediately to prevent them from becoming overripe and thus reaching the market in a deteriorated and unmarketable condition; that the plaintiff would during the busy season require a large number of “carrier crates” to-wit: five or six thousand each day in which to pack tomatoes which ripened and became ready for shipment; that the defendant had notice that the carrier crates which were offered to it for transportation consigned to plaintiff were to be used for the purpose of packing and shipping tomatoes grown on plaintiff’s farm near Peters Station; that a failure to deliver them promptly would result in the loss of a large number of tomatoes. That the busy season for shipping tomatoes extended from about the middle of March to about the middle of April.
The thirty-first count also alleges that the defendant had notice that the plaintiff had employed a large force of workmen and teams to pack and ship the tomatoes and that this force of men and teams would be idle and become very expensive to plaintiff to maintain if the crates were not delivered promptly. This allegation, however, is not important as an element of damages as the plaintiff seeks only damages for the loss of tomatoes which became overripe and unfit for shipment while waiting for crate material which he had ordered from Jacksonville
These allegations as to the number of men and teams employed and the likelihood of a disorganization of working force and the nature of the tomato vine and its deterioration under certain conditions and the necessity for ample facilities for speedy shipment, may not be considered as an element' of damages, because damages from that source are not alleged to have occurred nor are damages claimed on that account, but they did serve to inform the defendant of the precarious, uncertain, doubtful and extremely exacting nature of the business in which the plaintiff was engaged requiring on his part precise, methodical and most continuous and prudent management in every department, including • ample pro
It is alleged that the defendant received in Jacksonville for transportation to the. defendant the “crate material” in the quantities and upon the dates mentioned, but did not transport the material with reasonable <Mspatdh, but on the contrary greatly delayed the transportation and delivery of the same, which delay in transportation and negligence on the part of the defendant was the cause of great damage and loss to the plaintiff, “to-wit, ninety-three thousand (93.000) crates of tomatoes” of the “net value to the plaintiff of, to-wit, one dollar and thirty-five' cents ($1.35)” for each crate of tomatoes. It is alleged that this great quantity of tomatoes “became overripe and rotted in the field of the plaintiff because the plaintiff had no “carrier crates” in which to pack and ship the same. So it appears from the plaintiff’s declaration that if there had been no complaint against the defendant about the transportation of the fifty thousand crates, the plaintiff would nevertheless have suffered the loss of forty-three thousand crates of tomatoes for the shipment of which there was no provision.
The first assignment of error rests upon the court’s order in overruling the defendant’s motion for a new trial, the first eight grounds of which attack the verdict as contrary to the law, the evidence and the charge of the court, and as being excessive.
The pleas interposed to the declaration were not guilty and a special plea which in substance averred that from the beginning of the tomato shipping season up to March 23 the plaintiff did not exhaust his supply of crate
1st. Was the defendant negligent in delaying the transportation of any crate material delivered to it in Jacksonville consigned to plaintiff for transportation between March 16th and 27th, both inclusive, and in respect to how many car loads of such material was it so negligent?
2nd. What is a reasonable time to be allowed for the transportation of crate material in car lots from Jacksonville to Peters’ Station ?
3rd. Had the plaintiff himself made reasonable provision for the shipment of the quantity of tomatoes which he claims to have lost and for which he seeks damages on any day during such period, by causing to be delivered to the defendant at Jacksonville for transportation t'o the plaintiff a reasonable time prior to any such day of sufficient “crate material” and providing himself with other necessary material for shipping the quantity of tomatoes claimed to have been lost on that day?
5th. Did the defendant have notice of the conditions as alleged in the declaration and special damage that »would result from negligent failure to deliver the crates ?
6th. What was the market value each day of the tomatoes in the plaintiff’s field which there became overripe and unfit for shipment and were lost because of defendant’s negligence in delaying the-transportation of crate material
The damages which the plaintiff sought was the value of the tomatoes lost on account of defendant’s alleged negligence, as measured by the market price per crate. As he only made provision for fifty thousand crates his damages of course must be confined within that limit, for it is clear that he cannot ask for damage that resulted from his own inattention to the demands of his own business. It might even be said with propriety that it was the plaintiff’s duty, knowing the precarious, uncertain, doubtful and' extremely exacting nature of his business to have allowed ample time for the transportation of his crate material; that is to say prudence would seem to have required that he should have caused crates to be delivered to the railroad for transportation to him at such time as would allow a margin of at least a few hours more than a reasonable time for transportation of ordinary freight, and if delay in the transportation of the crate material was likely to be the proximate cause of disastrous consequences in the form of special damages as alleged' in the declaration the plaintiff should have previously given notice to the defendant company of the special damage that would result from an unreasonable
It was the violation of this principle in the admission" of evidence and the giving of instructions on the first trial of this case that necessitated a reversal of the judgment. A principle of law which appeals alike to both reason and conscience and surely is not very difficult to comprehend'.
In applying this principle to the case as it is now presented we find nothing in the record to show that the defendant had any information from the plaintiff or from any other source, previous to March 16th, that an unreasonable delay in the transportation of the crate material would result in the special damage alleged to have followed; nor do we find any evidence to justify the finding that such notice was received by the carrier prior to the receipt by it that day of the seven thousand five hundred crates that day shipped to the plaintiff. On the question of what may be considered under the circumstances a reasonable time for the transportation of such freight in car lots from Jacksonville to Peters Station a point on the line of railroad about ...... miles from Jacksonville there is possibly some evidence from which the jury might have concluded that two days was a reasonable time. The testimony of the defendant in error was that two days was about 22 hours longer than the defendant’s schedule and was a reasonable time for the transportation of such material between the two points, although his experience with the defendant in such matters was that there was some variation from that limit up to as much as three days. The plaintiff should have
Allowing two days for transportation of the material, the period during which damages were recoverable extended from the nineteenth to the thirtieth of March, 1911, according to the declaration, because material shipped on the 16th should have been ready for delivery on the 19th because an arrival on the 18th would have satisfied the reasonable time allowance.
No recovery should be allowed for loss on the 19th because no notice was shown to have been given the defendant of the special conditions under which the shipment of the 16th was made prior to the issuing of the bill of lading for those cars. No recovery should be allowed for damages accruing on the 22nd because no cars were ordered out on the 19th, and no provisions made by him for packing tomatoes that day in crates handled by the defendant; for the samé reason no recovery should *be allowed for loss accruing on the 29th, as no cars were ordered to be shipped on the 26th and no recovery should be allowed for loss accruing on the 30th because material arrived on that date greater in quantity than was ordered on the 27th. The number of crates therefore which according to the evidence were delayed in transportation and because of which the plaintiff may recover was 37,-
The action is one upon the case for special damages resulting to the plaintiff because of the negligent delay in the transportation of freight in twenty separate shipments, therefore the burden was upon the plaintiff to show the special damage resulting to him from the defendant’s. negligence in handling .each shipment, and as that damage consisted as alleged in the declaration in the spoiling of tomatoes in the field because there were no- crates in which to pack the tomatoes and the picking of them would be an unnecessary expense the plaintiff should show the quantity of tomatoes which ripened and spoiled from day to day and not add one day’s injury to another and estimate the total damage to be
What proportion of this large quantity of tomatoes was ready for shipment four or five days earlier when the plaintiff had some crates on hand, or what proportion was actually shipped afterwards is not shown. The stipulation shows that except 101 crates there were none shipped from the 24th to the 30th inclusive. But during the period from March 19th to the 26th the plaintiff provided for only 32,500 crates if the five thousand are
Because of' these insufficiencies in the evidence the jury could not have arrived at the conclusion they reached solely upon the evidence before them. There were necessary elements in the case lacking in the proof and it is the duty of this Court to reverse or modify the judgment.
The measure of damages in this case is discussed in the second opinion, 77 Fla. 411, 83 South. Rep. 559, where the method of arriving at the value of the tomatoes alleged' to have been lost is clearly pointed out by Mr. Justice Whitfield.
The refusal of the court to give the charge requested by the defendant and lettered “C” is not available as a ground for an assignment of error because no exception was taken to the refusal at the time; besides the point presented' by such requested instruction was covered in other charges which the court gave.
Under the first and fifty-eighth assignments of error counsel for plaintiff in error contend that as the evidence showed that the plaintiff had on hand on certain days during the shipping .season supplies of unused crate material he could not recover damages resulting from a failure to use such material because of a lack of cars in which to ship the tomatoes.
Plaintiff’s counsel in examining the plaintiff as a witness in his own behalf did bring out the fact that between the 15th and 23rd of March the plaintiff had ¡packed
It does not appear therefore that any damages were claimed on account of injury to the tomatoes because of the necessity of keeping them in the packing house for lack of cars. The plaintiff offered evidence to show that on March 26th he had on hand fifty-eight thousand and forty-four crates of tomatoes in the field and' packinghouse which it is claimed were ruined for lack of “carrier crates” in which to ship them. Mr. Britt, however, said that some of them were in carrier crates- with three baskets in the bottom and “not in the top” by which is probably meant that the “carrier crates” on hand were only partially packed. He also said there were not enough baskets to make a good crate.
The plaintiff also testified that he lost tomatoes between the 16th and 26th of March which became overripe in the field and that the 5,000 or 7,500 crates of tomatoes in the packing house rotted during “those ten days.” The former he said' were not included in the estimate made on March 26th. Now as the plaintiff had made provision according to his declaration for 10,000 crates to be delivered to him by defendant up - to March 26th he could recover damages for as many crates of tomatoes lost by becoming over-ripe as he had made complete• provision for shipping, and if any portion of those tomatoes could have been safely carried over until the 27th, 28th and 29th, he could' recover damages for their loss because of failure to deliver within reasonable time tké “crates” ordered out
But as the parties seemed to agree that “baskets” used in shipping tomatoes were included in the “crate material” received by the defendant for transportation we will so regard the evidence and order the entering by plaintiff of a remittitur within ten days of $22,500.00 and interest to be calculated on that amount from September 22, 1911; otherwise the judgment stands reversed.