114 Mo. App. 676 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1905
This action was brought before a justice of the peace to recover damages resulting from the breach of a verbal contract alleged to have been made by the parties, by which defendant undertook and agreed
Plaintiffs, who are stock shippers living near Sturgeon, applied to defendant’s agent at that point for four cars in which to ship the cattle from Sturgeon to St. Louis. After some delay, the agent agreed to have the cars at the stock pens on a certain day in time for the shipment to go forward in a certain train and directed plaintiffs to have their cattle in the pens so that they could be loaded into the cars before the arrival of this train. Following this direction, plaintiffs drove their cattle in from the country and placed them in the pens as directed, but the promised cars failed to arrive, and were not received until after the lapse of five days from the appointed time. In the meantime, plaintiffs were compelled, in order to properly feed and care for the cattle, to remove them from the railroad pens to feed lots. Expense was incurred for feed and attention; the cattle suffered a loss in weight and the market declined. When the cars arrived, plaintiffs changed the destination of the shipment from St. Louis to Chicago and entered into a written contract with defendant for their transportation to. the stockyards in the latter city, where they were delivered by defendant and sold on the market by plaintiffs.
One of the errors assigned by defendant is the refusal of the trial court to admit in evidence the written contract providing for the carriage of the cattle to Chicago. This contract was signed by both parties and, under its terms, defendant received the cattle for transportation to the destination named “at the rate of eighteen and one-half cents per cwt., which is a reduced rate expressly agreed upon between the parties hereto, and, in consideration of which rate, the party of the sec
Reaffirming and applying the doctrine of that case, we must hold that the learned judge erred in refusing the evidence offered. The contract should have been admitted and the issue raised by defendant’s averment that the rate given was, in fact, a reduced rate, then opened for proof.
The contract expressly based the agreement of plaintiffs to release the accrued damages upon the consideration of a reduced rate and, if in fact no reduction was made, there was no consideration for the agreement and it should not be enforced against the plaintiffs. It is not required of us to go into the subject of the validity of an agreement of this character, that appears to be without any consideration to support it, nor to look for other considerations than the one provided. It must-be assumed that plaintiffs were actuated by the representation believed by them that they were receiving a reduced rate, without which they would not have released their accrued claim. The parties themselves incorporated in their contract a statement of the thing that moved plaintiffs to consent to a release, and, if it was, in fact, non-existent, the minds of the parties failed to meet and the stipulation must fall because of the lack of an actual agreement behind it. [Summers v. Railroad, 79 S. W. 481, 114 Mo. App. 452.]
Defendant further complains of the admission by the court of incompetent evidence relating to the market value of the cattle. The testimony on this subject elicited by plaintiffs was given by experienced stockmen, whose business it was to keep themselves informed of the fluctuations in the market value of cattle. Their information aside from that derived from their own transactions at the centers of trade was obtained from reading daily market reports published in trade journals and
In this view of the question, we must hold that the witnesses were qualified to testify concerning the market value of the cattle at the times stated. [McCrary v. Railroad, 109 Mo. App. 567.] But the learned trial judge went too far in permitting one witness to state the contents of a telegram received by him from a commission dealer, which purported to give information on the subject of market value and in allowing another to state the values published by certain trade journals in their market reports. These statements were not the expression of the opinion of the witness, but related to facts communicated to him by others, and therefore were incompetent, not only for the reason that they were not
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.