211 Mo. App. 564 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1923
This is an action, instituted before a Justice of the Peace, to recover for damage to a carload of potatoes through freezing, alleged to have been caused by a breach of defendant’s duty as a common carrier to transport and deliver the same-with due care and within a reasonable time. The trial below, before the court and a jury, resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff, and the defendant prosecutes the appeal. -
This shipment originated in Wisconsin and was transported to St. Louis by the Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railway Company, consigned to plaintiff. Plaintiff’s evidence shows that upon arrival of the car in St. Louis it was opened and the potatoes inspected by plaintiff and another witness and found to be in sound condition. Thereupon plaintiff reconsigned the car, to his own order, for transportation to Clarksville, Arkansas; the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railway Company issuing its bill of lading therefor on December 3, 1917. It appears that the car was handled in St. Louis by the Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railway Company and tbe Terminal Railroad Association of St. Louis, the latter delivering it to the defendant, Missouri Pacific Railway Company; and that defendant issued its way-bill therefor on December 6, 1917, upon which day the car left St. Louis. It thus appears that a. period of three days was consumed in getting the car started from St. Louis, whereas plaintiff’s evidence tends to show that one day was a reasonable time 'therefor. Upon whose line or lines this delay occurred the evidence does not disclose. Though the shipment left St. Louis on one of defendant’s lines on December 6, 1917, it appears that it did not arrive at Clarksville, Arkansas, until December 13, seven days being consumed in such carriage. And plaintiff’s evidence is that a reasonable time for trans
Testimony for plaintiff shows that on December 3, 1917, the temperature in St. Louis was above the freezing point; that on December 4 at that place it fell below the freezing point and continued to fall until December 8, when it was at zero (Fahrenheit), remaining but a few degrees above zero until December 13; that in Little Rock (Clarksville being south thereof) the temperature was above freezing until December 8 when it was thirty degrees above zero; that on December 10 it was thirty-four degrees above zero, on December 11, twenty degrees above zero, on December 12, eighteen degrees above zero, and on December 13, twenty-eight degrees above zero.
The testimony for plaintiff further shows that the shipment was made in a refrigerator car in which there was a heater. And a witness for plaintiff testified that potatoes shipped in a refrigerator car could stand a temperature of about zero without freezing for a time, but that after the second or third day the cold would get into the car and they would begin to freeze; and that exposure to low temperature for several days would result in freezing.
All of the evidence to which we have referred was offered byplaintiff; defendant offering none.
The first assignment of error is to the action of the trial court in refusing to peremptorily direct a verdict for the defendant. In support of this assignment it is argued, in the first place, that the peremptory instruction should have been given because the evidence fails to support the averment of plaintiff’s petition, or statement filed before the justice of the peace, to the effect that plaintiff delivered the carload of potatoes to this defendant for transportation to Clarksville, since it appears that the car was not delivered by plaintiff to de
It is further contended that the evidence failed to make out a case of liability against the defendant. The shipment, was an interstate one, and it is said that under the Federal law, by which the question of defendant’s liability must be determined, mere proof of delay in the transportation and delivery of the goods, does not establish a negligent delay, and is insufficient to warrant a recovery. It is true that the matter is one governed wholly by Federal law. The liability of carriers arising out of their duty in respect to the transportation of goods in interstate commerce under bills of lading depends upon acts of Congress, agreements between the parties, and common-law principles accepted by and enforced in the Federal Courts (New York Central & Hudson River R. Co. v. Beaham, 242 U. S. 148). But we regard it as clear that under the Federal law recovery may be had against a carrier of goods, in an interstate shipment, for loss or damage proximately caused by the carrier’s breach of its common-law duty to transport the goods with reasonable dispatch, i. e., to use due diligence to deliver the goods at destination within a reasonable time; and that in a case of such
“While, in the absence of an express contract, no rule of law exists specifying the exact time within which delivery must be made, still the authorities generally agree that there is an implied promise to carry and deliver within a reasonable time. In other words the law requires of common carriers due diligence, this being as much a part of their contract as the obligation to deliver the property transported in good condition, and if any unreasonable and unnecessary delay occurs, either in the transportation thereof or its delivery after arrival at the terminus of the route, for the immediate and proximate damages resulting from such neglect of duty the carrier is liable.” '
In support of this statement of law numerous authorities are cited (4 R. C. L. 737, 738) with which we need not encumber this opinion. And see also: New York, P. & N. R. Co. v. Peninsula Produce Exchange, 122 Md. 215, where the matter is fully discussed; and same case in United States Supreme Court, on error, 240 U. S. 34. And that such is the accepted rule in the Fedefal courts will appear by reference to the following: New York P. & N. R. Co. v. Produce Exchange, 240 U. S. 34; Chicago & Alton R. Co. v. Kirby, 225 U. S. 155, 32 Sup. Ct. 648, 56 U. S. (L. Ed.) 1033, Ann. Cas. 1914A, 501.
“The duty to deliver without undue delay was just as obligatory at common law as the duty to deliver safely. [Baltimore & Ohio R. R. Co. v. Whitehill, 104 Mo. 310.] In P., B. & W. R. R. Co. v. Diffendal, 109 Md. 509, this court, speaking through Judge Worthington, said that it became the implied duty of a defendant in accepting a carload of fruit for transportation ‘to use due diligence to deliver the 'same at its destination within a reasonable time (Hutchinson on Carriers, sec. 652), and for a breach of this duty resulting in a loss to the plaintiff, the defendant was responsible in damages whether the loss was' occasioned by a fall in the market price, or by damage to the goods themselves, or by a combination of the two causes.’ . . . There is no evidence offered by the defendant carrier to explain and excuse the delay which is shown to have occurred in the transportation. Conditions might be supposed under which the most diligent action by the carrier might not secure delivery within a stipulated time. But in this ease the proof tends to show that the duty to forward with, reasonable dispatch has not been performed, and, under such circumstances as the present, the carrier cannot be exempted from liability merely because the*573 consequence of the delay thus occurring was a loss of market value and not some other form of injury to the property.”
The judgment of the Maryland Court in that case was affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States (240 U. S. 34). And see: Chicago & Alton R. Co. v. Kirby, supra.
The law does not attempt to fix any arbitrary rule as to what will constitute a reasonable time for delivery. "Each case is referred to its own peculiar circumstances, an account being taken of the mode of conveyance, the distance, the nature of the goods, the season of the year, the character of the weather, and the ordinary means for transportation under the control of the carrier.” [4 R. C. L. 738, sec. 207.] In the instant case plaintiff’s evidence showed that the shipment was of perishable goods at a season when extremely cold weather might be expected, and while showing an unreasonable delay in the City of St. Louis, showed that defendant, after receiving the goods, consumed seven days in transporting and delivering them at destination, whereas, it is said, two days was a reasonable time therefor. And in the face of this testimony, defendant stood mute. In this state of the record, we think that it cannot be doubted that plaintiff made a prima-facie case under the rule-of law' invoked and which we have stated above.
And the circumstances shown in evidence undoubtedly sufficed to show, prima facie, that the damage to the goods by freezing was proximately due to the failure to transport and deliver them within a reasonable time. [See: McGraw v. B. & O. R. Co., 18 W. Va. 361, 41 Am. Rep. 696, 11 A. S. R. 361; Fox v. Boston & Maine R. Co., 148 Mass. 220; Wood v. Chicago, etc., R. Co., 68 Iowa, 491, 27 N. W. 473, 56 Am. Rep. 861; Hewett v. Chicago, etc., R. Co., 63 Iowa, 611, 19 N. W. 790; Tierney v. New York, Cent., etc., R. Co., 76 N. Y. 305; 4 R. C. L., p. 739, sec 207; 6 Cyc. 444.]
The decisions of the Kansas City Court of Appeals relied upon by defendant do not, when rightly considered,
Defendant does not appear to question plaintiff’s right to proceed against it as the delivering carrier and to invoke the common-law presumption that the loss and damage occurred while the goods were in defendant’s possession. It appearing that the goods were delivered to the initial carrier in good condition, the presumption is indulged, prima facie, that they- remained in that condition to the’ time of their delivery to the last or delivering carrier, and that the injury or loss occurred while they were in that carrier’s possession. [4 R. C. L., pp. 916, 917, sec. 372.] And the provisions of the Carmack Amendment (Act of January 29, 1906, Chap. 349; 34 Stat. at Large, 584-595; Comp. Stat., secs. 5563 et seq.; 4
We are consequently of the opinion that the trial court committed no error in refusing to direct a verdict for defendant.*
Defendant, complains of the giving of plaintiff’s instruction No. 1, which is as follows:
“The court instructs the.jury that if you find and believe from the evidence that on or about December 3, 1917, plaintiff delivered to an initial carrier at St. Louis, one carload of potatoes properly marked and consigned to Clarksville, Arkansas, and if you further find and believe from the evidence that said potatoes were delivered by the initial carrier to the defendant, Missouri Pacific Railroad Company, as the terminal carrier, to deliver said potatoes at destination, and that if you further find and believe from the evidence that there was a negligent delay in the carriage of said potatoes as a direct result of which a portion of said potatoes were damaged and rendered worthless, if you so find and believe from the evidence, upon their arrival at destination, and that plaintiff did not contribute to said damage, then your verdict must be for the plaintiff.”
It will be observed that this instruction authorizes a verdict for plaintiff upon the finding “that there was a negligent delay in the carriage of the potatoes,” without regard to whether the loss was due to the delay occurring on defendant’s line. While plaintiff was entitled to the benefit of the presumption aforesaid in making out its case against defendant as the delivering carrier, nevertheless, in order to cast liability upon defendant, it was necessary that the jury find, as a. fact, that
And we may add that we think that the instruction should require a finding of failure to transport and deliver the goods within a reasonable time, this being the gist of the action; but whether for this the instruction should be held to be prejudicially erroneous, under the circumstances, we need not decide.
It follows that for the error in giving this instruction -the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.