70 Neb. 364 | Neb. | 1903
This case is before us a second time. On the former trial, in the district court, the plaintiff recovered a judg
Ezekiel Johnston brought this action against the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company to recover damages for an alleged breach of contract between said parties, whereby the latter undertook and agreed to ship certain cattle for the former, by rail, from Holdrege to Chicago. The breach assigned by the plaintiff in his petition is, that the cattle were diverted from the direct route between said points to South Omaha, where they were detained for some hours and then forwarded to Chicago and delivered to another and different party than the one specified in the contract of shipment. The damages claimed are for the diversion above stated, for delay in the shipment and for the delivery to a person other than the one provided for in the contract. The defendant, by its answer, admits that the cattle were taken to South Omaha and there detained for some time, but alleges that, prior to the shipment of the cattle, the plaintiff had executed and delivered certain mortgages thereon to one J. H. Pratt; that by the terms of the mortgages, in case the plaintiff should remove, or attempt to remove the cattle from his premises in Phelps county, Nebraska, or attempt to dispose of them, the mortgagee should have the right to take immediate possession of the cattle, by himself or agent, wherever found, and when the cattle should be removed or shipped for sale they should be consigned to the mortgagee at South Omaha, and that they should not be shipped or sold without his order or consent; that such consent was never given, and when the duly authorized agent of the mortgagee learned of said shipment, and while said mortgages were still in force and unsatisfied, he stopped the
The plaintiff now contends that the defendant was not justified in the diversion, the delay or the nondelivery at destination, and in consequence is liable to him for damages. It appears that in October, 1895, J. H. Pratt shipped the cattle in question from Cadiz, Wyoming, billed to himself at Chicago, with the privilege of stopping and feeding at some point on the way in order to fatten and prepare them for market. They were stopped at Holdrege, where the plaintiff purchased the cattle, and gave his two notes dated October 29, 1895, secured by mortgages on the cattle in payment. The notes were made payable at the Union Stock Yards National Bank of South Omaha, six months from date, and the mortgages were recorded in Phelps county. They contained the following provision:
“It is hereby agreed and understood by and between said parties that said cattle shall not be removed by the party of the first part or taken from the section and township (section 27, township 5, range 18, in Phelps county) on which the same are herein declared to be situated, without written consent of the party of the second part (Pratt), and when removed or shipped for sale they shall be consigned to James H. Pratt, mortgagee, at South Omaha, Nebraska, to be sold on commission; the said party of the first part hereby covenants and agrees that in case the said first party shall remove, or attempt to remove, or permit to be removed from said premises, or dispose of, or attempt to dispose of, said stock or any part thereof, or in case the party of the first part shall fail to keep any of the agreements herein contained, or if the party of the first part
On the 16th day of December, 1895, Pratt, the mortgagee, gave one Alex. Laverty full power of attorney authorizing him to collect the notes, release the mortgages, and do everything about the contract as fully as Pratt himself could do. On Saturday, April 11, 1896, Johnston and the First National Bank of Holdrege shipped the cattle, consigned to J. H. Pratt, to Chicago, Illinois. A day or two before, Johnston had spoken to Mr. Engstrom, the agent of the railroad company at Holdrege, about the shipment, and had ordered cars for that purpose at that time. At the time of the shipment, on Saturday, the plaintiff had not paid the mortgages, which lacked some eighteen days of being due, and had not notified either Pratt or Laverty that he was intending to ship the cattle and did not have the consent, written or otherwise, of Pratt or his agent to make the shipment. It is claimed by plaintiff that he told Engstrom that he had Laverty’s permission' for the shipment to Chicago, and that he had arranged with the bank to pay the mortgages, which arrangement he said was satisfactory to Laverty; and, with full knowledge of such arrangement, the agent received the shipment on Saturday, and the company was therefore bound to transport the shipment to Chicago without delay. This claim is not borne out by the evidence, and the finding of the jury was against him thereon. The evidence given by the plaintiff is as follows: “I told Engstrom I was going to ship the cattle to Chicago, and he says, have you got permission from Laverty to ship them to Chicago. I said he told me I could. He. said don’t depend on what Laverty told you; you had better have a statement in writing from him before you ship, and I would advise you to get a per
The record shows now, as it did before, that Laverty told
“Ordinarily, the person who delivers the goods to a common carrier is-to be treated by them as the owner, and, in general, his title may not be disputed by the company, or a jus tertii or adverse title he set up, but the goods must be delivered according to his directions Avithout putting him upon proof of his title. That applies, however, only where such adverse claim is not asserted by the superior claimant to the sender, but merely by the carrier’s own motion. • But, should the goods be the property of a third person who is also entitled to the possession of them, and, while in the custody of the carrier, such owner should demand possession, it would be justified in delivering the goods to him.” Hale, Bailment and Carriers, p. 497, and cases there cited.
We therefore hold that the verdict, so far as this question is concerned, is sustained by the evidence, and the instructions of the court were without error.
It is further contended by the plaintiff that he is entitled to damages on account of the delivery of the cattle to Greer, Mills & Co., at Chicago, instead of Rosenbaum Bros., to whom he had desired the delivery to be made. It appears when the contract of reshipment was made in South Omaha, and the cattle were forwarded to Chicago, Laverty had not yet received the draft mailed on Saturday afternoon to him by the bank at Holdrege; that, in order to secure the payment of the mortgage debt dué his principal, Pratt.,, he had the cattle consigned to the care of Greer, Mills & Co.; that, as soon as he received the draft and the mortgages were in fact paid, he notified Greer, Mills & Co. to turn the property over to Rosenbaum Bros., which was done. It follows that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover any damages on that account. In fact, it is thoroughly established by the evidence that whatever delay, change of route, loss of market, or weight, was suffered in the shipment, resulted entirely from the failure of the plaintiff to observe his obligations under the mortgage
Plaintiff also contends that the court erred in refusing him the right to file; his amended reply. It was largely in the discretion of the district judge whether he would permit the filing of the amended reply or not. And the exercise of that discretion can not be overruled without essential and fundamentally good reason. The issues in the case had been carefully made up in the county court, and also in the district court; the case had been twice tried on these issues, and the offer to file the amended reply was an attempt to introduce new issues and a new controversy into the action. The court properly exercised his discretion in refusing to permit it. Again, the right to recover on the basis of the allegations contained in the amended reply was barred by the statute of limitations; the shipment Avas made in April, 1898, the amended reply, presenting neAV rights of recovery, was offered for filing in May, 1902; these new grounds for recovery could become effective only from the date of the filing of the reply, which was more than four years from the carriage of the shipment and after any cause; of action could accrue thereon. Buerstetta v. Tecumseh Nat. Bank, 57 Neb. 504; Box v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co., 107 Ia. 660.
For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.