194 Mo. App. 346 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1916
Plaintiff, who lived at Napoleon, Ohio, and was engaged in dressing and shipping poultry to New. York and other eastern points, brought this suit for damages arising out of the failure of the defendant railway companies to furnish a refrigerator car at Napoleon for shipment of dressed poultry. The cause of action is based upon a contract alleged to have been made by defendants with plaintiff that if plaintiff would route his dressed poultry over defend
The answer was a general denial. The case was tried before the court without a jury, and judgment was rendered for the plaintiff. Defendants appealed.
Napoleon, plaintiff’s place of residence and shipping point, is on the Detroit, Toledo & Ironton Railroad and not on the defendants’ system of lines. The nearest point connecting' with the defendant lines is Lima, Ohio, over fifty miles from Napoleon. So that, in order for freight to get to the defendant lines, it-must first go over the Detroit Toledo & Ironton, Railroad to Lima. There it could be turned over to the defendants for carriage on to New York and other eastern points.
The Detroit, Toledo & Ironton Railroad, the only road in Napoleon, was a short line and had but few cars. Plaintiff had encountered much difficulty in getting a' car when he wanted it. Dressed poultry is a perishable product; and, of course, for one in plaintiff’s situation, it was necessary that- a properly iced refrigerator ear be at Napoleon at the proper time. The defendants constantly kept on hand at Lima a number of cars adopted to this business. The arrangement plaintiff relies upon as a contract was made between plaintiff and one PI. M. Quicksell, defendants’ travel
The arrangement was entered into some time in August, 1910. Thereafter, and up until the 22nd day of October, .1910, plaintiff regularly obtained a car at Napoleon every Saturday in this way, and routed it over defendants’ lines as he agreed to do.
The facts in reference to the car wanted on October 22, 1910, are as follows: On Tuesday, October 18, 1910, plaintiff, following the usual program under the arrangement, notified Mullin, the D. T. & I. agent at Napoleon, that he would want a car on the 22nd. Mullin telephoned the order to defendant’s agent at Lima. According to defendants’ evidence, this order was received at Lima sometime in the afternoon of Friday, October 21. The defendants iced a refrigerator ear and. delivered it to the D. T. & I. railroad at 11 p.m. of the same day. Under ordinary conditions the car, turned over at that hour to the D. T. & I. at Lima, should have been delivered at Napoleon by noon of October 22, but was not started out of Lima by the D. T. & I. railroad until 7:30 a.m. Sunday October 23. According to all the evidence it did not arrive in Napoleon until Monday the 24th, and during this delay from the 22nd to the 24th the poultry deteriorated.
It will thus be seen that there is no evidence that the defendants failed to ice and furnish a car at Lima in time for the D. T. & I. railroad to get the car to Napoleon when needed. All that plaintiff’s evidence shows is that the car did not reach Napoleon until the
The defendants’ contention, therefore, is that they are not liable, for the reason that the arrangement their traveling fast freight solicitor made with plaintiff was not a contract whereby defendants would deliver cars at Napoleon but only that they would turn them over to the D. T. & I. Railroad at Lima for plaintiff to use whenever they reached Napoleon. Defendants also contend that even if the arrangement be construed as a contract to deliver cars at Napoleon, still, as this is a point not on the defendants’ lines, their traveling fast-freight soliciting agent had no authority to bind the defendants to such a contract.
Taking up the first contention, namely, that the contract was not for'a delivery at Napoleon, we think this was a question for the trial court, sitting as a jury, to determine. The contract asserted by plaintiff is that the defendants agreed that, if he would route his shipments over their lines, they would furnish him cars when notified three days in advance, that notice to be given to the agent at Napoleon. Plaintiff performed his part of the agreement by routing his cars over their lines and by giving the proper notice. that he wanted the car in question. There was thus a mutuality to the contract and a sufficient consideration to support the undertaking. [Boxley v. Tallassee R. Co., 128 Ala. 183, l. c. 189-190; Gulf etc. R. Co. v. Combes, 80 S. W. 1045.] The mutual and reciprocal promises of the parties were not only a sufficient consideration therefor, but they were evidence tending to prove a contract to furnish the cars at Napoleon. [Baker v. Kansas City etc. R. Co., 189 N. Y. 93.] That there was mutuality in and a consideration for the contract and that Napoleon was the place where the cars were to be furnished, can be seen from plaintiff’s evidence as to what the contract was. (It should be said here that his evidence was corroborated by other disinterested witnesses and that defendant offered no evidence to contradict' it.) That evidence
But defendants say the plaintiff knew the cars /had to be transported from defendants’ lines over the D. T. & I. railroad to Napoleon; that plaintiff knew Quicksell was not an agent of said road; and, therefore, although they spoke loosely of Napoleon as the place where the cars were to be furnished, yet the arrangement must be interpreted in the light of the surroundings, and, considered in that light, the contract was nothing more than an agreement to furnish and deliver cars to the D. T. & I. railroad at Lima and not that they were to be delivered at Napoleon. But the shipment was to be from Napoleon; that was the station where the cars were needed and were to be used. It would do the plaintiff no good to know the cars were prepared and ready at Lima when they were imperatively needed at Napoleon. It was the place in contemplation by the parties making the contract. Consequently, when the parties agreed that the cars should be delivered at Napoleon, their agreement is entitled to be taken to mean just what it said and
The fact that the cars were to be furnished at a place not on the defendants’ line but on the line of a connecting carrier, did not compel the trial court, nor does it require us, to construe the contract as defendants would have it interpreted. “It is competent for a railroad company to bind itself by contract to furnish cars at a place not- on its own line, but that of a connecting carrier.” [1 Michie on Carriers, sec. 714, p. 441.] In Missouri etc. R. Co. v. Kyser & Sutherland, 87 S. W. 389, the gist of plaintiff’s action was the breach of a contract of defendant to furnish cars for the shipment of cattle from Waggoner, Ind. Ter., to Martin, Texas. Waggoner was not on the defendant’s line. A judgment in plaintiff’s favor was affirmed, the court saying:
*354 “Notwithstanding the fact that Waggoner Was not on the defendant’s line of railway, we hold that it was competent for the defendant to hind itself by contract to furnish cars at that place. Waggoner was on the line of another railway with which the defendant’s road connected, and over which the cattle were shipped. Such being the conditions, we see no reason why the defendant could not make a valid contract to furnish cars at Waggoner.”
It follows, from what has been said herein, that we are without authority to disagree with the trial court in its finding that the contract was for a delivery of cars at Napoleon.
We now take up defendants other contention, namely, that Quicksell was without authority to hind his principals to furnish cars at a point elsewhere than on their lines.
Upon this branch of the case it is well to recall that Quicksell was defendant's’ traveling fast-freight solicitor; that he was at Napoleon, fifty miles from his lines, to get freight for defendants; that plaintiff had no knowledge of any limitation upon his authority (and here again defendants do not offer any evidence to show what his authority was or that there were any limitations thereon); that there was no other agent at Napoleon with whom plaintiff could contract with defendant for cars; and ' that no contracts could be made with defendants except through agents. It is unreasonable to suppose that Quicksell would be sent out with power merely to solicit freight and yet be without power to ynake binding contracts in reference thereto. Again, Quicksell was not sent out to solicit a particular shipment,- hiit he was sent to obtain freight contracts from whomsoever he could. He was, therefore, a general agent as to that branch of defendants’ business. In Butler v. Maples, 9 Wall. 766, l. c. 773-4, it is said: “The distinction between a general and a special agency is in most cases a plain one. The purpose of the latter is a single transaction, or a transaction with designated persons. It does not leave to the agent any discretion as to the persons with
It is contended, however, that the agreement to furnish cars at a point off the defendants’ line was so unusual and out of the ordinary that plaintiff as a prudent man should have known that the contract was beyond the agent’s authority. But, the evidence is that prior thereto, the plaintiff had, through Quick-sell, requested cars for use at Napoleon, and had obtained a large number of cars at that place and in that way; and, as stated, the defendants’ witness,
Defendants have cited a number of cases to show that a station agent has no authority to bind its road to carry beyond the end of its line, or to furnish cars at a station other than his own. No doubt this last is true, and so also is the first (at least as regards all shipments not within the purview of the Carmack Amendment). But even in cases where it is held that a station agent cannot bind his principal to ship beyond the end of the line, the holding goes no further than to lay down the rule that the contract itself is not sufficient to make plaintiff’s case. The holding is that, in addition thereto, there must be “some evidence tending to prove that the agent had authority, express or implied, to enter into the contract before it will bind the company. ” [Faulkner v. Chicago etc. R. Co., 99 Mo. App. 421, l. c. 424.] On the same page
Besides, there is a vast difference between a station agent and a traveling fast freight soliciting agent. The former’s authority is known to be limited to his own station. He cannot contract with reference to some other station. There was no agent of defendants at Napoleon who could make contracts, as there was in the instance of those cases where an agent at one station agreed to furnish cars at another. The very object and purpose of sending Quicksell out into the territory where plaintiff was located was to get freight contracts. How could he get them unless he could agree with the shipper to furnish facilities for the shipper’s use? For him to go out and solicit freight but have no power to offer facilities or inducements to shippers to ship over his roads would render his. work futile not to say ridiculous. And in this case, plaintiff’s difficulty in getting cars at Napoleon was the thing which the freight agent proposed to overcome if plaintiff would route his cars over the defendant lines. This was the inducement offered to plaintiff in order to get the business for defendants. And the evidence was that the defendants kept a supply of refrigerator cars on hand at Lima tó be used for the purpose. The apparent authority of an agent, sufficient to bind the principal, is such authority as the agent appears to have by reason of the actual authority which he does have. [Northwest Thresher Co. v. Eddyville State Bank, 114 N. W. 291.] Apparent authority is “such authority as a reasonably prudent
Upon the ratification feature, defendants say there is nothing to show that defendants knew they were furnishing the cars at Napoleon but only that they were supplying them at Lima. This same point was made in St. Louis etc. R. Co. v. Boshear, 102. Tex. 76, l. c. 79. But the court held that if the cars had been furnished on the defendants’ own line the point might be good, for then it could not be inferred the cars were furnished upon the agreement, but since the defendant ivas not required by law to furnish
Being of opinion that we are without authority to disturb judgment, it is accordingly affirmed.