54 Mo. App. 293 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1893
— Plaintiff shipped from Saline county, Missouri, to Chicago, Illinois, ninety-six head of fat cattle over defendant’s road for the purpose of selling on the market there. The cattle were negligently delayed, as is charged, so that instead of arriving at Chicago on the morning following the shipment in time for that day’s market they did hot arrive till late in the afternoon, too late for that day’s market, in consequence of which plaintiff was compelled to place the cattle on the market of the next day, on which they were fifty cents per hundredweight lower in price than on the previous day, thereby entailing a loss to plaintiff. He brought this suit for the difference between what he could have sold his cattle for and what he did sell them for on the day following the day he expected to sell’ them. Plaintiff was forced to a non-suit on account of the ruling of the trial court on the admissi
I. Plaintiff contends that the contract of shipment which he made with defendant was verbal. Defendant claims that it was written. Plaintiff then says that-though written, defendant is liable to the action brought. Plaintiff claims that, some days before the seventeenth day of November, 1891, he entered into parol contract with the defendant through its proper agents and officials, whereby it was mutually agreed that the-defendant would send a special stock train to Mt. Leonard, a station on defendant’s line of road,' and take plaintiff’s stock for shipment by special train from that point to Chicago, Illinois, in time for the mai’ket of November 18, 1891, said stock consisting of ninety-sis head of fat cattle. Plaintiff under the terms of said agreement was to deliver said cattle for shipment on the morning of the seventeenth, and load them into-said special train ready for shipment ujider said agreement. That in performance of said contract the defendant did, on the morning of the seventeenth day of November, 1891, send a special train to Mt. Leonard for the purpose of taking plaintiff’s cattle under the contract to Chicago, Illinois, and plaintiff loaded the cattle into the special train for shipment and fully performed all the terms of the pá-rol contract as far as he had agreed to do. That after the cattle had been received for' transportation under said contract and the transportation had begun, and after the cattle had entirely passed out of the control of plaintiff, and just before the train containing the cattle had started on its way to-Chicago, the station agent of the defendant at Mt. Leonard handed the plaintiff the special written contract spoken of to sign, and he signed it; that he did so without any new consideration moving to him in any way whatever.
Defendant pleaded in defense the terms and provisions of the written contract of shipment whereby it was agreed and stipulated that the reasonable time in which to transport said cattle was and should be the schedule time of freight trains on the time card of the defendant in force at said date of shipment, with twelve hours added thereto, not including time lost by stops for feed, water, rest or for proper and humane care of said cattle, and that if said stock should be-transported within said time the plaintiff should not have any claim for damages for delay in transit, and that defendant should not be liable therefor, and that the time should be estimated from the time the train should start from Mt. Leonard. That said contract further specified that: “As to stock consigned to stock
In our opinion when plaintiff accepted and signed the wi’itten contract under the circumstances shown before the train started without protest and without any other apparent reason than as a substitute for the original verbal contract at a time when he might have refused to sign or have withdrawn his cattle, he must be assumed to have agreed to the cancellation or anulling of the oral contract. A cancellation of an oral contract is a good consideration for the substituted contract. Bishop on Contracts, secs. 68, 768; O’Bryan v. Kinney, 74 Mo. 125.
II. The case then stands upon the written contract with its provisions of exemptions of liability on the part of defendant. Among those provisions as before stated is one stating that the parties agreed that schedule time and twelve hours additional should be considered reasonable time. If for any reason other than negligence defendant’s train failed to arrive at Chicago within the time it customarily did with live stock trains from the same points, this provision would relieve the defendant. It is a provision relieving it from the strictness of the rule with which the common
When a common carrier, under the circumstances here offered to be shown, undertakes to transport fat cattle to market in a live-stock train, it must be held to have undertaken a business which calls for diligence and dispatch exactly commensurate with the trust it hag accepted. It ought not to require any argument to show that a delay of such cattle destined for such purpose with the resulting shrinkage of weight, as well as from value 'arising from the fluctuations and uncertainty of the market, will result in great damage, and should not occur if it could reasonably be avoided by an exercise of'care and diligence.
■ III. ‘ But defendant says that there was no offer of evidence to show that plaintiff had given notice of his damage within five days after-arrival at Chicago, as the contract provides in the word's hertofore set forth. In our opinion that clause of the contract relates to injury or damage to -the cattle themselves while in the posses.sion of the defendant, and would therefore cover the.
The further provision of the contract that the ■defendant should not be liable for “loss or damage which may arise to the stock from any cause,” after it is delivered upon the tracks of the Stock Yards Company, can have no application to loss and damages •of the character here sued for.
As a result of the foregoing we must reverse the .judgment and remand the cause.