155 Mo. App. 175 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1911
This is a suit for damages accrued to plaintiff: through the breach of a contract of carriage.
Plaintiff is an incorporated company engaged in the lumber business in the city of Chicago, Illinois, and defendant is an incorporated railroad company engaged in the business of a common carrier of goods between the towns of Hyatt, and Dallas, Texas. It appears plaintiff’s consignor consigned a carload of lumber to it over defendant’s railroad at Hyatt, Texas, for delivery to plaintiff at Chicago, Illinois, with routing directions via_ Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company at Kansas City, Missouri. Of course, plaintiff had the right to stop or divert the car at an intermediate point on the route, and it attempted to do so at Kansas City for the purpose of furnishing the lumber therein to its customer, Swift & Company, at that place. But instead of sending the car through Kansas City, according to the directions on the bill of lading, defendant’s connecting carrier, the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company, transported it through St. Joseph, Missouri, and made delivery to plaintiff at Chicago. Because of this, an expense of $98.04 was entailed on plaintiff in transporting the car back from Chicago to Kansas City. By this suit, plaintiff seeks to •recover this amount, and declares upon the contract of carriage for the recovery. The breach of such contract alleged is that defendant failed to observe its provision or shipping direction thereon to transport the lumber through Kansas City where it might be intercepted.
Defendant company owns and operates a line of railroads in the State of Texas, the city of Dallas in that state being its northern terminus, at which point it connects with the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company. It appears the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company proceeds from Dallas, Texas, to Topeka, Kansas, and thence maintains two lines, one through Kansas City, Missouri, and another through
It is conceded the negligence involved here which entailed plaintiff’s loss was that of the connecting carrier, the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company, in omitting to observe the stipulation in the bill of lading to transport the lumber through Kansas City, and that defendant Initial carrier properly delivered the same in due time at Dallas, Texas, to such connecting carrier. In view of these facts, it is urged that there can be no recovery against this defendant, the initial carrier, for the negligent inattention to duty by the Chicago, Rock Island ,& Pacific Railway Company, because this defendant incorporated in the bill of lading a provision to the effect that its liability should cease upon delivery to its next connecting-line and such is parcel of the agreement. It is undoubted that where the place of destination is not upon the carrier’s road and it receives goods and undertakes only to transport them by its own route to the point most convenient to the destination reached by it and there to deliver to or forward over another road, the carrier performs the full measure of its duty by making the delivery to the connecting carrier as was done in this case. [Hutchinson on Carriers (3 Ed.), sec. 243; Coates v. United States Express Co., 45 Mo. 238.] It is no doubt true as well that it may properly stipulate against liability in some cases after the goods pass into the possession of another or connecting carrier. But while the carrier may by express contract stipulate against liability for goods while in the hands of connecting carriers, he may not relieve himself -from the obligation to answer for the negligence of such connecting carrier, even at common law, if his undertaking in the first instance was one for a through shipment. In such circumstances,
But it is argued plaintiff’s petition declares upon one contract and the recovery was had on another. It may be said of this that the suit, originated before a justice of the peace, where formal pleadings are not required and much latitude is indulged in the statement of a cause of action.. In such cases, it is sufficient if the statement affords reasonable notice to the adverse party of the claim he is called upon to meet and will operate to bar another suit on the same cause of action. It is true the statement alleges that defendant by its written contract undertook to transport the lumber to Kansas City and there deliver it to the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company and the proof shows the contract was for a through transportation to Chicago, via the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company at Kansas City. It is shown also in proof that defendant’s line terminates at Dallas, Texas, and that the car of lumber was given into possession of its connecting carrier at that point, but nothing appears to this effect in the bill of lading and it does substantially entail an obligation upon defendant to see that the lumber was in the possession of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company at Kansas City. This
The other questions in the brief were not presented to the trial court and we therefore decline to consider them for the reason this court is one of review only. The judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.