133 Mo. App. 589 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
Plaintiff shipped a car of strawberries from Exeter, Missouri, to Omaha, Nebraska, over defendant’s line of railroad. Being of a highly perishable nature, the property was practically ruined by being kept a day at the receiving station without refrigeration. Plaintiff alleges in his petition that this delay and consequent injury were caused by the breach, on the part of defendant, of an oral contract to procure a refrigerator car properly iced for plaintiff’s use at Exeter at a specified time, and the prayer is for the recovery of the damages sustained by plaintiff in consequence of said breach of contract. Defendant denies the existence of such contract and the issue thus raised by the pleadings was submitted to the jury as one of fact. Verdict and judgment were in favor of plaintiff
It appears from the evidence that to transport the berries to Omaha without serious damage to them, it was essential that they be loaded within a few hours after their picking in a refrigerator car properly iced. Plaintiff, knowing that defendant did not keep cars of this class at Exeter and would have to send the car he needed from a division point, appeared at the station at Exeter on June 6, 1904, at about seven o’clock in the morning, and requested the agent to order the car. On direct examination, he testified that the agent accepted the order and told him the car would be down on a local freight train due to arrive that morning from Monett, a division station nineteen miles distant. The car did not come on that train, nor until the day following. In the meantime plaintiff brought the berries to the station and placed them on the shipping platform where they remained for more than twenty-four hours. When finally loaded in the car, they were so badly damaged
“The Court . . . Now, without any further questions I will give you a chance once more to state just what was said by you to the agent there that morning and just what he said to you, without any interruption, giving the conversation as near as you remember it. A. I stated what I thought it was. I asked him to order a car that morning and he said he would and it would probably be down on the local — whether he said probably or would be down, I don’t just know; it had been coming down each morning on the local and I took it for granted—
“The Court: What did you say? A. I said, ‘Mr. Bash, I want a car this morning.’
“Counsel for defendant: And he said, ‘All right, I will order it,’ did he? A. I suppose that is about what he said; he might have said it a little rougher, but he gave me to understand he would order it.
“The Court: Tell what he said. If he swore about it, tell what he said. A. If he didn’t swear about it, it was an accident, he always did before I can’t remember whether he swore about it on this occasion or not, anyway he gave me to understand as usual the car would be down.”
The agent introduced as a witness by defendant denied he promised that the car would arrive by any particular train and stated he told plaintiff that he would transmit the order to his superior at once and that the car would probably come in, not on the local freight train, but on a later train due to reach Exeter at about seven o’clock that evening. The agent and plaintiff both expected the car would be sent from
It is elemental that to constitute a binding contract, there must be a meeting of the minds of the parties. They must assent to the same thing in the same sense. “Any Avords manifesting an aggregatio mentium are sufficient to constitute a contract but the mutual consent — the aggregatio mentium — cannot be attained Avithout the assent of both parties.” [Egger v. Nesbitt, 122 Mo. 667.] Plaintiff’s oavu statement of the contract shoAvs very clearly there Avas no consent of defendant’s agent to bind it to send the car by a particular train at a particular time. The agent did agree to order the car at once and performed that agreement. He did say “it would probably be doAvn oh the local” but this cannot be interpreted otherwise than as an expression of opinion and was not a promise that the car would arrive on that train. Plaintiff does not knoAV whether the agent said “probably” or that the car “Avoukl be doAvn.” If he does not know this, how could the jury say that the agent made an unconditional promise? Plaintiff understood that “the car Avould be down as usual.” So did the agent, for that matter, but it is a long cry betAveen the entertainment of this mutual belief and the existence of an unconditional promise that the car would arrive by a particular train. The burden Avas on plaintiff to proAre that such promise was made and broken to his detriment, and this he has failed to do.
The case is analogous in essential features to that Ave considered in Gann v. Railway, 65 Mo. App. 670, and we refer to the opinion in that case for a further elucidation of the views herein expressed.
The judgment is reversed.