184 Iowa 1352 | Iowa | 1918
The shipping contract contained no provision for unloading the horses at Council Bluffs for inspection, but the quarantine regulations of this state require carriers to unload horses brought into this state from points west of the
The contents of the billing order were telephoned to the agent of defendant in South Omaha, but the written order was never delivered to him; and later, the shipping contract in question, signed by both the agent of the company and the agent of plaintiff, was executed. A notation, “Stop this car at U. S. Yards at Council Bluffs for inspection,” was written on defendant’s waybill. After the arrival of the car at defendant’s stockyards in Council Bluffs, and after the horses had been unloaded therefrom, plaintiff, for the first time, learned that the car had not been taken to the Union Pacific Stockyards, and he testified that he requested the agent of the defendant to remove it from its yards to the Union Pacific Stockyards, and that the agent refused to have this done. Whereupon, the horses were fed, cared for, and reloaded by plaintiff at defendant’s yards.
The Union Pacific Stockyards were in charge of Dr. Hollingsworth, 'an assistant state veterinarian, and are lo
“3. That the first party shall be exempt from liability for loss or damage to the person or persons and property covered by this contract, arising from derailment, collision, fire, escapement from car, heat, suffocation, overloading, crowding, maiming or other accidents or causes, unless the injuries arising from said causes are the direct result of negligence on the part of the carrier. .
“8. That in case of loss of any of the live stock covered by this contract from any cause for which the first party may be liable, payment will be made therefor on the basis of the actual cash value at the time and place of shipment, but in no case to exceed $100 for each horse, pony, gelding, mare or stallion, mule or jack; and in case of injury or partial loss, the amount of damage claimed shall not exceed the same proportion.
“15. That no suit or action against the first party for the recovery of any claim by virtue of this contract shall be sustainable in any court of law or equity, unless such suit or action be commenced within six months next after the cause of action shall occur; and should any suit or action be commenced against the first party after the expiration of six months, the lapse of time shall be constituted conclusive evidence against the validity of such claim, any statute of limitation to the contrary notwithstanding.”
All of the above provisions of the contract are pleaded and relied upon by defendant railway. Plaintiff contends that defendant forfeited its right to rely thereon, by de
The court below held:
(a) That the alleged prior verbal shipping directions were merged in the written contract, and that parol evidence thereof was inadmissible, and that, as the written contract did not direct defendant to unload the horses at the Union Pacific Stockyards, it was not required to do so; and
(b) That plaintiff’s cause of action was not brought within the time required by the terms of the contract, and therefore could not be maintained.
It is not claimed by counsel for appellant that the written contract required defendant to unload the horses at the Union Pacific Stockyards for inspection, but some claim is made that a legal duty was imposed upon it to unload the horses at the stockyards nearest the Missouri River. The quarantine regulations, however, require the carrier, in lieu of a copy attached to the waybill of an inspection certificate of health and record of the mallein test on all horse shipments originating west of the Missouri River, to detain such stock for inspection at whatever suitable stockyards, or other enclosure, are nearest the state line within' the state, on the railroad over which they are being shipped. It will thus be seen that the quarantine regulations did not require the defendant, to unload the horses at the yards or enclosure nearest‘the Missouri River in Council Bluffs, but only at the yards or enclosure nearest the river upon its line.
That plaintiff had a right to contract with defendant to unload the horses at the Union Pacific Stockyards, for
"If, after the commencement of an action, the plaintiff, for any cause except negligence in its prosecution, fails therein, and a new one is brought within six months thereafter, the second shall, for the purposes herein contemplated, be held a continuation of the first.”
Notwithstanding the fact that Shields, at the time the former action was begun in his name, was a member of the plaintiff copartnership, they were separate and distinct entities. The cause of action sued upon must have arisen in favor of the copartnership, and not in favor of Shields. The six months’ period within which action . could be brought, under the terms of the contract, expired more than a year and a half before the petition in the pending case was filed. The prior action was, under the verdict of the jury, unauthorized. This is the ground upon which recovery was denied. No action was brought by a plaintiff entitled to maintain same for more than two years after the right to do so arose. The contract specifically provided that suit must be-brought within six months after the loss. This clearly contemplated' an action in the name of the person or party legally entitled to maintain the same. Surely, plaintiff was negligent in failing to prosecute its action within the time agreed upon. In our opinion, the present action, in which the parties plaintiff are not the same, can in no wise be treated as a continuation of the former, and that the court rightly held that no action was brought