109 Mo. App. 567 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1904
This action was instituted to recover damages for an alleged negligent delay in the shipment of a lot of beef cattle over defendant’s road from Highee, Mo., to Chicago, Illinois. The -judgment was for the plaintiff in the trial court.
A general statement of plaintiff’s complaint is that his cattle were shipped to the Chicago market on the 30th of August at about 5 o’clock in the morning and that they should have arrived in Chicago in the early morning of the nest day. That a reasonable time to make such trip was about 23 hours and that that was the time customarily taken. But that defendant negligently delayed the cattle on the way several hours, so that they arrived in Chicago at about the close of that day’s market whereby plaintiff suffered damage from a decline in the market and an undue shrinkage in weight.
The defendant contends that plaintiff made no showing of negligence; that the only proof offered was a delay of several hours longer than the trip customarily took. It is true that, in a case of this kind a mere showing of a delivery of the stock and a delay in arrival at destination will not make out plaintiff’s charge of negligence, since the delay may have been unavoidable and hence not negligent. The burden is on the plaintiff. [Stanard Mill v. Transit Co., 122 Mo. 258, 275.] Arid it does not shift to defendant on a showing of delay, unless there he also something shown to characterize the delay.
But in this case plaintiff went further than showing a delay. He showed several delays-of several hours
Objection is made that the court should not have allowed plaintiff to state what was a reasonable time for the trip between the points of shipment. Plaintiff was shown to be a shipper of large experience and for several years had shipped between the same points over defendant’s road. On such foundation it was proper to allow him to state a reasonable time.
Defendant’s next objection is that plaintiff was permitted to state the amount of his damage. It is a well-understood general proposition that a witness should not state values and especially not state the amount of damage. The reason of the rule is that the witness substitutes his judgment for that of the jury and thus usurps the functions of the latter. lie states a conclusion that ought only to be stated in the verdict. [Spencer v. Railroad, 120 Mo. 154.] But there are exceptions. Thus he may state the market value of grain, or of a horse, or of land. In these, and like in
Defendant also objected to plaintiff’s stating what the market for cattle in Chicago was on that day. We think the evidence admissible. Plaintiff was there and became acquainted with the market. He did not have to be present at each sale in order to know what it was. In the sense of legal evidence his knowledge was not hearsay, as defendant contends. He made sales himself on that day and became aware that it was less than the sales at other times of the same day in much the same way that persons become possessed of knowledge of things with which they have not come in personal contact. The market was a matter of public notoriety. Plaintiff was shown to be a shipper to that market and while he was not present all of the day he was at the latter part, and he became acquainted with the day’s
The account of the sale of the cattle rendered by the defendant’s commission agents were referred to by plaintiff and pronounced by him to be correct. He was present at the sale and knew of what he spoke, thus making a difference from the authority cited by defendant. But defendant urged that the account of sale itself should not have been admitted. We can not conceive of any harm resulting to defendant. There was no contradiction to plaintiff’s testimony on that head and the mere letting in of the account of sale on so formal and undisputed a matter was of no substantial consequence.
We do not regard that there was anything in the case upon which defendant could properly object on account of the want of notice. On the whole record we are satisfied that the judgment should be affirmed.