181 Mo. App. 142 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1914
Action for damages alleged to have been caused by a negligent delay in the shipment of cattle. Plaintiff recovered and defendant has appealed.
The case originated in a justice court. • The first question to be determined is what negligence is covered by the petition. Defendant claims that the only
Owing to the presence of an allegation in the petition that the cattle did not reach Kansas City in time for the Wednesday market and could not be placed on the market earlier than the next day, it might appear somewhat problematical, to say the least, whether the petition did not, according to the maxim expressio imius est exclusio alterius, plead only the damages arising from failure to reach a certain market. However, the pleading came from a justice court. The petition did not limit the damages to that one item, nor did it state all the facts necessary to make out a case as to that single item. It alleged generally that plaintiff by reason of the negligent and careless handling and shipment of said cattle was damaged in the sum of $300. Both sides treated the petition as covering all damages arising from a careless and negligent shipment. The evidence as to shrinkage and bad appearance of the cattle was not objected to as being outside the pleading. Consequently, we will place the same construction on the petition the parties did at the trial. [Strauss v. Metropolitan St. Ry. Co., 166 Mo. App. 153; Litton v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy R. Co., 111 Mo. App. 140; Mellor v. Missouri Pac. R. Co., 105 Mo. 455, l. c. 471; Mitchell v. Samford, 149 Mo. App. 72, l. c. 77; Chamlee v. Planters Hotel Co., 155 Mo. App. 144 l. c. 159.] If such objection had been made, and the petition held not to cover shrinkage, plaintiff could have amended the petition pursuant to section 1848, Revised Statutes 1909. The cause of action was the negligent transportation of the cattle, and loss by reason of shrinkage was one of the natural,
The shipment in question consisted of two carloads, or fifty-four head, of grass-fed cattle shipped from Sargent, Nebraska, by way of Lincoln through .St. Joseph to Kansas City, Missouri. No delay is •claimed until after the cattle left Lincoln, Nebraska.
Defendant, upon the theory that the only item of •damage pleaded is the loss on account of failure to reach the Wednesday market, claims that no negligence was shown, but that if there was, under the scheduled service for cattle leaving Lincoln on Tuesdays, there was no way for cattle to reach the Wednesday Kansas ■City market, and consequently the delay was not the proximate cause of the damage.
According to the schedules offered in evidence by defendant, a special service went into effect February 28,1911, by which on Mondays and Wednesdays, cattle leaving Lincoln at 3:20 went as through freight, not .stopping for local shipments, on to Kansas City, arriving there in time for the next morning’s market. But on other days in the week the train leaving Lincoln at 3:20 went only to Table Rock, the end of the division, and at this point stock for Kansas City waited and was taken on by a train which left Lincoln at 6:30 p. m. and, affected by local business, did not arrive in Kansas City until 12:05 the next day. The shipment in question left Lincoln on Tuesday, October 4, 1911, at 3:20 p. m. and under the schedule in force would not be due in Kansas City until 12:05 p. m. on Wednesday.
Plaintiff testified that he never learned' of such special service on Mondays and Wednesdays until long after the shipment in question; that during the five or
As to the damage sustained in not reaching the Wednesday afternoon market, if any, and as to the shrinkage of the cattle from the delay after 12:05 p. m., the situation is different. Loss arising from the lapse of time after that hour would be the direct result of delay causing the failure to arrive at 12:05. And if the delay was shown to be negligent, defendant would be liable for that loss without regard to whether defendant’s service was as plaintiff claimed or as defendant insisted it was.
The cattle shipped were grass-fed and fat. They would therefore suffer peculiarly from delay and long confinement on the cars. It is only 200 miles from Lincoln to Kansas City. The cattle were accompanied by two men. There was evidence that the cattle were delayed something like five hours at Napier, three hours at St. Joseph, and six hours at Harlem just outside the limits of Kansas City. A part of these delays were unexplained. A number of trains were allowed to pass this train. The delay was unusual and beyond a reasonable time. Mere delay, with nothing more, is insufficient to support a recovery for delay in the transmission of live stock. But delay shown under such circumstances as to raise even a slight inference of negligence is sufficient. [Muir v. Missouri, Kansas & Texas R. Co., 168 Mo. App. 542; Bushnell v. Railroad, 118 Mo. App. 618; Anderson v. Railroad, 93 Mo. App. 677; Lay v. Railroad, 157 Mo. App. 467.] Where a delay has occurred at several points en route, some of which are unexplained, the question of negligence is for the jury. [Libby v. Railroad, 138 Mo. App. 424, l. c. 426.] The excuse for the delay at Harlem was not a sufficient excuse. There was no sudden, unexpected,
We do not think the testimony of Satterfield as to when the train was due in Kansas City should have been allowed to go to the jury. It is true, it occurred in a deposition and came out in the cross-examination by defendant, but some of the evidence was given in answer to the specific question if he knew when the train was due in Kansas City. At the time other portions were given it did not clearly appear that he knew nothing about the matter, but inferentially that he did know from his experience in shipping. Afterwards it. came out' clearly that he knew nothing whatever of his own knowledge about it. The objection to his testimony on that feature, made at the trial, should therefore have been sustained. Asking to have it stricken out at the time the deposition was taken would have accomplished nothing. Cross-examination in an endeavor to find out if he knew of his own knowledge the time required, was no waiver of the admissibility of the evidence he gave as to when it was due, in view of later admission that he did not know.
Instruction D. was clearly erroneous. It was based on a cause of action given by the Federal twenty-eight Hour Law, while the petition was a mere common law action for negligent delay in shipment. It was wholly beyond the scope of the pleadings, and evidence of that violation of that law and the argument made thereon were improper and prejudicial. [Raybourne v. Phillips, 160 Mo. App. 534; Schumacher v. Kansas City Breweries Co., 247 Mo. 141, l. c. 162; Burgher v. Wabash Railroad, 164 Mo. App. 114.] In ad
The admission of evidence as to the condition the-cattle were in and the price they would have brought, had they been in good condition was objected to but we find no error therein. Such evidence is not a substitution of the witness’ judgment for that of the jury. [McCrary v. Chicago & Alton R. Co., 109 Mo. App, 567, l. c. 571; St. Louis, Keokuk and Northwestern R. Co. v. St. Louis Union Stock Yards Co., 120 Mo. 541, l. c. 551.]
For the error above. noted the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.