McNeill v. Wabash Railway Co.

231 S.W. 649 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1921

Lead Opinion

This is an action against the defendant, a common carrier, for alleged damages resulting to the plaintiffs by reason of the wrongful delivery by the defendant of certain live stock belonging to the plaintiffs. Plaintiffs recovered and defendant prosecutes the appeal.

The cause of action stated in the petition is as follows: "That on the 16th day of January, 1918, the plaintiffs delivered, and the defendant received, two hundred and eighteen head of sheep, being breeding ewes, which defendant agreed for in consideration of certain freight charges paid well and safety to carry from Mexico, Missouri, to St. Louis, Missouri, and at the latter place to deliver the same to the plaintiffs, or their agents or assigns; but the defendant, in violation of its said agreement and in total disregard of its duty as common carrier as aforesaid, so carelessly and negligently conducted itself in the premises that said property was not delivered to the plaintiffs, its agents or assigns, in St. Louis, Missouri, and that said defendant failed and neglected to deliver said property at its destination to the plaintiffs or to any one for them, but on the contrary the said defendant wrongfully diverted said stock to National Stock Yards, in the State of Illinois, and delivered them to a live stock commission firm, who were engaged in the business of receiving and selling such sheep for immediate slaughter, and that by reason of the delivery by the defendant of said sheep to said parties in the State of Illinois, and by reason of its failure *167 not to deliver them to the point of destination, to-wit, St. Louis, Missouri, said breeding ewes and all of them were sold for immediate slaughter and were slaughtered, and that plaintiffs received on account of the sale and slaughter of said sheep the sum of seventeen hundred and ninety-nine dollars and eighty-one cents. That the total value of said sheep, as breeding ewes, was forty-three hundred and sixty dollars, and that by reason of the wrongful acts of the defendant above set forth plaintiffs were damaged in the sum of twenty-five hundred and sixty dollars and ninety cents."

The answer contains a general denial and in addition pleads:

(1) That the sheep, referred to in plaintiffs petition, were received and transported by the defendant under and subject to the terms of a written contract, whereby it was agreed between the plaintiffs and defendant that defendant should transport the sheep from Mexico, Missouri, to the National Stock Yards, at Illinois, and there deliver the same to the Woodson-Fennewald Commission Company, the consignee named in the contract. That defendant fully complied with the provisions of said contract and transported said sheep from Mexico, Missouri, to the National Stock Yards, Illinois, and made delivery thereof to said Woodson-Fennewald Commission Company.

(2) That the plaintiffs appointed the said Woodson-Fennewald Commission Company its agents to receive and take delivery of said sheep at its destination and that the said commission company received the sheep, as the agent of the plaintiffs, and sold the same at the National Stock Yards, Illinois, for and on behalf of the plaintiffs. That the plaintiffs received the proceeds of said sale and by so doing waived any right they had or may have had to have said sheep delivered at St. Louis, Missouri, and that plaintiffs therefore were estopped from asserting their claim for damages set up in the petition. *168

In their reply plaintiffs denied, under oath, that they executed the contract, set up in the answer, and averred therein that they made a contract with the defendant to transport said sheep to the Independent Stock Yards, St. Louis, Missouri, and gave defendant directions in writing to that effect; that by mistake the agents of the defendant in writing said contract inserted the destination as National Stock Yards, Illinois, but that said mistake was discovered before the sheep were shipped and being advised of its mistake the defendant corrected and agreed to correct said contract by making the destination Independent Stock Yards. The reply further admitted that the sheep were delivered wrong fully to the National Stock Yards by defendant and that thereafter and by reason of said conversion, the sheep were sold by mistake and plaintiffs receiver what they brought at said sale, to-wit, seventeen hundred and ninety-nine dollars and eighty-one cents, and which amount was twenty-five hundred and sixty dollars and nineteen cents less than their real value;

The facts in this case are briefly as follows: About the middle of January, 1918, the plaintiffs purchased from the firm of Mason Carter two hundred and eighteen breeding ewes. The ewes had been bred and were to bring lambs the following April. The plaintiffs gave directions to Mason Carter to ship the sheep from Mexico, Missouri, to plaintiffs home at Salem, Missouri. Mr. Carter, a member of the firm of Mason Carter, saw Mr. Richards, defendant's freight agent at Mexico, Missouri, about shipping the sheep to Salem, Missouri. Mr. Richards informed Mr. Carter that the sheep would have to be shipped to St. Louis, Missouri, and then re-billed from St. Louis to Salem, Missouri. Mr. Carter then communicated with Mr. E.L. Woodson, a member of the firm of Woodson-Fennewald Live Stock Commission Company, and told him he was billing two loads of sheep to plaintiffs at Salem, Missouri, and that Mr. Richards would not bill them through to Salem and requested *169 Mr. Woodson to see a Mr. Clem, live stock agent for the defendant, and see if he could not get them shipped through to Salem without unloading them.

Mr. Woodson saw Mr. Clem and was told by him to bill the sheep to the Independent Stock Yards, St. Louis, Missouri, and then re-bill them over the Frisco to Salem.

Mr. Woodson informed Mr. Carter what Mr. Clem had said and Mr. Carter told him the sheep would be billed to the Woodson-Fennewald Commission Company at the Independent Stock Yards at St. Louis and then re-billed to Salem, Missouri. Arrangements were made for Mr. Andrew McNeely, manager of the Woodson-Fennewald Commission Company, at the Independent Stock Yards St. Louis, Missouri, to take charge of the sheep at the Independent Stock Yards and re-bill them to Salem, Missouri, to plaintiffs.

Mr. Carter then told Mr. Richards, defendant's freght agent, to bill the sheep to the Woodson-Fennewald Commission Company at the Independent Stock Yards at St. Louis, Missouri. Mr Richards then prepared a live stock contract to which was attached an offer of shipment and which the plaintiffs were to sign. Mr. Carter noticed that the offer to shipment read "from Mexico, Missouri, to St. Louis U.D." and he told Mr. Richards he wanted the sheep to go to the Independent Stock Yards and asked him if the letters U.D. meant that they would be shipped to Independent Stock Yards. Mr. Richards replied that they did and that they billed them on the U.D. track to go to the Independent Stock Yards, St. Louis, Missouri.

Mr. Carter further noticed that on the back of the contract were written the words "From Mexico, Mo., To Natl. Stock Yards, Ill.;" and he called Mr. Richards attention to the mistake and told him to bill the sheep to the Independent Stock Yards, that if they went to the National Stock Yards, to the Woodson-Fennewald Commission Company, the sheep would be sold for *170 slaughter. He told Mr. Richards to correct the mistake. Mr. Richards promised to do so and did change the contract on the back thereof, by scratching out the words Natl. Stock Yards, Ill., and writing in lieu thereof the words "St. Louis U.D.," but failed to make the correction in the body of the contract.

The contract names the Woodson-Fennewald Commission Company consignee. Their name appears only on the back of the contract. Mr. Carter suggested that Mr. Richards write a new contract but Mr. Richards assured him that the train crew would not see the contract but would get the way bill. Mr. Carter thereupon executed the contract and offer of shipment on behalf of the plaintiffs.

The destination of the sheep, according to the way bill accompanying the shipment, was St. Louis U.D. The sheep were received for shipment by the defendant on the 16th day of January, 1918, and duly arrived at defendant's station at Bremen Avenue, St. Louis, Missouri. The Independent Stock Yards are located at said Bermen Avenue.

The destination named in the original way bill, accompanying the shipment, was changed by defendant's agent at Bremen Avenue Station by writing on said way bill in blue pencil the words "National Stock Yards." As to why this change was made the evidence does not disclose.

The Woodson-Fennewald Commission Company were located at the National Stock Yards, East St. Louis, Illinois, but maintained a branch house at the Independent Stock Yards, Bremen Avenue, St. Louis, Missouri, which was conducted for them by the McNeely Son Commission Company.

The sheep in question were not delivered to the Independent Stock Yards, St. Louis, Missouri, but were delivered by the defendant to the National Stock Yards Company at East St. Louis, Illinois; they were unloaded into their pens, and, a few hours after they received *171 them, the said Yards Company delivered them to the Woodson-Fennewald Commission Company at said last named place.

The season for the sale of breeding ewes had closed at the National Stock Yards at the time the sheep were delivered to the Woodson-Fennewald Commission Company and at said time the great majority of the sheep, consigned to said commission company at the National Stock Yards, Illinois, were sold for immediate slaughter.

Mr. Little, who had charge of the sheep department of the Woodson-Fennewald Commission Company, not knowing that the sheep were not to be put on the market for sale, sold the sheep, within a few hours after they were delivered to him by the Stock Yards Company, and the sheep were immediately thereafter slaughtered. The plaintiffs had no knowledge that the defendant had delivered the sheep to the National Stock Yards Company until after they were killed.

The net proceeds of the sale of the sheep amounted to seventeen hundred and ninety-nine dollars and eighty-one cents, which amount the Woodson-Fennewald Commission Company paid plaintiffs. The defendant offered no evidence other than the shippers contract, heretofore mentioned, which was admitted in evidence.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs for twenty-one hundred and twenty-five dollars.

At the close of plaintiffs' case, and again at the close of all the evidence, the defendant asked a peremptory instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence which the court refused to give.

Counsel for defendant insist that said instruction should have been given.

(1) They argue that the plaintiffs are precluded from recovering in this action because of the written contract. They contend that the destination of the sheep, according to the written contract, was the National Stock Yards and that delivery of the sheep was made at said destination. *172

This suit is not founded on a breach of the written contract, but on the alleged breach of the common-law duty of defendant to deliver the sheep to the consignee according to plaintiffs' direction. Plaintiffs were not compelled to sue on the written contract, but could sue defendant on its common-law liability as a common carrier. Defendant pleaded and introduced the written contract as a defense. Plaintiffs had a right to set up and prove that the written contract, by reason of the mistake made therein, did not effectuate the intention of the parties and therefore was not binding on them. [Barlow v. Elliott, 56 Mo. App. 377; Leitensdorfer v. Delphy, 15 Mo. 115; Lupe v. Atlantic Pacific R.R. Co., 3 Mo. App. 77; Deierling v. Railroad, 163 Mo. App. l.c. 296, 146 S.W. 814; Creamery Co. v. Railroad, 128 Mo. App. 422; Short v. Thomas, 178 Mo. App. 417, 163 S.W. 252; Wernick v. Railroad, 131 Mo. App. 37, 109 S.W. 1027.]

The evidence disclosed, beyond question, that the parties at no time intended to ship the sheep to the National Stock Yards, Illinois, but intended that the shipment should be made to the Independent Stock Yards, St. Louis, Missouri. The words "Natl. Yards, Ill.," written in the body of the contract, were inadvertently written therein by defendant's agent. The mistake was discovered before the shipment was made and defendant endeavored to correct it by eliminating the said words and writing in lieu thereof, on the back of said contract, the words "St. Louis U.D."

Moreover, defendant's agent, the one who wrote the contract, made out the way bill for the shipment. In the way bill the sheep were billed to St. Louis, U.D.; "St. Louis U.D." meaning Independent Stock Yards, according to the interpretation of said agent. This way bill accompanied the shipment and was the order that controlled the train crew in handling the shipment. Defendant, therefore, was not mislead because of the written contract in making the delivery of the sheep at the National Stock Yards, Illinois. *173

It is evident from the testimony that the reason the sheep were carried to the National Stock Yards, Illinois, and there delivered, was on account of the unauthorized act of defendant's agent at Bremen Avenue, St. Louis, Missouri, who changed the destination of the shipment and re-billed the sheep to the National Stock Yards, Illinois. This act was the cause of defendant's wrongful delivery and conversion of the sheep. The issue raised by the pleadings regarding the execution of the written contract was for the jury to decide.

(2) Counsel for defendant further contends that the defendant had the right to assume that the consignee, the Woodson-Fennewald Commission Company, were the owners of the sheep and therefore the delivery to said consignee discharged the defendant from liability, although the place of delivery was not the place appointed by the plaintiffs.

To this contention we cannot agree.

It will be seen from the statement of the facts in this case that the defendant had notice that the sheep belonged to the plaintiffs and that the consignee was merely their agent to receive the sheep at the Independent Stock Yards, St. Louis, Missouri, and re-ship them to Salem, Missouri. Defendant, therefore, had no right to indulge in the presumption contended for.

The law governing the question under discussion is tersely stated by the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Southern Express Company v. Dickson, 94 U.S. 550. Said case is decisive of this question. The court there says: "Where it is known that the goods are the property of the shipper, and have been shipped by him for delivery to the consignee as his agent at a distant place, can the carrier deliver the goods to such consignee or to their order at another place? We think the rule is, that, where the consignor is known to the carrier to be the owner, the carrier must be understood to contract with him only, for his interest, upon such terms as he dictates in regard to the delivery, *174 and that the consignees are to be regarded simply as agents selected by him to receive the goods at the place indicated." [See, also, Smith Company v. Railroad, 145 Mo. App. 394, l.c. 406, 407, 122 S.W. 342; Hutchinson on Carriers, Vol. 1, sec. 177, Vol. 2, sec. 736; Wichita Poultry Co. v. Southern Pac. Ry. Co., 198 S.W. 82 (not officially reported); Cooper v. Bank of British North America, 30 F. 171; Bank of British North America v. Cooper, 137 U.S. 473; Bartlett v. Steamboat Philadelphia,32 Mo. 256.]

It was the duty of the defendant to deliver the sheep, according to the plaintiffs direction, and to make delivery at the place appointed by the plaintiffs, to-wit, at the Independent Stock Yards, St. Louis, Missouri, and a delivery at the National Stock Yards, Illinois, although to the same consignee, did not relieve defendant from its responsibility.

(3) The defendant further contends that the plaintiffs waived the conversion by receiving the proceeds of the sale of the sheep.

In dealing with this question it must be borne in mind that the plaintiffs had no knowledge of the wrongful delivery of the sheep until after the sheep were slaughtered. Defendant was guilty of a conversion in delivering the sheep at the National Stock Yards. The slaughter of the sheep was due to said conversion. The wrongful act of the carrier, the cause of the loss to the plaintiffs, had been committed when plaintiffs accepted the proceeds of the sale of the sheep.

Let us suppose that the plaintiffs had accepted the sheep from the defendant after they were slaughtered. Could it be contended that plaintiffs act in accepting the sheep constitute a waiver, of the conversion, as a matter of law? We think not.

Waiver is a question of intention. What constitutes waiver depends upon facts of each particular case. If reasonable minds might draw different conclusions from *175 the facts the question of waiver is one for the jury and not for the court.

The plaintiffs contend that they did not take the proceeds of the sale of the sheep in satisfaction of the wrong done them by the defendant; that the loss sustained by them for the miscarying of the sheep to a wrong and bad market and having them sold for slaughter was not intended to be waived and was not affected by plaintiffs acceptance of the proceeds of sale.

There was ample evidence to sustain plaintiffs' contention. It was a question of fact to be determined by the jury. The court was not authorized to declare, as a matter of law, that plaintiffs had waived the conversion. [Arrington v. Wilmington Weldon R.R. Co. (N.C.), 72 Am. Dec. 559; Lesinsky v. Great Western Dispatch, 10 Mo. App. 134, l.c. 141; Atkisson v. Steamboat Castle Garden, 28 Mo. App. 124; Peoples State Savings Bank v. Railroad, 192 Mo. App. 614, 178 S.W. 292; Fairbanks, Morse Co. v. Baskett, 98 Mo. App. l c. 67, 71 S.W. 1113; Lake Shore, etc., Railroad Co. v. W.H. McIntyre Co., 60 Ind. App. 191; Lester v. Delaware, L. W.R.R. Co., 36 N.Y.S. 907; Corpus Juris, sec. 380; McSwegan, et al. v. Pennsylvania R.R. Co.,40 N.Y.S. 51.]

(4) Respondents further contend that the verdict is excessive.

The evidence discloses that a few days prior to the conversion of the sheep plaintiffs paid thirty-eight hundred and thirty-three dollars and fifty cents for them. There was evidence showing that immediately after they were shipped the price of breeding ewes was from two to two dollars and fifty cents a head higher. Other evidence tended to show that the sheep were worth twenty dollars per head. The verdict of the jury is supported by the evidence.

It would needlessly lengthen this opinion to consider appellant's other assignments of errors. It is *176 sufficient to say that we find no error which would warrant a reversal of the judgment herein.

The judgment of the Circuit Court of Audrain County should be affirmed, and the Commissioner so recommends.






Addendum

The opinion of BRUERE, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. The judgment of the Circuit Court of Audrain County is accordingly affirmed. Allen, P.J., and Becker, J., concur.Daues, J., not sitting.

midpage