205 Mo. App. 463 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1920
This action for damages grows out of a shipment of fat sheep which, as alleged in the petition, were intended by plaintiff for sale on the market at the Union Stock Yards in Chicago.
■ The transportation began on the morning of Sunday, November 26,1916, at Bullion, Missouri, on defendant’s line; and the shipment went thereon, safely and in due time, to Quincy, Illinois, the end of defendant’s railroad, where the animals were turned over to the
About three o’clock in the afternoon of the 26th, while the sheep were enroute between Quincy and Gales-burg, the Union Stock Yards Company informed the Burlington Live Stock Agent at the Union Stock Yards that the Yards were going to get out an embargo against all shipments from Missouri, Kansas and Nebraska, and that he had better arrange to have all stock then en route held until such time as disposition could be made thereof or until the Stock Yards could receive, it.
Knowing from past experience that if an embargo were put on, unloading would be refused by the Stock Yards, the Burlington Live Stock Agent, notified the "Burlington Superintendent of Transportation at Chicago and the Burlington General Superintendent at Gales-burg that the Union Stock Yards had advised him that, on account of prevalence of Foot and Mouth Disease, the Yards would not accept stock from Missouri, Kansas or Nebraska and that they had “better arrange to hold all stock from this territory as probably unloading will be refused.”
The General Superintendent at Galesburg wired the Superintendent of Transportation asking what course to pursue. The latter replied that it would be necessary to hold stock at Galesburg until definite information could be obtained. Fifty minutes later, to-wit, at 9:43 p. m. of November 26th, at the request of the Union Stock Yards Company, the President of the Chicago Junction Railroad .Company (the carrier which takes
This refusal of the Union Stock Yards to receive, accept or unload such stock came about in this way. The President of the Union Stock Yards Company called the attention of Dr. Bennett, who was the Stock Yards Superintendent of Sanitation, to a rumor that Foot and Mouth Disease had appeared in the Kansas City Stock Yards introduced by cattle from Nebraska. Dr. Bennett immediately called by telephone the Chief of the Bureau of Animal Industry at Washington, who replied advising that “every precaution possible” be taken. Dr. Bennett then advised the Union Stock Yards Company to “shut off all shipments” from Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska until it was fully determined what the nature of the disease was in the Kansas City Stock Yards. Thereupon the Union Stock Yards Company directed the above notice to be sent.
Upon arrival of the shipment at Galesburg, plaintiff, who accompanied9it, got his supper and returned to the train expecting to resume the journey to Chicago, but was told, along with a number of other shippers, of the orders received and that the shipments would be held until further notice. Plaintiff said nothing when told this and went to a hotel for the night and the railroad unloaded the sheep.
The next morning, according to plaintiff’s evidence, he requested the agent to send his stuff back to Bullion “provided,he couldn’t send it on to Chicago,” but was told that this could not be done without a special permit from the Missouri State Veterinarian. Later on in the trial he testified that on Monday he told the railroad officials there wasn’t anything to prevent the ship
The next morning, Tuesday, November 28, the shippers were told that their stock could be sent to the National Stock Yards at East St. Louis, and thereupon plaintiff gav.e to the railroad a written order diverting the shipment to that point care of the same firm to which it had been consigned in Chicago. Other shippers diverted their stock to the same point, but some waited at Galesburg and then went on to Chicago December 3, after the embargo had been raised, which was done on December 1st, the rumor as to the dreaded Foot and Mouth Disease having been ascertained, upon investigation, to be unfounded.
The trial court instructed the jury that no justification was shown by the defendant for the connecting carrier’s refusal to promptly deliver the plaintiff’s stock at the Union Stock Yards in Chicago, nor for the detention of said stock at Galesburg; and that if they found from the evidence that plaintiff was damaged in consequence of such refusal to carry to destination, and delay in the shipment, and failure to properly feed and water the sheep while at Galesburg, and for damages caused by any, sustained by reason of such failure to transport the stock to said Union Stock Yards at Chicago not to exceed $744.60, the amount asked in the petition. The jury «returned a verdict, in plaintiff’s favor, of $600, and defendant has appealed.
Plaintiff’s sheep were not diseased, and, as stated, upon investigation, it turned out that no Foot and Mouth
The shipment was interstate, and liability is, therefore, governed by the rules of decision in the Federal Courts. It must also be borne in mind that this is not a
Under the Federal rule, before the carrier can be held liable for delay, or failure to deliver promptly, the shipper must show either negligence or some other fault upon the part of the carrier. [Berry v. Chicago, etc. R. Co., 208 S. W. 622; Baker v. Schaff, 211 S. W. 103.] The absence of negligence or other fault excuses a carrier for delay. [2 Hutchinson on Carriers (3 Ed.), sec. 653.] And if delay is induced by causes beyond the carrier’s control, the latter is excused regardless of the agency producing such delay. It does not have to be an Act of God or caused by the public enemy. [1 Mitchie on Carriers, sec. 908; 6 Cyc. 645, 646; Gulf, etc., R. Co. v. Levi, 76 Tex. 337; Dawson v. Chicago, etc. R. Co., 79 Mo. 296; Dillender v. St. Louis, etc., R. Co., 149 Mo. App. 331, 337; Missouri, etc., R. Co. v. Stark, 131 S. W. 410; Geismer v. Lake Shore, etc., R. Co., 102 N. Y. 563.]
However, in the ease at bar, the refusal of the Union Stock Yards Company to receive or unload the shipment did not, like a washout or some other occurrence on the railroad, actually prevent the carrier from transporting the stock on to Chicago and tendering it to the Stock Yards within the reasonable time contemplated by the shipping contract. And since plaintiff was with the shipment, and, according to his evidence, demanded that such contract be carried out, did he not have the technical right to have that done? Doubtless he did have, that right. But, evpn so, is he entitled, under the circum
So that.we do not think plaintiff is entitled to substantial damages for failure to reach Monday’s market at the Stock Yards in Chicago merely because of his technical right to have the contract of carriage performed. Hence the judgment rendered should not be permitted to stand.
But there was some evidence that while the sheep were held at Galesburg until disposition could be made of them they were not given proper food and water; also that there was unnecessary delay in the transportation of the sheep from Galesburg to St. Louis whereby they had to be held over Thanksgiving and were thereby caused to suffer still'greáter loss. Of course, if damages was caused either from failure to properly care for the sheep while at Galesburg or by delay in transporting them to St. Louis, the carrier guilty of these things would be liable for the damage caused thereby. Is the defendant herein, the initial carrier, liable under the Carmack Amendment to the Interstate Commerce Act? It is clear to our minds that, as to the failure to properly feed and water the stock while being held at Galesburg, the initial carrier would be liable since, under the Federal law, the initial carrier is liable for any negligence of a connecting carrier, and the latter owed plaintiff, the duty of properly feeding and watering the sheep (2 Hutchinson on Carriers (3 Ed.), sec. 653), which duty arose, under the circumstances, by virtue of the contract plaintiff made with the initial carrier. But after the shipment' was diverted to St. Louis, without notice to the initial carrier, is the latter liable for the negligence of the connecting carrier for delay in the transportation from Galesburg to St. Louis? In cases where goods were voluntarily rerouted by the shipper over another line without notice to the initial carrier, the latter was held not
“The “Account of Sales” which plaintiff received for the sale of his sheep at St. Louis should not have been admitted without proof that it correctly showed such sales. No such proof was introduced. Hazelwood said it was a correct copy but does not say the “account of sales” was correct and showed what the sheep actually sold for. [Stockwell v. Union Pacific R. Co., 182 S. W. 829; Moore v. St. Louis & San Francisco R. Co., 143 Mo. App. 675.]
Several other complaints are made concerning the admission of evidence in plaintiff’s behalf. We think the evidence as to the promise of a “passenger run” from Galesburg to St. Louis was not admissible. The case was not based on any promise of that kind and if it were, stick, evidence would come dangerously near making a “new contract” of shipment different from the. one the initial carrier had made. The fact of the conductor’s fretting at the engineer, during the trip to St. Louis, over the unusally slow speed of the train with no apparent cause for the lack of speed, would, along with all the
For the reasons hereinabove stated the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.