168 Mo. App. 542 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
Suit to recover damages, for negligent delay in the shipment of forty-eight head of mnles from Windsor to Fulton, both in Missouri. The route of shipment over defendant’s line is from Windsor northeast to Sedalia twenty miles away, then from Sedalia east sixty miles to North Jefferson. From this last point to Fulton, a distance of twenty-five miles, the shipment went over the Chicago & Alton road, defendant having no line to Fulton.
The ordinary and usual time required to transport a shipment from Windsor to Fulton was twenty-four hours or less. The shipment in this case occupied something over fifty-two hours. It started at Windsor at 2 p. m. August 15, got to Sedalia at 6:10 p. m. that day, going a distance of twenty miles in four hours and ten minutes. At Sedalia the mules remained from 6:10 p. m. of the 15th to 10:15 a. m: of the 16th, a period of sixteen hours and five minutes. During this period they were watered and fed in the pens. At 10:15 of the 16th the mules were started to North Jefferson and arrived there at 4 p. m. of that day, travelling sixty miles in five hours and forty-five minutes. There was only one freight train a day from North Jefferson to Fulton and its time for leaving North Jefferson was one o’clock, although frequently it left later than that; and on this particular day it left at 2:30. As the mules arrived at North Jefferson at four o’clock, of course the train for Fulton had gone, so the defendant fed and cared for the mules at Mokane until the next day, the 17th, and then delivered them to the Chicago & Alton, which took them on to Fulton, arriving there between sundown and dark, August 17, something over fifty-two hours from the time they started from Windsor. After failing to reach North Jefferson in time to catch the Fulton train on the 16th, the delay at
The defendant offered no evidence but stood upon its overruled demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence. Plaintiff recovered and defendant appeals, its main contention being that there is no evidence showing a negligent delay. Undoubtedly a showing of mere delay and nothing more, neither negligent acts causing it nor other circumstances tending to raise even a slight inference of negligence, is insufficient to support a recovery. In this case no specific acts of negligence are alleged or shown. But the question is, has the delay been shown with such circumstances and under such surroundings as to raise the inference that the delay had its origin in negligence? From the very nature of the relation of carrier and shipper, circumstances that even slightly tend to show this are sufficient, especially, where the knowledge of what caused the delay is with the carrier and not the shipper. [Bushnell v. Railroad, 118 Mo. App. 618, 627; Gilbert v. Railroad, 132 Mo. App. 697, 764. If, therefore, such circumstances and surroundings have been shown in this case, plaintiff is entitled to recover.
Defendant received the mules for shipment from Windsor to Pulton. It therefore became bound to 'so transport them as to enable them to reach their destination in reasonable time. A reasonable time theretofore had been, and thereafter was, twenty-four hours
Appellant’s point that there was a failure to prove actionable damages cannot be sustained. The petition does not declare on a failure to reach a certain market, but upon the loss sustained by reason of the difference in the flesh and condition of. the mules on arrival from that in which they would have been had no delay occurred. To get at this loss it is necessary to show the difference in the market value of the mules in one condition from their market value in the other. In doing this the term “market value” is used in contradistinction to the value peculiar to the owner; and not because the property damaged is to be immediately sold on the market. The above is the correct rule whether the property is shipped to market or held for some other purpose. [New York, etc., Railroad Co., v. Estill, 147 U. S. 591.] In this case, at pages 616 and 617, the Supreme Court of the United States say: “The difference between the market value of the cattle, in the condition in which they would have arrived but for the negligence of the defendant, and their market value in the condition in which, by reason of such negligence, they did arrive, constituted the proper rule of damages. It was not material whether the plaintiffs intended to keep the cattle upon their farms, for breeding purposes, or to sell them upon the market. The depreciation in value of the cattle was the same in either case.”
The contention is made that this difference in value was only temporary. This makes it none the less a loss. Plaintiff did not claim the mules were permanently injured but that they were so set back in
Judgment affirmed.