135 Mo. App. 74 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
This is a suit for damages for conversion. The Young-Flesch Grain Company of St. Louis sold to the Wayland-Wright Grain Company of Kansas City two cars of corn, to be shipped to Birmingham, Alabama. The cars were delivered by the first-named company to the Mobile & Ohio Railroad Company at St. Louis on February 28, 1903, for transportation. Shipper’s order bills of lading were delivered by said Mobile' & Ohio Railroad Company to the Young-Flesch Company, on which was the notation, “Notify Wayland-Wright Grain Company.” Upon the receipt of the bills of lading, the Young-Flesch Grain Company endorsed and delivered them to the Wayland-Wright Grain Company. The latter had contracted to sell the corn to J. J. Stevenson of Birmingham; and upon receipt of the bills of lading the Wayland-Wright Company drew a draft on Stevenson for the purchase price of the corn, and, having endorsed the bills of lading, attached the same to the draft and delivered both to the plaintiff and received credit for the amount.
Upon the arrival of the corn at Columbus, Mississippi, the Mobile & Ohio Railroad, not having a line of railroad to Birmingham, turned the corn over to the defendant for transportation to Birmingham, viz., one car on March 7th and the other on March 10, 1903. One of the cars of corn arrived at Birmingham on the
Upon the arrival of the corn at Birmingham, defendant’s agent sent a notice to the Wayland-Wright Company at Birmingham. But it was shown that its agent there knew that said company was located at Kansas City and not at Birmingham. This notice was not received and was returned to defendant. When Stevenson refused to accept the corn, defendant sold it and realized the net value from the sale of $434.62, which it holds to the order of the owner of the bills of lading. It was shown that had the corn been kept
It is contended that, upon the facts, the defendant was not guilty of conversion and that plaintiff was not entitled to recover. Conversion as defined by Bomber’s Law Dictionary is, “The unlawful turning or applying the personal goods of another to the use of the taker, or of some other person than the owner; or the unlawful destroying or altering their nature.”
Our Supreme Court, in applying this, held, “The shipper of goods has the right to designate the consignee, and the carrier is bound to obey the directions of the shipper, or to comply with the terms of the shipment as to the delivery, and if it disobeys then it is liable for a conversion.” [Marshall & Michel Grain Co. v. Railway, 176 Mo. 480.] “A shipper of goods has the right to designate the connecting line over which his goods shall be carried and the first carrier is bound to obey the directions of the shipper in respect thereto and, if he does not do so, he is liable for conversion.” [Wiggins. Perry Co. v. Railway, 128 Mo. 224.]
The action of defendant’s agent in not notifying Wayland-Wright Grain Company, the consignee, of the arrival of the corn, and in shipping it at the request of Stevenson to Bessemer, and there holding it until it was damaged, was an act of conversion under the authorities cited. It was the duty of defendant when the corn arrived at Birmingham to have notified the consignee as required by the bill of lading. Had this notice been given, the corn could have been delivered to Stevenson on its arrival at Birmingham, upon payment of the purchase price. Notwithstanding Stevenson requested defendant’s agent when the corn should arrive in Birmingham to ship the cars to Bessemer, such request was not binding on the defendant, as the destination of the corn was Birmingham and not Bessemer and the consignee had the right to require that the
The defendant contends that, as Bessemer was within the switch limits of Birmingham, there was no conversion, - as thereby there was no change of destination. But Bessemer was fourteen miles from Birmingham and, notwithstanding it was within the same switch limits, it was at a different point and distinct from that of delivery. And it seems that it was so considered by defendant’s agents, who for some time failed to locate the corn, it not being found to be at Birmingham.
The court, at the request of defendant, instructed the jury that if the railroad tracks of defendant at Bessemer were within the switch limits of Birmingham, then the setting of the cars containing the corn upon the sidetracks at Bessemer did not constitute conversion. For plaintiff, the court instructed the jury as 'follow^: “The court instructs the * jury that J. J. Stevenson had no right, without having received the bills of lading for the grain' in question, to assume control thereof or give any direction in regard thereto; and, if you believe from the evidence in this case that Birmingham and Bessemer are separate and distinct cities, about twelve miles apart, and that the railroad station at Bessemer is a separate and distinct station from that of the defendant at Birmingham, then the sending of the grain to Bessemer at the request of said Stevenson, if it was so sent, constituted a wrongful diversion of said grain by said defendant.” The defendant contends that the two instructions are in conflict, and they may be, as it was shown that, notwithstanding the two places were miles apart, they were within the same switch limits. But, as defendant invited the error,
Instruction 2 is criticized because it required defendant to notify consignee or consignor of the arrival of corn. It is held in Ross v. Railway, 119 Mo. App. 290, and cases there cited, that in the absence of a custom no notice is necessary to a consignee of the arrival of the goods.’ Tírese cases have no application, as the contract of shipment required notice to be given to the Wayland-Wright Company. Consequently, there was no error in the action of -the court in refusing defendant’s instruction to the effect that it was not required to give such notice.
Defendant contends that notice to Wayland-Wright Company at Birmingham was sufficient. This raises the question whether the mailing of the notice to said company at Birmingham, when defendant’s agent knew they were not doing business at that place and that it was not their post-office address, was a sufficient compliance with the contract. The defendant was bound to notify the consignee at its known place of business wherever that might be, and Ave hold that it was not a- sufficient compliance to mail the notice to the company at Birmingham, where it Avas knowm not to be doing business and where it would not be received.
Exceptions Avere .taken to certain remarks of plaintiff’s counsel during his argument, but Ave believe, under the circumstances, that they were not of such a character as to unduly influence the jury, and, besides, we are of the opinion they were invoked by the counsel of the defendant.
The judgment was for the right party and, no prejudicial error having been committed, the cause is affirmed.