65 Mo. 629 | Mo. | 1877
It is alleged in plaintiff’s petition that in February, 1875, he delivered to the defendant twenty-one mules and one horse, tó be carried from Wentzville to St. Louis; that by the negligence and carelessness of the defendant, one of said mules escaped -or was stolen from the car while being transported, and was entirely lost to plaintiff. The allegations of the petition were denied in defendant’s answer, and a special contract between the plaintiff and defendant was set up therein by way of defense, containing among others, in substance, the following stipulation: That the plaintiff should go with and take care of said freight while on the trip, and load and unload
So much of defendants answer as set forth the above special agreement, was on plaintiff’s motion stricken out, on the ground that it constituted no defense to the action. This ruling of the court was excepted to by defendant at the time, and is relied upon here as the principal reason for a reversal of the judgment.
Upon the trial, the evidence tended to show that plain-, tiff, without paying any fare, accompanied the train to take care of his stock; that when the mules were loaded, the car door was closed and fastened with a wooden pin passed
It is now well settled by numerous decisions of this court, that a common carrier, can by special contract, limit his common law liability, but cannot, by such contract, exempt himself from the consequences of his own negligence. Where a loss or injury to a cargo shipped on a railroad occurs from any of the causes excepted in a bill of lading, or contract made between the parties, in order to relieve the company from liability, it must appear that the exception named is the proximate and sole cause of the damage or loss. If the negligence of the carrier mingles with it, as an active and co-operative cause, the carrier will be responsible. 42 Mo. 88; 52 Mo. 399; Read v. St. Louis. K. C. & N. R’y Co., 60 Mo. 199. In the case last cited, as is contended in the case at bar, the petition was based on an alleged breach of defendant’s duty as a carrier, and the defendants pleaded a special contract. If the contract set up in defendant’s answer was such an one, as
It may be well to observe that, notwithstanding the stipulation in the contract that defendant should not be responsible for damages occasioned by escapes from any cause whatever, the defendant would still be liable for an escape occasioned by its negligence, or where such negligence was an active and co-operating cause in producing it. How far the failure of defendant to seal the car, when requested by plaintiff to do so, may have contributed to the escape of the animal, was a question for the jury, and this being' so, the court properly refused to instruct that, under the pleadings and evidence, plaintiff could not recover. It may also be well to observe that this case is distinguishable from the case of Rice v. Kansas Pacifie R. R. Co., supra, in this, that it was there agreed that no
Reversed.