158 Mo. App. 519 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1911
This is an action in the nature of trover as for conversion. At the conclusion of the evidence for plaintiff, the court peremptorily directed a verdict for both defendants and plaintiff prosecutes the appeal.
Defendant Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company, incorporated, is a common carrier of freight and as such owns and operates a line of railroad from Coffeyville, in the State of Kansas, to St. Louis, Missouri, and defendant Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, incorporated, is a common carrier of like character and owns and operates a line of railroad from East St. Louis, Illinois, to Nashville, Tennessee and other points south and east thereof. Plaintiff, People’s State Savings Bank, is a corporation engaged in the banking business at Coffeyville in the State of Kansas and as such is. the assignee for value of a consignment of nine horses, alleged to have been converted’by defendants, which consignment was made by John McNulty, at Coffeyville', to himself, or shipper’s order, at Batesburg, South Carolina, and was immediately transferred to plaintiff bank by an assignment of the bill of lading therefor. The suit proceeds
It appears John McNulty was engaged in the business of buying horses at Coffeyville, Kansas, and shipping them to Batesburg, South Carolina, over the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway to St. Louis and through its agency across the Mississippi river to the point of connection with the Louisville & Nashville Railroad, thence over that and other lines to Bates-burg.. Plaintiff bank furnished McNulty with the means to purchase the load of horses alleged to have been converted by defendants and after McNulty delivered the horses to the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway at Coffeyville for shipment and received from it a negotiable bill of lading therefor, reciting that the horses were consigned to John McNulty or to his order at Batesburg, South Carolina, he assigned and delivered this bill of lading to plaintiff, People’s State Savings Bank, for $1500. Plaintiff immediately made a draft on the consignee, John McNulty, at Batesburg, South Carolina, through the Citizens’ Bank of that place and forwarded it there for collection, with instructions, upon the payment of the draft by McNulty, to deliver him the bill of lading for the nine head of horses. At the time defendant Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company issued this negotiable bill of lading to McNulty, consignee, or his order, it also issued a stock shipment contract of some kind to him, which authorized an attendant to travel with the horses to the end of its line at St. Louis, Missouri, and for a return pass to Coffeyville, Kansas. This stock shipment contract was delivered by McNulty to one Coverdale, who accompanied the shipment for the purpose of caring for the horses, but the stock con
It appears that the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway, in performing its contract, transported the horses to the end of its line, St. Louis, Missouri, and across the Mississippi river by a connecting carrier where it unloaded them at the National Stock Yards,
Upon accepting the shipment for transportation to the end of its own line and across the Mississippi river for delivery to the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company under a negotiable bill of lading prescribing the shipper’s order as a term of the contract and with instructions to so deliver it to the connecting carrier, the law devolved upon defendant Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company the duty to make the delivery accordingly, or not at all; for no one can doubt the right of the shipper to prescribe such reasonable conditions upon which his goods shall be delivered to the connecting carrier or that the initial carrier becomes his agent for the purpose, charged with the primary duty of executing the shipping directions as given, if he so accepts the goods, unless it be in the case of an extraordinary emergency, of which nothing appears here. If a common carrier assumes to depart from such shipping instructions and delivers the consignment to a connecting carrier contrary thereto, he is guilty of conversion for thus exercising dominion over plaintiff’s property without regard to his rights, and becomes an insurer if the goods are thereafter lost from any cause. [Weaver v. So. R. Co., 135 Mo. App. 210, 115 S. W. 500; Wiggins Ferry Co. v. C. & A. R. Co., 128 Mo. 224, 27 S. W. 568, 30 S. W. 430; Marshall, etc. Co. v. K. C. Ft. S., etc, R. Co., 176 Mo. 480, 75 S. W. 638; Johnson v. N. Y. Central R. Co., 33 N. Y. 610; S. D. Seavy Co. v. Union Transit Co., 106 Wis. 394; 2 Cooley on Torts (3 Ed.), 861, 862; 1 Hutchinson on Carriers (3 Ed.), sec. 130; see also 1 Hutchinson on Carriers (3 Ed.), sec. 26.]
Though it does not appear by direct proof that the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company had knowl
It is immaterial that plaintiff omitted to prove a demand was made on defendants before the suit was instituted. Where it appears the tort is affirmative in character, as here, and the conversion is operated through an abuse of the bailment, contrary to the terms and stipulations of the contract therefor, no demand is necessary. [2 Cooley on Torts (3 Ed.); 871. Though a party is legally possessed of goods, if he actually converts them, no demand is necessary before instituting a suit therefor. [Knipper v. Blumenthal, 107 Mo. 665, 18 S. W. 23; 28 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law (2 Ed.), 666; Wimberly v. Pitner, 66 Mo. App. 633; LaFayette County Bank v. Metcalf, 40 Mo. App. 494.] The judgment should be reversed and^the cause remanded. It is so ordered.