41 Mo. App. 84 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890
This case was before this court on a former appeal, and the decision of this court is reported in 34 Mo. App. 675. On its being remanded to the circuit court in pursuance of the mandate of this court, the defendant filed an amended answer in that court, setting up the special defense upon which it has chiefly relied. So much of this amended answer as it is material to recite is as follows: “That, on the twenty-fifth day of February, A. D. 1887, the plaintiffs delivered to the defendant at Frankford, a station on defendant’s railway, in, the state of Missouri, the said carload of wheat consigned to the plaintiffs, to be transferred over its railway to the city of Hannibal, in the state of Missouri; that the defendant forwarded the carload of wheat to, and'it was received in, the said city of Hannibal, on the morning of February 25, A. D. 1887 ; that there was no delay in the shipment, and that the said carload of wheat arrived at its destination on time ; that defendant’s line terminated at the limits
I. The first assignment of error is that the court erred in permitting the alleged testimony of a deceased witness, M. P. Gregg, preserved in the bill of exceptions taken at the former trial, to be read in evidence, against the objection of the plaintiffs. Notwithstanding the statement to the contrary in the appellant’s abstract, we find, on an inspection of the record, that no exception was saved to this ruling.
II. The next assignment of error is that there was no evidence that the plaintiffs received actual notice that the carload of wheat had been placed by the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, which acted as the agent of the defendant, on the sidetrack known as the “Badger State” sidetrack; or that, if there was any evidence of this fact, the preponderance against it is so great that the verdict must be regarded as a manifest mistake on the part of the jury, under the rule in Rosecrans v. Railroad, 83 Mo. 678. It may be worth a passing observation that this is the second jury that has returned a verdict for the defendant in this case. In all the litigation in which railway companies have been parties, which has been before this court during the more than nine years that I have been a judge of it, this, so far as I can now recall, is the fourth verdict which a jury has freely given in favor of a railway company. If the jury has given this verdict on a state of evidence which clearly shows that it was the result of prejudice or partiality, within the doctrine of the case just referred to, it is a remarkable circumstance. We
We do not, however, regard the finding of the jury, in favor of the defendant, of the fact that the defendant gave notice to the plaintiffs that the car had been placed on the “Badger State” track, as the finding of a fact necessary to the defense, for reasons which we shall state in speaking of the instructions.
III. Complaint is made of the rulings of the trial court in giving and refusing instructions. In order to understand this assignment of error, we shall set out the principal instructions which were given and refused.
The following instruction, number 1, was requested by the plaintiffs, and refused by the court in the form in which it was requested:
“The court instructs the jury that it is admitted by the pleadings in this case that the defendant, the St. Louis and Hannibal Railway Company, was, on the twenty-fourth day of February, a common carrier of goods, wares and merchandise ; and it is also admitted by the pleadings that defendant, as such common carrier, accepted and received of plaintiffs at Frankford, Missouri, on the twenty-fifth day of February, 1887, six hundred bushels of wheat, to be by said defendant carried on the line of its railway, in its cars, as such common carrier, to Hannibal, Missouri, and delivered to plaintiffs. Now, the court instructs the jury that the law then imposed on the defendant the duty of safely*90 carrying the said wheat to Hannibal, Missouri, and there delivering the same to plaintiffs, and if the jury find from its evidence that the defendant did carry said wheat to Hannibal, Missouri, but did not deliver the same to plaintiffs, b,ut the said wheat was lost to plaintiffs, the jury will find a verdict for plaintiffs, and assess their damages at the reasonable market value of said wheat, as shown by the evidence, not exceeding the sum of six hundred dollars.”
In lieu of this instruction the court, of its own motion, gave the following :
“ The court, in lieu of instructions asked by plaintiff, of its own motion, instructs the jury that it is admitted by the pleadings in this case that the defendant, the St. Louis and Hannibal Railway Company, was, on the twenty-fourth day of February, 1887, a common carrier of gopds, wares and merchandise ; and it is also admitted by the pleadings that the defendant, as such common carrier, accepted and received of plaintiffs, at Frankford, Missouri, on the twenty-fifth day of February, 1887, six hundred bushels of wheat, to be by said defendant carried on the line of its railway in its cars, as such common carrier, to Hannibal, Missouri, and delivered to plaintiffs. Now, the court instructs the jury that the law then imposed on the defendant the duty of safely carrying the said wheat to Hannibal, Missouri, and there delivering the same to the plaintiffs ; and if, under the instructions herein, the jury find from the evidence that there was no delivery, and no state of facts dispensing with delivery of said wheat, the jury will find for the plaintiffs, and assess their damages at the then reasonable market value of said wheat, not exceeding the sum of six hundred dollars.”
What state of facts would not dispense with delivery, the court explained to the jury in the following instruction, given of its own motion :
“In lieu of instructions asked by plaintiffs, the court of its own motion instructs the jury that, although*91 from the eyidence they may find that the wheat in question arrived on time in good order at its destination in defendant’s hands, yet, unless from the evidence they further find that, twenty-four hours before the burning of said wheat, the defendant gave plaintiffs, or one of plaintiffs, actual notice of said arrival of the said wheat, the jury will find that there was neither a delivery, nor any state of facts dispensing with a delivery, of said wheat to plaintiffs.”
The court also gave the two following instructions requested by the plaintiffs:
“ 2. The courts instructs tbe jury that, if they find from the evidence that the freight in question received by defendant at Frankford, Missouri, for transportation to Hannibal, Missouri, was grain in bulk, to-wit, wheat, consigned to plaintiffs at Hannibal, Missouri, then it was the duty of defendant to transport and deliver the same to said consignee, to-wit, plaintiffs, at Hannibal, Missouri; and it was the duty of defendant to give plaintiffs twenty-four hours’ actual notice of the arrival and placing of said bulk wheat, so contained in said car number 42, on the “Badger State” sidetrack, said twenty-four hours to embrace such time as the car number 42, containing such bulk wheat, was placed and kept on said sidetrack by defendant; and unless the jury find from the evidence that defendant' did give plaintiffs said actual notice twenty-four hours before the burning of said car and wheat, they will find, a verdict for plaintiffs.
“ 3. Although the jury may find from the evidence that the defendant, after receiving said carload of bulk wheat, safely transported it to Hannibal, Missouri, and there placed the car containing said wheat on the “Badger State” sidetrack, and although they may further find from the evidence that said carload of wheat was afterwards burned on said sidetrack, and that said defendant was not chargeable with such burning, yet, unless the jury further find from the evidence that*92 defendant notified plaintiffs of the placing of said carload of wheat on said “Badger State” sidetrack twenty-four hours before said carload of wheat was so burned, then the jury wall find a verdict for plaintiffs.”
The court gave several cautionary or admonitory instructions requested by the defendant, which are not complained of ; and it also gave of its own motion the following instruction, in lieu of other instructions requested by the defendant:
“1. In lieu of instructions prayed by defendant, the court of its own motion instructs the jury that, if from the evidence they find that, upon the arrival of the wheat in question, it was deposited and kept in good order, in a reasonably convenient and proper place for unloading, and thereafter and twenty-four hours before the loss or destruction of said wheat, the defendant gave to plaintiffs or to one of plaintiffs actual notice of said arrival, then said arrival, deposit, safekeeping and expiration of said notice, if any, terminated defendant’s liability as a common carrier ; and if from the evidence the jury further find that thereafter the defendant had said wheat in a reasonably safe place and exercised such care in the preservation of said wheat as a person of ordinary prudence would administer in charge of his own affairs in behalf of the owner, under the same circumstances, the jury will find for the defendant, although the said wheat in car on track was lost or destroyed.
“2. The court, of its own motion, instructs the jury that the burden of proof rests upon the defendant,-' to show, by a ■ preponderance of the evidence, to the ■reasonable satisfaction of the jury, either a delivery of the wheat to plaintiffs, or a state of facts dispensing with the said delivery.” •
“The burden of proof to establish the measure of damages, if any, is on the plaintiffs.”
In considering the propriety of these rulings upon the instructions, it is to be borne in mind that the issue
The first complaint of the plaintiffs in respect of the instructions is that the court refused the plaintiff’s instruction number 1, as requested, and gave in lieu of it, of its own motion, the instruction above quoted. There was plainly no error in refusing the plaintiff’s instruction number 1, as tendered, because the issue on the present trial was not, as on the former trial, the mere issue of delivery or no delivery; but the defendant had pleaded a state of facts, which, if true, might be regarded as dispensing with a delivery, or which might be regarded as being in themselves a delivery, — the difference being a mere matter of legal phraseology. Under this state of the issues, it would plainly have been misleading to submit the case to the jury on an instruction, requiring them to find for the plaintiffs if there had not been a delivery, without explaining to them what facts would constitute a delivery, or what facts would dispense with, or be tantamount to, actual delivery. The first instruction, which the- court gave in lieu of this, rightly told the jury that they must find .for the plaintiffs, if there was no delivery and no state
On this point the instructions were more favorable to the plaintiffs than they were entitled to ask. The second and third instructions requested by the plaintiffs and given by the court (above set out) informed the jury that they must find for the plaintiffs, unless the defendant gave the plaintiffs notice of the arrival of the wheat, and of its being placed on the “Badger State” track twenty-four hours before it was burned. It is argued that these instructions are contradictory of the instructions given by the court in lieu of instructions requested by the defendant. This is true; but the error was an error in favor of the plaintiffs, and they are, therefore, not in a position to complain of it. They
The judgment will be affirmed. It is so ordered.