117 Mo. App. 288 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906
The plaintiff shipped a lot of household goods over the defendant’s road from Hannon, Missouri, a point south of Kansas City, destined for Polo in the same State. He charges that they were damaged and lost by defendant in negligently delaying them and carelessly and negligently handling them. Defendant sought to excuse itself by showing that the property was lost in an extraordinary and unprecedented flood. The judgment in the trial court was for plaintiff.
The property was partly lost and the remainder damaged at Kansas City, Missouri, in the great flood at that point in the latter part of May and first of June, 1903. In the case of Moffatt Com. Co. v. Railway, 113 Mo. App. 544, 88 S. W. 117, we considered a question of the liability of a freight carrier for the loss of freight in that flood. We there held that, though the flood was an act of God, that to excuse the carrier, “the act of God must be the sole cause of the loss or injury, and whenever the negligence of the carrier mingles with the act of God, as a co-operative cause, he is liable, provided the resulting loss is within the probable consequences of the negligent act; otherwise, it will be too remote and disconnected to be considered the proximate cause.” We see no reason for departing from that case. It was but the application of a well-recognized rule of law, which has been stated by our Supreme Court. [Brewing Assn. v. Talbot, 141 Mo. 674; Holwerson v. Railway, 157 Mo. 216, 231; Warner v. Railway, 178 Mo. 125, 134.] The case of Haley v. Transit Co., 179 Mo. 30, is directly in point as to what should be considered to be caused by the negligent conduct. In that case, the servants of a street railway negligently carried the plaintiff a block beyond the point where she wished to leave the car, for stopping at which she had signaled. It was after dark and ice was upon the sidewalks. In walking back the dis
But in the Mofifatt case, we recognized that, if injury from the act of God might have been avoided by reasonable foresight and care, liability would follow. And so the learned trial judge instructed the jury in this case, that if “the defendant became aware of the impending and approaching flood in time to have removed the goods to a place of safety by the exercise'of ordinary care and diligence,” it was liable for the loss. [Davis v. Railway, 89 Mo. 340, 347.] So, therefore, the question is: Was there evidence adduced which had a tendency to support the hypothesis thus submitted to the jury? An examination of the record satisfies us that there was.
Polo, the destination of the goods, was not on defendant’s line of road, and it transferred them to a car of another line, which reached that place. Kansas City, where they were lost, was the transfer point. They left the point of shipment about one hundred and fifty miles from Kansas City on the afternoon of Wednesday, the 27th of May. It does not appear clearly in evidence just when they arrived in Kansas City, but defendant alleges in its answer that it was on the night of Friday, the 29th. At any, rate, defendant was handling the car, in which they were, on Saturday forenoon and in the afternoon of Saturday they were transferred from defendant’s car to the car of the connecting carrier and then abandoned on account of the flood, which at that time was too high for further movement of cars.
There was evidence, the tendency of which was to show that the flood worked its principal destruction in
In the nature of the case, plaintiff could not himself know, in detail, what defendant did with the car containing his goods after its arrival in Kansas City. He has depended upon defendant’s employees for an accounting of their conduct, and there are some matters not stated by them in terms. Thus, though we have said that the car was left for a time at Grand avenue station and then, in forenoon of the 80th, taken to West Bottoms, there is no specific statement of that, but it is a legitimate inference which we must draw in plaintiff’s favor on a demurrer or peremptory instruction. It was stated that that was the usual way of doing with such class of freight. But, even though the car Avas not left at Grand avenue, but was taken to West Bottoms the night of arrival and before defendant saAV the extraordinary character of the water, yet there Avas enough evidence in the case to go to the jury on the question of negligence in not getting it out before too late. We cannot say, Avithout an exercise of arbitrary and unwarranted power, that the entire evidence leaves defendant so clearly without fault as to deprive plaintiff of a-right to the opinion of the jury.
There was evidence, from which a legitimate inference may be drawn, that, but for many of defendant’s experienced employees going on a strike and quitting its service a few days before, it could have taken the car out to a place of safety. But a strike, while possibly a misfortune, is no excuse. [Read v. Railway, 60 Mo. 207; Cleary v. Transit Co., 108 Mo. App, 436.] Besides, on the additional contention of plaintiff which, as we have seen, the evidence tends to support, the strike should have rendered the defendant the more careful as to the situation in which it placed plaintiff’s property.
Anr| the same may be said concerning the evidence in defendant’s behalf of the crowded condition of its road
There were other points of objection to the judgment urged by defendant, though not discussed in detail. We have considered them, but think they are not well taken.
The judgment is affirmed.