17 Mo. 290 | Mo. | 1852
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was a suit by the plaintiff, Porter, against the steamboat New England, for a breach of a contract for the transpor-. tation of the plaintiff’s son from St. Louis to a landing on the Mississippi, in the state of Illinois, called the Two Branches. The suit was begun in a justice’s court and appealed to the law commissioner, where, after a judgment for the plaintiff for $21 50, there was an appeal to this court.
Evidence was given on the part of the defendant, showing that a landing on the night in question would have been dangerous, not only from darkness, but from the nature of the landing, and that there was a great number of passengers aboard. This was excluded and exceptions taken to its exclusion. The night was very dark ; there was a plain road up the river from Johnson’s landing to the Two Branches, and a house of entertainment at Johnson’s landing.
The following instructions, asked by the plaintiff, were given by the court:
1. If the jury believe from the evidence, that the defendant contracted with the plaintiff to take his son, a minor, from St. Louis to the Two Branches, on the Mississippi river, and de-
2. The measure of damages is the expense necessarily attendant upon the plaintiff to get his son home, the loss of the time of the services of said son to the plaintiff, caused by the failure of defendant to land the said son at the Two Branches, and such other damages as the jury shall believe the said son sustained, by reason of the defendant’s forcing him to go ashore at Lagrange.
3. If the defendant could have landed the son of plaintiff at the Two Branches, either by landing herself, or by means of her yawl, she, was bound so to do, and her failure to fulfill her contract to land said son at the Two Branches, if such contract was made by said defendant, renders the defendant liable for all damages caused by reason of said failure to land.
And the court gave the following instructions, asked by defendant :
The plaintiff can only recover in this suit such damages as, by using due diligence, he would have sustained in going to his place of destination.
The plaintiff is not entitled to any damages for the expenses of the two men sent after the boy, unless the jury believe it was necessary to send the two men after the boy at Lagrange.
And the following instructions, asked by the defendant, were refused by'the court:
The plaintiff can only recover in this suit such damages as, by using due diligence, he would have sustained in going to his place of destination from the first landing the other side of the Two Branches.
If the jury believe from the evidence, that the landing of the vessel at the Two Branches, on the night in question, would
If the jury believe from the evidence, that the plaintiff’s son had notice that the vessel could not land at the Two Branches, and that it was dangerous for the vessel to do so, and to the lives of the passengers, then it was the duty of the plaintiff, after the vessel passed the port of Ms son’s destination, to stop his son at Cap au Gris, and to use due diligence in sending the said son to his port of destination.