62 Mo. 527 | Mo. | 1876
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an aetion for damages alleged to have been occasioned by the defendant’s negligence and breach of contract and failure of duty as a common carrier.
The evidence of the plaintiff tended to establish the following facts: The plaintiffs son, as agent for his father, applied to the station agent of defendant at'Hamilton, some time prior to the 1st of December, 1863, for transportation of about three hundred live hogs, and the agent agreed with or promised the plaintiffs son, that the hogs should be transported to Macon between the 1st and 10th days of December. The hogs were driven to the station, and on the 1st of December placed in the stock pens of the company. None of the hogs were shipped until about the 25th of December, and in the meantime about fifty head died in the pens by exposure to a snow storm, which occurred about the middle of the month, and for want of shelter, and' about one-third of the hogs were killed by the plaintiff ancj. shipped on coal cars, and by deterioration, consequent upon this mode of transportation, brought one-half of the market price. The expenses attending the delay, by feeding, cost of hands, etc., are stated in the evidence ; but need not be detailed here, as no question arises in regard to such matters.
About the 12th of December, 1863, a second contract was made with the a-gent at Hamilton for the transportation of about eight hundred hogs on the 14th or 15th of December. This second lot of hogs was driven to within about ten miles of the station on the 14th or thereabouts, when the agent of defendant sent word to the plaintiff not to bring them in, as they were crowded and could not ship them for a while. These hogs were kept in the neighborhood, shifting around
There was proof of a loss of about one hundred and fifty hogs of the second lot, during this interval from the 20th of December to the 15th of February. The expenses incurred were also in proof. The loss of these hogs was occasioned partly by cold during the storm of snow in January, and piling, and partly from the usual accidents in driving, and by shrinkage, etc.
The petition charges not only negligence, but favoritism to other parties, and that the hogs of plaintiff were not taken in regular turn from the depot in their order of priority.
The defense relied on in the answer, and also in the testimony, was : 1. the unusual influx of freight along this 2-oad in the winter of 1863-4, especially of hogs, and the inability to furnish rolling stock sufficient to take all the hogs offered in a reasonable time ; 2. the demands of United States government for transportation of military supplies and soldiers, and, 3. the remarkable and unprecedented snow storm which occurred this season ; and nearly all the evidence of defendant is directed to these points. It does not appeal’, however, that the snow storm of the 15th of December stopped the passage of ti'ains, but that the storm of the 31st December did stop the trains for from ten to fifteen days. t
I ought to add, in regard to the defenses, that the plea of the statute of limitations was also interposed to bar a recovery.
The jury on the instructions found for the plaintiff, and assessed his damages on the first and second counts (which referred to the two lots of hogs hei’etofore mentioned) at $7,500. A remittitur was however entered for $2,000, and the verdict then stood at $5,500, and the court then refused to set it aside.
1. It was the duty of defendant to receive all live stock which was offered at Hamilton during the months of November and December, 1863, and to take, transport and deliver the same without unnecessary delay, according to contract.
2. If the jury believe from the evidence, that at any time within five years next before the 14th day of March, 1863, plaintiff offered for shipment at Hamilton, Missouri, a lot of live hogs, and that defendant’s station agent at Hamilton accepted said hogs into the pens of defendant at Hamilton, for shipment, then no laek of rolling stock for shipping said hogs, nor the fact that the rolling stock was used by order of' the military authorities of the United States, will amount to a sufficient excuse for failing to ship said hogs without unnecessary delay; and in that ease, if the jury shall further find, that defendant failed to ship the hogs so received into said pens without delay, then the jury will find for plaintiff on the first count of the petition, unless the jury shall further believe from the evidence, that the defendant was prevented from shipping said hogs within a reasonable time 6olely by reason of a storm of snow and wind of unusual severity.
3. If the jury believe from the evidence, that in the month of December, 1863, E. T. Pruitt, acting for plaintiff, and defendant, by its station agent, E. N. Sleeper, made a verbal agreement, by the terms of which plaintiff was to deliver for shipment at Hamilton, Missouri, within three days thereafter, eight hundred hogs ; and that said Sleeper was to accept and ship said hogs upon their receipt; and that said Sleeper refused to accept, and ship said hogs, and notified plaintiff not to deliver said hogs; then the jury will find for the plaintiff in the second count of the petition.
4. If the jury find for the plaintiff on the first count of the petition, they will assess the damages at such amount as they may believe from the evidence resulted to plaintiff directly from defendant’s failure to ship the hogs mentioned in said first eouut, not exceeding $4,000.
6. The jury are instructed, that, as common carriers, it was the duty of the defendant to so distribute its rolling stock among the various stations on its road, as to afford a fair and reasonable proportion of such rolling stock to shipper’s at each station, regard being had to the usual amount of freight offered at such station for shipment; and if the jury believe from the evidence, that unjust discrimination was made against shippers at Hamilton Station in this regard, and that such discrimination resulted in the damage to plaintiff complained of, they must find for plaintiff, even though there was no contract on the part of the defendant to ship plaintiff’s hogs in proof.
7. If the jury find for the plaintiff, in estimating his damages they will allow him sneh damages as may fairly and reasonably be considered as arising naturally — that is, according to the natural course of things — from the breach .of defendant’s contract or duty, and which did from such breach ; and if by reason of defendant’s negligence or breach of duty, the property was deteriorated and reduced in value by storm, frost or any destructive agency of ordinary occurrence, the plaintiff is entitled to recover all the damages he has sustained thereby. not exceeding the sum of fourteen thousand dollars.
8. The jury must find separately on each count in plaintiff’s petition, aud if they find for plaintiff on the first count, the verdict may be in the following form: We, the jury, find for the plaintiff on the second count in his petition and assess his damages at-dollars.
And if the jury find for plaintiff on the second count their verdict may be in the following form: We, the jury,find for plaintiff on the second count in his petition and assess his damages at-dollars.
The following instructions asked by the defendant were given by the court:
2. The jury are instructed as to damages, in ease they find for plaintiff on either the first or second count of plaintiff’s petition, that if they believe from the evidence, that said hogs, or any of them, died from freezing, or the effects of excessive cold weather, or were smothered by piling together in consequence of such cold weather, or died from the want of proper care on the part of the plaintiff, or the person having them in charge, they will not include the value of such hogs in their assessment of damages.
3. The jury are instructed as to damages, in case they find for plaintiff on either the first or second count of plaintiff’s petition, that if they believe from the evidence, that the loss from shrinkage in weight of said hogs, or any of them, was occasioned by insufficient feeding or want of proper care on the part of plaintiff, or the person having charge of them, or solely by the effect of excessive cold weather, they will not include any such loss in their assessment of damages.
10. If the jury believe from the evidence, that the failure of the defendant to ship plaintiff’s hogs, mentioned in the first count of his petition, was in consequence of an unusual fall of snow, which filled the cuts along defendant’s road and rendered it impassable, or that in consequence of unusually .cold weather and great depth of snow, defendant’s engines were frozen up and rendered useless for shipping purposes, they will find for defendant, provided they believe from the evidence, that defendant was diligent and used all ordinary means to overcome such obstacles, and shipped said hogs as soon as its road was passable, in their proper turn or order, at the station where said hogs were received.
The following instructions asked by defendant were refused :
4. The jury are instructed that, if they believe from the evidence that previous to the month of November, 1863, the defendant had furnished and had on said road sufficient accommodation and rolling stock for the transportation of all freight and live stock that was ordinarily and generally offered for transportation on its said road within a reasonable time after the same were offered, and that during said months of November and December, 1863 and January, 1864, the defendant kept all of its available accommodation and rolling stock employed with reasonable diligence in receiving and for transporting the freight and live stock that were offered for transportation on said road, and that during said months of November, December and January, there was an unusual influx of business and an extraordinary press of freight and live stock for transportation on the road beyond the aapacity of the road and all accommodation and rolling stock to receive and transport immediately and at once ; and that while the said hogs of plaintiff were waiting to be received in turn after they were offered for transportation in the order of time and priority in which they were so offered, there occurred along the line of said road a severe and unusual snow storm and great cold, obstructing the operation of said road, hindering it from thereaftenvards receiving and transporting said hogs of the plaintiff in the order of time and priority in which they were offered for transportation, then defendant is not liable on the ground and for the reason merely that the plaintiff’s hogs were not received and transported in the exact order of time and priority in which they were offered, in view of the operations and business of the whole road at all stations, junctions and shipping places there.
5. Should the jury believe from the evidence, that defendant, through its agent, Sleeper, contracted with plaintiff to
6. If the jury believe from the evidence, that defendant was prevented from receiving and shipping the hogs of plaintiff mentioned in the first count of the petition by an unusual influx aud an unusual press of freight and live stock and United States troops, horses and mules, forage stores and provisions for transportation, beyond the capacity of the road, and all accommodations and rolling stock on said road, and, also, by the occurrence, along thelineof said road, of a severe and unusual snow storm and great cold, obstructing the operation of said road aud hindering it from receiving and transporting said hogs of plaintiff, then defendant is not liable on the first count in the petition, and the jury will find for the defendant.
7. If the jury believe that more than five years elapsed between the 14th day of December, 1863, and the 27th day of February, 1873, the time of the filing of plaintiff’s amended petition, the jury will find for the defendant on the second count of the second amended petition.
8. If tiie jury believe from the evidence, that the cause of action stated in the second count of plaintiff’s petition accrued to plaintiff more than five years before the filing of plaintiff’s amended petition, which was filed February 27th, 1873, they will find for defendant.
11. If the jury find for plaintiff, in assessing damages they will not include any amount for hogs that were frozen to death, or smothered to death by being overlaid by other hogs.
The first two instructions are not seriously objected to, and it is difficult to see any ground upon which objections could be raised. They relate to the first delivery of hogs in the pens of the defendant, and merely require that they shall be forwarded without unnecessary delay. They further assert, that the lack of rolling stock, and its subjection by the charter to the preferred claims of the government, constituted no excuse for the detention, but concede, that the defendant is not responsible for any delay occasioned by a snow storm and unusual wind. These instructions are certainly more favorable to the defendant than the evidence justified, since there was evidence of an express contract made by the agent, that the hogs should be forwarded by the 10th of December, and there was no proof of any unusual snow storm or wind previous to this date, and if there had been, it should at least have been stated in the instruction, that the storm
The instruction was, we think, right in leaving out of view the insufficiency of the defendant’s rolling stock, and its preoccupation by the United States military authorities. The reception of the hogs in the pens of the company (omitting all consideration of the promise or contract of the station agent) was equivalent to an obligation to forward without unnecessary delay. If the government monopolized the road, the company should have abdicated its functions as a common carrier for the public at large. But the agent is presumed to have been acquainted with the condition of the rolling stock, and the ability of the company to forward the freight received in at least a reasonable time, barring inevitable accidents from obstructions to the road by storms, etc. The company is also supposed to be acquainted with the prior claims of the government, and it was its duty, as a common carrier, to provide for the accommodation of private citizens as well as the government. The civil war had been, at the date of these contracts, in December, 1863, and January, 1864, in progress for upwards of two years, and the defendant must be presumed by this time to have ascertained to a reasonable extent the probable claims of the government on its road for transportation, and to have made provision for such demands without interfering with the ordinary business of the road. And the same may be said of the alleged increase in the crop of hogs in the vicinity of the road, a matter of which companies engaged in the business of transportation are not likely to be ignorant.
Indeed, it may be observed, without undertaking to give even the substance of the evidence on this subject, that it was of the most indefinite character, giving no statistics, no facts, but merely general statements of a great increase of the hog crop in the country tributary to this road, and a great increase in this branch of the business of the road, which, together with the severity of the winter, were claimed to absolve the company from its obligations as a common carrier.
With regard to the third instruction, which is based on the hypothesis of a contract between the plaintiff and the station agent, it is urged here, that such agents have no power to make such contracts. The general understanding of the country undoubtedly is, that such agents are placed there for the express purpose of receiving and forwarding freight, and making such contracts in reference thereto as they are authorized by the company to make.
The fact that, in a particular instance, the agent exceeds his authority by making engagements, which his principal’s instructions forbid, is certainly a matter of which the publie cannot take notice, unless eonveyed to the public in such a manner as would authorize the inference that, shippers are apprised of the restrictions. It is difficult to see how the business of a railroad could be successfully conducted, in regard especially to live stock, unless the owners have a right to rely on the representations of the station agents as to the time in which to deliver their stock. It is convenient to both parties that such power should be given to the agents, as stock dealers would be placed in a position which might subject them to unnecéssary expense, if not informed, at least within a reasonable time, of the day when it will be convenientfor the railroad to transport the stock. Such engagements, like all other engagements, may be excused from literal performance, undoubtedly, if unforeseen occurrences, such as the law recognizes as sufficient, should occasion slight delays. (Derring vs. Grand Trunk R. R. Co., 48 N. H., 455; 2 Redf. Railr., 113; 18 Eng. Law & Eq. R., 557; Sto. Ag., §§ 448, 127 ; 42 N. H., 125 ; 47 Id., 554.)
The third instruction, which was in reference to the second drove of hogs, in number about 800, was not framed in con
There is no question of the propriety of the' fourth, fifth and seventh instructions for the plaintiff. These instructions were, however, subsequently qualified or explained by the second and third instructions given for the defendant, which excluded from the consideration of the jury any estimate in their damages of the hogs that died from freezing, or the effects of excessive cold weather, or from piling or smothering in consequence of the cold weather.
It is probable from the course of the plaintiff in' entering a remittitur for $2,000, which was about the value of the hogs proved to have died from these causes, that the jury disregarded these instructions for the defendant, and in their damages included their value; but as the remittitur removed any objections on this score, the defendant has no cause of complain t.
We would not be understood, however, as concurring altogether in the views of the circuit court, as indicated in these instructions for the defendant, although they have the sanction of very respectable authorities. It is not deemed necessary, or appropriate to the position of the present case, seeing that the circuit court adopted the views most favorable to the defendant, that the subject of proximate and remote damage
The case of Clark vs. Pacific R. R. Co. (39 Mo., 184) is not inconsistent with the views expressed in the later cases in this court I have referred to. There Judge Holmes observed, that “though the act of God, or of the public enemies, be in itself a good defense, yet, if the loss be directly brought about by reason of the negligence or want of proper care of the-party himself, it would not excuse him. In such case the negligence or want of reasonable care and foresight might be deemed the proximate cause of the loss. And if it had been made to appear that the conductor knew of the immediate presence of the hostile forces, and had reason to believe that his train could go safely through on that day, but that there was danger that the train would be attacked and destroyed on the next day, and that he had for that reason left the plaintiff’s goods behind aud taken other goods instead to
The general doctrine on this subject of damages is undoubtedly correctly stated in the instructions given for the plaintiff, that damages in such cases can only be such as may fairly be supposed to enter into contemplation of the parties when a contract is made, or a duty assumed, and such as might naturally be expected to follow its violation. In other words, the damages must be such as are foreseen, or might be foreseen, as likely to result from a breach of the contract or obligation assumed or implied.
It appears strange, that a violent snow storm, or excessive cold weather, should be regarded as extraordinary events in the latitude of this road in North Missouri, during the months of December or January. I should rather suppose, that the absence of such storms during these winter months would be out of the range of ordinary experience. Of course, such storms, when of sufficient violence or duration to obstruct the passage of trains, must be allowed, as the circuit court in this case allowed, to excuse delays during the continuance of such obstructions. Whether the detention of two or three hundred hogs in uncovered pens for twenty-five days, during the month of December, might not ordinarily and reasonably be expected to result in considerable loss from exposure and smothering, is a question, I think, which might have been left to the jury. The second and third instructions for the defendant excluded all losses of this character from their consideration.
Most, if not all, of the cases in New York and in this State, where the carrier has been held responsible for damages resulting from negligence in exposing the property to unforeseen accidents, are cases in which the property has been actually received on the trains, and bills of lading given. But in Denning vs. Grand Trunk R. R. Co. (48 N. H., 455) that
Upon the whole, we think the instructions in this case were sufficiently favorable to the defendant. In truth the delay of twenty-five days in relation to the first drove of hogs, and of forty-one days in regard to the second, to say nothing of the fifteen days consumed in driving to Macon City, might be termed prima facie negligence, inexcusable unless by the total cessation of all business by the company for the public. There were at least fifteen days in the early part of December when no obstruction appears, so far as the evidence is concerned ; and deducting the ten or fifteen days in January, during which the road was blocked by snow, there were still from the 20th December to the 1st of February twenty-six days in which the defendant was engaged in transportation.
It is unnecessary to notice the question of the statute of limitations, because the record does not contain the original petition, and there is nothing to show that the amendment embraced a new cause of action.
Judgment affirmed. All the other judges concur, except Judge Tories, who is absent.