188 Mo. App. 41 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1915
This is the second appeal in' this case, the judgment formerly rendered having been set aside and the cause remanded by our court for error in an instruction. [See Reading v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Co., 165 Mo. App. 123, 145 S. W. 1166.] On the case reaching the circuit court after our judgment of reversal, the petition being unchanged, defendant filed an amended answer which averred that the hogs complained of by plaintiff were not delivered to defendant and never had been in its possession until loaded upon defendant’s cars; that if’ any damage occurred to the hogs prior to that time it so occurred while they were in the possession and under the control and care of plaintiff. It is further averred that if plaintiff placed his hogs in the stock yards at Reading siding, he was using defendant’s pens solely for his own convenience in lieu of retaining his hogs on his own premises until the evening of the day they were loaded on the cars, and that in so using defendant’s stock pens plaintiff assumed the risk of putting and holding his hogs in the pen during all that
This was replied to by general denial.
Comparing these averments in the amended answer with the statement of the issues as set out when the cause was before us on the former appeal, it will be seen that the issues' at this second trial were practically as at the former trial. So, too, the facts as developed at this second trial were substantially as at the first trial. They are so fully set out in the report of the case on the former appeal, that we need not repeat them. Most of the legal propositions involved are substantially as before and are so conclusively disposed of in that opinion, that we do not think it necessary to enter into a further discussion of them.
The error for which the former judgment was reversed, an error in an instruction, was not repeated at this second trial. No error is now assigned on the instructions given except as to one in which the court told the jury that if they found for plaintiff they might award him whatever sum they found from the evidence
The other errors assigned here are to the action of the court in overruling instructions in the nature of demurrers to the evidence offered at the close of plaintiff’s case and again at the conclusion of the introduction of all the evidence in the case; to error in excluding competent, material and relevant testimony offered by defendant tending to show that plaintiff’s negligence contributed directly to cause the damage to his hogs; in excluding competent and relevant testimony offered by defendant tending to show that the hogs in controversy, at the time of the death of some of them, were in the exclusive control and possession of plaintiff and had not been delivered to and accepted by defendant; in excluding competent, material and relevant testimony showing that Reading switch was a “wayside deposit,” a “blind station,” and that there were no agents of defendant thereat; in excluding the tariffs of defendant on file with the Interstate Commerce Commission and governing the shipment mentioned in plaintiff’s petition and evidence.
The demurrers to the evidence were properly overruled; there was substantial evidence introduced by plaintiff warranting the submission of the cause to the jury. "We need not repeat it, referring to the statement of it as set out in the opinion handed down on the former appeal.
We have read the testimony excluded and find no error of the court in its action in this exclusion. It was either irrelevant or incompetent and properly excluded for those reasons. Touching the assignment, that the court erred in excluding tariffs and classifica
We are unable to understand what is meant by a “blind station,” or a “wayside deposit,” as applicable to this case. It is true that there was no agent at this switch where the cattle and hog pens were located, but it is equally true that this Reading switch was a known and used point for the reception and loading of hogs and cattle, and that it was recognized and used by defendant and by shippers for that purpose.
The facts in this case, as developed at this second trial, are not only substantially as set out by Judge Nortoni when the case was here on the former appeal but are almost identical with the facts in Lackland v. C. & A. Ry. Co., 101 Mo. 420, 74 S. W. 505. In both cases the question of whether a delivery had been made and acceptance of the hogs at the pen at this switch was held to be a question of fact for the determination of the jury. So it may be said as to the question of due care by plaintiff, of the condition of the pens and as to the other questions involved.
Touching the matter of interest, we think that under the decisions of our Supreme Court, interest is not allowable, this being an action ex delicto. [Gerst v. City of St. Louis, 185 Mo. 191, l. c. 211, 84 S. W. 34.]
But it is said by appellant that even if interest is allowable the verdict is so vague that it does not measure up to the standard required by law in that the jury did not separate the principal from the interest. The damages claimed in the petition in this case were $497 and interest; the verdict and judgment are for $577.15. That allows $80.15 for interest, which is less than the interest would be from the date of demand. The value of the dead hogs as averred in the petition, was proved without any attempt at contradiction.