62 Mo. App. 1 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1895
Plaintiff was the owner of a jack, which was shipped to him over defendant’s road by one Martin. The jack was crippled by the negligence of defendant, and was taken in charge by defendant’s servants and carried to a distant point on its road, where such servants killed him. The value of the jack was shown to be $1,000. Under an instruction of the court, based upon a clause of the contract alleged to limit the amount of liability for the loss of the jack, the jury returned a verdict for plaintiff for $100. Plaintiff appealed.
In the contract of shipment, which was signed by Martin, who shipped the animal to plaintiff and for plaintiff, the following clause appears: “Eight. It is understood and agreed that the stock shipped under this contract is transported at the above rates, upon the representation of the second party that its value does not exceed $100 for each horse or mule, $50 for each bull, cow, or ox, and $20 for each sheep, calf, or hog; and the first party shall not be liable for loss or damage to said stock in excess of those sums, nor for any sum in excess of their fair cash value at the time and place of shipment.”
It was under this clause that the court limited plaintiff’s recovery to $100. The point for decision is, whether the jack shipped is covered by the terms of
Again, it is the well recognized rule that, in any cases of doubt, the action of the parties when made to appear, will determine the intention of the parties and will resolve the doubt. In this ease, the parties seem not to have intended that the word “horse,” as used in the quoted clause, should mean jack; or else they would have named “a horse,” as the animal shipped, instead of a jack, as they have done. It likewise appears in this case that a horse or mule is shipped by defendant at a rate based on an arbitrary weight of two thousand pounds, whereas the shipment of this jack was based on an arbitrary weight of three thousand pounds.
Counsel has cited us to some authority in support of the position taken for defendant, which, in our view, does not militate against what we have said. One of these is the case of Railway Co. v. Brubaker, 47 Ill. 462. An ass was killed by the railway company by reason of not having erected fences along the sides of its road; the statute requiring railroad companies to erect and maintain fences “sufficient to prevent cattle, horses, sheep, and hogs from getting on such railroad.” The court first stated that the statute is not a penal statute and is, therefore, not to be strictly construed, but that it is remedial and was intended to protect domestic animals liable to stray onto railway tracks, and, there
Those cases construing public statutes, which were designed to cover certain well known public purposes, are clearly not applicable to the terms of a private contract. Those statutes were declared to be such as could receive a latitudinous construction, while the contract before us must be strictly construed, and must be looked upon in the light of the intention of the parties, as appears from the whole paper.
And it is the whole paper upon which counsel makes a point in behalf of defendant, viz: that the entire contract shows the jack was intended to be included in the specification of animals. We do not think so. The contract shows that it is one forgeneral use, to cover the shipment of any of the animals mentioned. It refers to them as “stock” and as “animals.” It refers to the animals crowding, or injuring each other; to-feeding, watering, unloading, etc. In no way do any of these expressions tend to show that the jack was intended to be included in any of the limitations specified in the section.
2. The next point was ruled against defendant in the trial court, and, we believe, correctly. It relates to the question of notice. There is a provision in the contract requiring plaintiff, in case of loss or damage, “within five days after said loss or damage has accrued, (to) give notice in writing of his claim therefor.” It will be observed that the contract does not require a notice within five days after the injury occurs, but after the
Since defendant’s servants took charge of the animal and conveyed him to a distant point and there killed him, we can not see why plaintiff should be required, under such circumstances, to give any notice. Such notices are a limitation on defendant’s common law liability. They will be upheld, because they are deemed to be reasonable. The object in requiring them is that defendant may have an opportunity of inquiring into the alleged loss, so that unjust claims may be thwarted. Brown v. Railroad, 18 Mo. App. 568; Rice v. Railroad, 63 Mo. 314. In the latter case, it is said that such provisions should be reasonably and justly construed in their application to each case as it arises. It seems to us apparent that defendant’s own conduct made a notice wholly unnecessary, and that it would be altogether unreasonable to require that it should be given. The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.