134 Mo. App. 681 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
Action by a skipper against a common carrier to recover the value of two cars of oats skipped from Kansas City to Birmingkam, Alabama, and not delivered at destination to the skipper who was also the consignee. The petition is in two counts, each car being treated as the subject of a separate cause of action. Verdict and judgment were for plaintiffs on each count for the full amount demanded, and the cause is here on the appeal of defendant. Plaintiffs, who
There is ho controversy over the facts that the commission company realized the full market value of the property in its damaged condition and that the charges for commission and freight Avere reasonable. In the instructions given at the request of plaintiff, the court expressed the view that if the oats ivere in a sound condition when they left Kansas City, as plaintiffs’ evidence tended to show, and were damaged by reason of being negligently carried by defendant in leaky cars, plaintiffs were entitled to recover, and on the measure of damages, told the jury to assess the damages, if they found for plaintiffs, at the reasonable cash market value of the oats at Birmingham on the respective dates of the arrival of the cars at that place. This was error. There' was no evidence to show what the oats were worth on those dates, nor was it possible for plaintiffs to produce any proof of that fact, since it Avas impossible for anyone to knoAV what the condition of the oats was on the dates of their arrival. Indeed, there is no proof that the property Avas damaged at all while en route. Granting the contention of plaintiffs .and other witnesses that the grain left Kansas City in sound and merchantable condition, the fact that after it had remained in sealed cars from three weeks to a month in the yards at Birmingham it was found to be damaged by the processes of fermentation, is no proof that it Avas in that condition when it arrived and certainly is no proof of the extent of the damage, if any, sustained at that time.
In directing that the damages be assessed at the value of the property on the dates mentioned, the court necessarily turned the jury into the field of speculation and gave them rein to guess at the condition of the
In discussing this identical subject, we said in Freeman v. Railway, 118 Mo. App. l. c. 534: “As consignees, it was their duty to be on hand ready to receive it. [Hutchinson on Carriers, sec. 386.] So far as the relation between plaintiffs and defendant is concerned, the vendees at New Iberia may properly be treated as agents designated by plaintiffs to receive the earn. They permitted it to remain sealed in the car for two weeks without any inspection. How can any reasonable person say how much damage the corn received from the injurious processes that must have been in operation during that period? If this fact cannot be known, neither can any one tell the extent of the damages that had accrued when the car reached its destination.”
As it is conceded by plaintiffs’ witnesses, and the fact is obvious, that the damaging processes were at work while the cars were in the yards, and as it is impossible to know the extent of the damage wrought during
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.