44 Ark. 439 | Ark. | 1884
Mudford filed the following complaint against the railway company, viz.:
“ The plaintiff alleges that heretofore on the eighth day of February, 1881, said defendant was a common, carrier for hire, from Texarkana, Miller County, Arkansas, to-Cairo, in the State of Illinois, and on said day received from plaintiff at said Texarkana, one box of gin-sharpening machines, for transportation to said Cairo, there to be delivered to a connecting carrier, to be forwarded to Goble Bros. ¿•'Co., at Cincinnati, Ohio.
“Said box of gin-sharpening machines was of the value of nine hundred and fifty dollars, and was so to be by defendant as a carrier for a reward there agreed upon and paid to defendant by plaintiff, carried and delivered to said connecting carrier within a reasonable time.
“Said plaintiff alleges that three days is a reasonable-time in which said machines should have been transferred from Texarkana to Cairo, Illinois, aforesaid, yet the defendant so negligently misbehaved in regard to the same in its calling as carrier for hire, that it failed and neglected to deliver the said box to a connecting carrier for transportation to Goble Bros. & Co., aforesaid, until the sixteenth day of May, 1881, to the plaintiff’s damage in the sum of one thousand dollars, wherefore plaintiff prays judgment,” etc.
Defendant filed the following answer :
“ The defendant admits that there was some delay in the transportation of said goods and the delivery of the same to a connecting carrier.
“ It denies that said goods are of the value of nine hundred dollars, or that plaintiff was damaged, as alleged, by said delay, as alleged.”
The only testimony in the case was that given by the plaintiff himself as follows :
“I am the plaintiff. I shipped the gin-sharpeners to Cincinnati by the defendant’s road. There were forty - seven (47) of them. They cost me five dollars apiece. They were defective, and were shipped to Cincinnati for repairs. Machines were worth and sold for twenty-five dollars apiece at the time. It would have cost me one dollar apiece to send them to Cincinnati and back for repairs. 1 was the patentee of the machine. I was forced to get other machines by the delay. They were shipped in Pebruary and did not arrive at Cincinnati until May sixteenth, almost three months after they were shipped. The station agent of the defendant at Texarkana notified me that they were lost, and asked me to make a bill of them. I waited four or five weeks, and then ordered other machines. The time for using the machines was in the spring, and they would not sell so readily in May, on account of the lateness of the season. When they ivere found, the machines were in the same condition as when they ivere shipped. They ivere worth five dollars when they ivere shipped, and ivere worth that when found. I suppose I made as many as twenty trips into Texarkana to ask about them. I lived five miles away. It would, with ordinary diligence, require half a day to make a trip. My time was worth two dollars and a half per day. I refused to receive the machines when found.”
Upon a trial before a jury the sum of $550 was awarded plaintiff. Defendant’s motion for a new trial, alleging misdirection of the jury, and that the verdict was contrary to the evidence and excessive in amount, was overruled.
It is obvious that the verdict is grossly in excess of auy ■damages that the plaintiff' could have possibly sustained, and that it cannot stand. If the railway company had converted these machines to its own use, or had lost them, or for any other cause had wholly failed to deliver them to the connecting carrier, the measure of damages would have been their value, $235, with interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum. How then could the plaintiff be damaged in more than double this sum, when the goods were delivered in less than three months, and in the meantime had suffered no depreciation in market value, and no intrinsic deterioration?
A common carrier is liable in damages for a negligent delay in the transportation of property. But the owner ■cannot, on account of unreasonable delay in the carriage and delivery, refuse to receive the goods and sue as for a conversion. Hutchinson on Carriers, sec. 775; 3 Sutherland on Damages, 215; Scovill v. Griffith, 12 N. Y., 509.
Consequently, when the defendant delivered the machines in good order to the connecting line at Cairo, it had performed its undertaking to carry, and was not responsible for their value as in case of a destruction or conversion. And the only claim which the plaintiff could have had against it was for the loss he had sustained by reason of the delay.
Now the complaint does not aver any special damages, that is, any damages which are not the necessary consequence of the delay, or which could not have been reasonably anticipated by the parties when the shipment was made. Hence none are recoverable except such as necessarily result from the injury complained of. 2 Gr. Ev., sec. 254; Sedgwick on Damages, 575.
For the breach of every contract the law implies that u x some damage has resulted. Yet if a party seeks to recover more than nominal damages, there must be evidence of an actual, substantial loss, unless the contract itself furnishes a guide to the measurement of damages. Adams Express Co. v. Egbert, 36 Pa. St., 360.
The answer admitted that the delay was inexcusable, but no testimony was adduced to show that the plaintiff had sustained any pecuniary loss beyond the trouble and inconvenience of making inquiries for the machines.
Reversed and remanded for a new trial.