121 Ark. 284 | Ark. | 1915
(after stating the facts). It is contended for reversal that the court erred in the giving and refusing of said instructions and in the admission of incompetent testimony.
Nor does the undisputed testimony show that it was not the intention to make the sale conditioned on the delivery of the berries in Oklahoma City at 5 A. M. the next morning, which would have been the case after their delivery to the express company at 3:30 P. M. on May 22, but for the failure of said company ¡to .make the transfer to the first connecting train >at Wister.
If the sale was not so conditioned, the title passed to the consignee upon delivery of the berries to the carrier in time for arrival at destination the .next morning and the shipper would have had no right to maintain the suit for damages and under the state of the testimony the appellant, it being a question for the jury, would have had the right to its said instructions numbered 5 and 10 but for the order of the consignee authorizing the carrier to adjust and settle the claim for damages with the shipper.
It being doulbtful whether the sale was complete upon delivery to the consignee or conditioned upon the .arrival of the shipment at the destination the next morning, the said order of the consignee authorizing the adjustment and settlement of the claim with the consignor and releasing the carrier from any claim of liability, reduced the matter to a certainty, and ¡since said order and release barred the consignee from any claim for damages to the shipment, it authorized the recovery or bringing of suit therefor by the consign or. .
It is questionable whether the sale was complete upon delivery of the berries to the carrier or delivery at destination, the consignor or the consignee only having the right to sue for damages according as the jury might find the fact to be and the consignee having released the carrier from the liability in the consignor ’s favor and authorized the settlement with him, no error was committed in refusing said requested instructions 5 and 10 and in giving instruction numbered 1.
The jury however, found in accordance with the fact fixing the damages ¡at the sale price without regard to the erroneous instruction and no prejudice could have resulted from it.
We find no prejudicial error in the record and the judgment is affirmed.