109 P. 713 | Mont. | 1910
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was brought by plaintiffs to recover damages alleged to have been suffered through the negligence of the defendant railway company in accepting for transportation for them from Boulder, Montana, to Benson, Minnesota, two carloads of horses, the defendant at that time not having the proper means and' facilities to transport and deliver them. Omitting the allegations touching the capacity of the defendant and the ownership and condition of the horses, the complaint states:
“ (4) That on the third day of June, 1908, the plaintiffs delivered to the defendant corporation as a railway company engaged in the business of common carrier for hire, at the said town of Boulder, county of Jefferson, state of Montana, the said 67 head of horses in good order and condition for transportation by said defendant to the town of Benson,' in the state of Minnesota.
“(6) That, by use of reasonable care and diligence by said corporation, its employees, and agents, said company would not have accepted said horses for shipment on the third day of June, 1908, when said defendant corporation, its employees and agents, well knew that it did not have the proper means and facilities to ship said horses to Benson, Minnesota, in a reasonable time and in good condition, or at all.
“ (7) That on the third day of June, 1908, with full knowledge of the facts and premises, said defendant corporation, its employees and agents, so negligently and carelessly conducted and so misbehaved in the premises, in its calling as a common carrier, accepted said horses from plaintiffs for shipment, and undertook to transport said horses upon its line of railroad from Boulder, Montana, to Benson, Minnesota, and caused them to be loaded in cars at its station at Boulder, Montana, and taken as far as Clancy, Montana, and on the fifth day of June, 1908, said horses were returned by the defendant corporation to Boulder, Montana, and turned back to these plaintiffs. .
“ (8) That, after accepting said horses for shipment as aforesaid,'the defendant, by reason of its negligence, in not furnishing good and sufficient motive power and ears, and in not properly managing and running its trains, and in not furnishing proper and adequate stockyard facilities for unloading, feeding, and watering said stock, caused the said train carrying said horses to be constantly delayed, suddenly jerked and jolted, whereby one horse was killed, and several badly cut and lacerated, and that said horses were kept on said train and in said yards without -a suitable place to feed or water for a period of 47 hours, whereby they were all greatly weakened and emaciated.
“Wherefore, plaintiffs pray judgment,” etc.
The defendant’s general demurrer having been overruled, it answered, admitting its acceptance of the horses, its agreement to transport them as alleged, and that certain of them were injured, but denying all other averments. It pleaded affirmatively that its ordinary duties and obligations as a common carrier had at the time of the delivery of the horses to it, been modified by the terms of a special contract (set out in haec verba), executed at the time by it and the plaintiffs. Among-the stipulations therein was one to the effect that $75 should be taken as the value of each of the horses and as fixing the basis of the rate charged for transportation. It was also stipulated that as a condition precedent to the right to recover any damages for loss or injury to the horses, or any of them, plaintiffs should give defendant notice in writing within fifteen days after such loss or injury occurred, or after the arrival of the horses at their place of destination. It is alleged that there was a failure by plaintiffs to comply with this stipulation. It is further alleged that the defendant accepted and. endeavored to carry the horses to the agreed destination, but that, after the transportation had commenced, an unusual, extraordinary, and unprecedented flood washed away its roadbed,
1. The first contention is that the court erred in overruling the demurrer. The argument is that, if we consider paragraphs 1 to 7, and part of paragraph 9, of the complaint, we find stated a cause of action for negligence by defendant for receiving and subjecting the horses to useless transportation,, when it knew it had not facilities to enable it to make delivery • of them at their destination; but that, if we consider paragraphs 1, 2, 3, 7 and 8 and other portions of paragraph 9, we find stated a cause of action for breach of duty by defendant as a common carrier to transport the horses with reasonable .speed and due care. Hence, it is said that, since these allegations are contradictory and inconsistent, they mutually destroy ■each other, with the result that the complaint does not state a • cause of action within the rule prescribed by the statute, to-wit, that it shall contain a statement of the facts constituting the • cause of action, in ordinary and concise language. (Revised Codes, see. 6532.)
It is reasonably clear from an inspection of the complaint that the purpose of the pleader was to state a cause of action for a breach of duty by the defendant in accepting the horses for transportation and subjecting them to the damage neces•sarily incident to having them loaded on its cars and carrying them the distance it did, when it knew, or should have known, that it could not deliver -them at their destination. It is eon-•ceded by counsel for defendant that it states facts sufficient to warrant a recovery on this theory for all damage which the 'horses suffered, whether it was aggravated by negligence on the part of the defendant in transporting them to Clancy, or by its omission to provide suitable facilities for unloading and deeding them at that place. If this is so, the defendant, is in
2. Error is alleged upon the action of the court in excluding evidence of the contract pleaded in the answer, modifying and limiting the ordinary obligations of the defendant as a common carrier.' The copy offered in evidence, though substantially the same in other particulars, differed from the contract pleaded in two important particulars. The contract pleaded purports to be between the plaintiffs and defendant. The copy offered purports to be between the plaintiffs and the Montana Central Railway Company. The contract pleaded also contains a stipulation to the effect that any action brought for damages for delay in transportation, or for loss or injury to any of the horses, must be brought, if at all, within three months after such loss or injury occurred, whereas the copy offered contains no such stipulation. Upon the theory that the action was brought for the wrongful acceptance by defendant of the horses for transportation, evidence of the contract was wholly immaterial; for, since it could not carry and deliver them as it undertook to do, it was wholly immaterial whether the defendant was guilty of unnecessary delay in delivering them,»or caused loss of or injury to any of them by improper handling during the course of transportation from Boulder to Clancy, or by failing to provide proper facilities for earing for them at the latter place. The contract of carriage contemplated transportation and
3. Way, one of plaintiffs, testified that the horses had been loaded at Boulder at about 8 o’clock in the evening of June 3; that the train reached Clancy, a, distance of twenty-two miles away, about 3 o’clock nest morning; that he then ascertained that a horse in one of the ears was down and at once requested the agent to unload the car containing it, so that he could find out what the trouble was; that the agent then informed him that all would have to be unloaded, which, owing to delay on the part of the agent, was not accomplished until about 6 o’clock, or three hours later. The injured horse was afterward killed. The de
4. It is argued that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict in that it appears that if there was any damage to the horses it was only such as is ordinarily incident to the transportation of such animals resulting from being confined in the cars and carried' contrary to their natural habits and from unavoidable delay, etc., and in that the statements of the witnesses as to the extent of the damage are not sufficiently definite to justify a finding in any amount. It is also said that there is no evi-
During the month of April a flood caused by the breaking of ' a dam in the Missouri river had washed away a considerable • portion of defendant’s track and roadbed between Clancy and . Great Falls, over which it must convey all freight shipped to eastern points. This had been restored, but the roadbed was still unsettled and soft and in places unballasted. On June 3, owing - to heavy rains then and theretofore prevailing along the line of" defendant’s road, conditions in many places between Boulder ■ and Great Falls were threatening. The water in the streams was • continually rising. During the afternoon of the 3d a small por- - tion of track had been washed out and restored. During the - day application had been made to the defendant by the Northern ■ Pacific Railway Company to have the passenger trains of the • latter, carrying mail, nine in all, detoured from its main line, which had been washed out in places by high water in other • parts of the state, to the main line of the defendant over the ’ line extending from Boulder and Clancy to Helena and Great . Falls. During the afternoon of the day, all available locomo- • tives belonging to the defendant had been gathered at Helena, , to be used in detouring these trains, and freight trains due to • leave Clancy and other places to the south for Great Falls on that evening were all annulled. The transfer of the trains of " the Northern Pacific Railway Company began with the early morning of the 4th. There had also been trouble with the tele- ■ graph line. At 3 o’clock P. M. a freight train left Great Falls .. for Helena. This arrived at the latter place on the morning ;
Under the issues presented by the pleadings, the plaintiffs were required to go no further than to prove that they delivered the horses to defendant; that it failed to carry them to their destination and deliver them; and that there was loss of or injury to some of them. To acquit itself of responsibility, the defendant was required to show that at the time of its acceptance it could not by the exercise of ordinary care have known or anticipated that it could not discharge the obligation thus assumed (Jones v. Minneapolis & St. Louis R. Co., 91 Minn. 229, 103 Am. St. Rep. 507, 97 N. W. 893; Grier v. St. Louis M. B. T. Co., 108 Mo. App. 565, 84 S. W. 158), and it does not avail it that, after acceptance, its road was disabled by the intervention of the flood, however unprecedented it may have been, if by the exercise of reasonable diligence it could have anticipated that such would be the case (Nelson v. Great Northern Ry. Co., supra).
Under the facts stated, we do not think that we should conclude as a matter of law that the defendant has acquitted itself of responsibility. Of course, if the testimony of the train-dis
The evidence submitted as to the amount of damage sustained by plaintiffs, apart from the value of the horse which was killed, is not as satisfactory as it might have been. It consists entirely ■of a statement by one of the plaintiffs, to the effect that two of those returned to him were cut, that they were all bruised and ■“skinned up” and had lost flesh, so that they were not fit for sale, and that he estimated their depreciation in value at $10 ■a head. Nevertheless it furnished some tangible basis for an estimate by the jury; and, while their finding was for an amount much less than that at which the witness fixed it, we do not think the verdict should be set aside on the ground that there is no evidence to support it.
The judgment and order are affirmed.
'Affirmed.