125 Minn. 125 | Minn. | 1914
Defendant’s railway passes through the village of Stephen, in> Marshall county, this state. On Saturday of each week defendant, has been accustomed to accept at that place live stock in carload lots for shipment to the markets of South St. Paul and Chicago. For handling such shipments it there maintains two stock pens and a loading-chute. The shippers of stock from Stephen buy the same from farmers living within a radius of 10 or more miles of. the village. The sellers generally deliver the same to the shippers, or buyers, at Stephen in the afternoon preceding the day of shipment. The shippers at once upon receipt of the animals place them in defendant’s pens and the next day, being Saturday, they are loaded onto the cars and taken out by the stock train scheduled to arrive at noon. One of the two pens contained a rack for feeding hay, the other a manger, and in the alley between the pens with gates opening into-each was a trough designed for watering.
In the afternoon on October 4, 1912, plaintiff placed in these pens, at Stephen for shipment the next day a carload of cattle, sheep, and hogs bought of surrounding farmers and then delivered to him. He
Defendant does not here contend for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, but it insists that its responsibility as a common carrier did not arise until the stock was loaded on the cars and therefore the court’s instruction which stated that it was required to furnish facilities for properly caring for the stock for a reasonable time prior to shipment, including means to water the same, was incorrect. Plaintiff on the .other hand claims that as soon as stock is turned into yards or pens of defendant for immediate shipment its responsibility as common carrier attaches. If that be incorrect, he nevertheless contends that defendant should here be held liable for failure to provide proper facilities fqr caring for the stock including water while awaiting loading.
A common carrier is required to furnish reasonable facilities for the proper conduct of its business, such as properly lighted and heated depots for its passengers, warehouses for the safe-keeping of inanimate freight, and, where reasonably necessary, pens, yards and loading-chutes for the handling of stock shipments. It is plain that no hard or fast rule can be formulated as to the character of these, or that all should be furnished at every railway stopping place. Nor is it necessary to decide whether Stephen is entitled to have defendant there provide stock pens. Defendant has for years recognized that facilities for shipping stock in carload lots is reasonably required at that point, for it has undertaken to furnish the same. The evidence also tends to show the manner in which shippers availed themselves of these facilities in view of the practice of defendant to accept stock shipments on a day certain each week. There ought
The evidence of plaintiff tended to show that the pens were in such, condition that the animals literally wallowed in mud and filth, that the manger and watering trough were filled therewith, and that the rack was so broken that when an attempt was made to place hay therein it fell out and was immediately trampled down in the mud and lost. Animals should not be compelled to stand or lie in mud. Under our present laws the dumb brutes within man’s power are entitled to humane treatment. This requires the place of confinement to be decently clean and dry, and food and water at the proper time. Where cattle, sheep or hogs, by the carload, are received at shipping points to such an extent that pens are reasonably necessary for their reception, it would seem to he out of the question to take the animals out for feed and water either singly or collectively. Hence it should be readily conceded that proper racks, mangers and troughs for feeding and watering are necessary equipments in stock pens.
In the main the trial court’s charge correctly defined the duty of defendant, in view of the situation at Stephen, with one exception. The jury were told: “It is also the duty of such carrier to furnish and siqiply to shippers who may have assembled and placed their live stock in such yard or pens, and tendered or offered such stock to the carrier at such point for shipment, reasonably fit and suitable facilities for securing and supplying water, such as a well, cistern, hydrant, or pump, or the like, for the use of such live stock while confined in such yards or pens, awaiting loading and shipment, during a reasonable time” prior thereto. This placed a more onerous burden on defendant than the evidence and the law warranted.
Nor do we concur in the contention of plaintiff that the responsibility of a common carrier attaches as such the moment stock is placed in its stock pens for shipment without regard to attending ■circumstances. The conduct of both shipper and carrier may be such that the liability as carrier attaches with the yarding of the .shipment. But there is no evidence warranting such a conclusion in the instant case. The control and management of the animals .appears to have been entirely with plaintiff until loading began. He ■could have withheld any or all from shipment. The recovery must •therefore depend, so far as the evidence in this record tends to show,
We have been cited to no authority supporting, in the broadest sense, the contentions of either party. Nor have we found any similar case to the one here presented upon the facts. The following may have some bearing on the propositions involved: Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Moore, (Tex. Civ. App.) 119 S. W. 697; Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co. v. Byrne, 100 Fed. 359, 40 C. C. A. 402; Covington Stock Yards Co. v. Keith, 139 U. S. 128, 11 Sup. Ct. 469, 35 L. ed. 73; Chicago, B. & Q. Ry. Co. v. Powers, 73 Neb. 816, 103 N. W. 678; 1 Hutchinson, Carriers (3d Ed.) § 114.
For the error alluded to in the charge the order, in so far as it denies a new trial, is reversed.