Lead Opinion
This is the second appeal in this case. The first is reported in 264 S.W. 470, to which reference is made for a full statement of facts. At the former hearing in this court the case was remanded for a new *Page 298 trial. Upon the second trial, a reply was filed alleging that plaintiff was induced to sign the "Drovers' Contract" relied upon as a defense, by the fraud of the agent of defendant in representing to plaintiff that said contract was a bill of lading and plaintiff was deceived thereby because he could not read but could only sign his name and that he did not know the contents of the Drovers Contract which he had signed. The issue of fraud was submitted to the jury and it is now contended that the evidence did not sustain the charge and the instructions submitting that issue should not have been given. There is no evidence that the agent of defendant knew that plaintiff could not read or did not know the contents of the contract he signed. All the plaintiff testified to in relation to it was to the effect that the agent said he better sign the bill of lading and that he signed it and did not know what it contained at the time and if he had known its provisions he would have complied with it. He did not say he was induced to sign by the representation of the agent that it was a bill of lading or that he would not have signed if he had known what was in it or had known that it was a Caretakers contract and not a bill of lading. All that can be gathered from plaintiff's testimony is that the only misrepresentation made by the agent was that he spoke of the paper he signed as a bill of lading instead of a Caretakers Contract. Merely giving a paper a wrong name with nothing further appearing does not constitute fraud. The instruction submitting the question of fraud to the jury should not have been given.
The plaintiff and two others shipped some cattle from Tuckerman, Arkansas, to Dudley, Missouri, and plaintiff was to accompany them as a caretaker. He signed a caretakers contract. The defendant contends that its demurrer to plaintiff's testimony should have been sustained because the notice of injury provided by the Drovers Contract was not given. This contract, signed by plaintiff, provided: "I hereby agree that in case of an accident . . . in which I shall receive any personal injury I will notify Issuing Carrier in writing through my home agent or other nearest or most convenient local agent of said Carrier or the General Superintendent of said Carrier of such injury and of the time, place, circumstances and extent thereof, and in default of my so doing within thirty days after the happening of such injury I hereby agree to waive any and all causes and right of action for or on account thereof, and I further agree that I shall not have any cause or right of action nor maintain any action for any injury except that for which I shall, in said notice as aforesaid, advise the said Carrier." A formal notice complying in terms with this provision of the Drovers Contract was not given. All the authorities agree that the purpose of such a notice is to give the carrier an opportunity to investigate the facts while they can be easily obtained. The defendant, however, did not wait for receipt *Page 299 of the notice but immediately proceeded to investigate. The plaintiff was injured by falling into a ditch while going from the depot to the caboose of the train for the purpose of boarding the train at Tuckerman, Arkansas, soon after having loaded the cattle. The fact of his injury was known immediately thereafter to the agent of defendant. The injury occurred in the nighttime at about 2 o'clock A.M. The plaintiff, after the injury, obtained lodging for the night and intended to take passage for his home on a passenger train the next morning. This train was held at the station until plaintiff could be examined by a physician selected by defendant. Plaintiff purchased a ticket and, after his examination by the physician, boarded this passenger train and went to Poplar Bluff, Missouri, where he changed trains to go the remainder of the way home. At Poplar Bluff, he was met by the claim agent of defendant who inquired about his injury and boarded the next train with plaintiff and rode with him to his destination. On the train this claim agent talked over with plaintiff the facts of his injury fully and tried to settle with him. Plaintiff refused to settle at that time because he did not know the full extent of his injuries. When they separated, the claim agent of defendant told plaintiff to write him when he, plaintiff, got ready to settle. Nothing was said about the notice in writing provided for in the contract. Within thirty days from the injury, plaintiff wrote the claim agent that he was ready to settle for his injury. He received no reply and in a few days wrote another letter, still within thirty days from the date of the injury, calling attention to the former letter and stating that if settlement was not made, he would place the matter in the hands of an attorney. No more was heard from the claim agent and this suit was filed.
The contention of plaintiff is that a formal notice complying with all the requirements of the notice set out in the Drovers Contract was waived by defendant by its conduct after the injury received by plaintiff. The contention of defendant is that since this was an interstate shipment and it having been shown in the last trial that the tariff sheet of defendant with copy of bill of lading issued by it was on file with the Interstate Commerce Commission, and that the bill of lading had this Drovers Contract printed on the back thereof, that the railroad company could not waive any of its provisions. A great many cases have arisen under the Interstate Commerce Law of Congress and the action of the Interstate Commerce Commission proceeding under that law, and courts have uniformly held that railroads, while acting under that law or under rules or regulations legally prescribed by the Interstate Commerce Commission under the law, cannot discriminate or grant preference between shippers. It is under that holding of the courts that defendant now contends that it cannot waive the giving of the written notice provided in the Drovers *Page 300 Contract. We do not agree that waiver under the facts in this case was forbidden, as we shall see later. The writer will observe that it occurs to him that if nothing can be waived by a railroad company it should also be held that nothing can be waived by the shipper, yet, in this Drovers Contract signed by the plaintiff in this case, he expressly agrees to waive damages for personal injury if he fails to give the notice therein provided. Further, if the non-waiver rule is to be applied to the facts in this case, then the rule itself places in the hands of a railroad company a very efficient method of granting preference by fraudulent means. If we assume, and in a legal view we must assume, that both plaintiff and the claim agent of defendant knew the law and knew the contents of the Drovers Contract requiring a certain form of notice in writing to be given within thirty days after the injury was received; then, with that knowledge, the claim agent talks over with plaintiff the facts connected with the injury and attempts then and there to settle with him, nothing being said about the notice. The plaintiff does not settle because he does not then know the extent of his injuries. He is, however, led to believe by the conduct of the claim agent that the defendant is admitting liability and the only question left to be determined is the amount of damages to be paid to plaintiff. Under such a state of facts, no man, even with the contract before him, would ever think that it would still be necessary to give the formal notice of the injury required by the Drovers Contract in order to fix a liability that the railroad company, by its claim agent, had already admitted existed. If an admission of liability by the claim agent of the railroad company whose duty it was to adjust and settle claims for personal injuries does not dispense with the necessity for formal written notice of the fact of injury and how it came about, then the claim agent by admitting liability and failing to settle with one claimant can induce him to neglect to give the required notice and then remain quiet until the time expired and thereby defeat his claim, and could, at the same time call the attention of another claimant whom he wished to favor to the fact that the written notice must be given and when given, pay him in full while the other claim is lost. When a non-waiver rule is used as a shield for a fraud or deceit which causes a party to lose his rights secured to him by the law, it should not be enforced. We are not basing our conclusion in this case on the question we have just discussed but merely mention it to say that in our judgment the non-waiver rule should not apply when to enforce it will result in at least a moral, if not a legal, fraud upon the party against whom it is enforced. [See Southern Pac. Co. v. Stewart, 233 F. 956.]
The chief reliance of defendant to support its contention that a demurrer to plaintiff's evidence should have been sustained because there was no showing that the written notice was given, is the case of *Page 301
Gooch v. Oregon Short Line R.R. Co.,
For the error noted in submitting to the jury the question of fraud, the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.Bradley, and Bailey, JJ., concur.
Addendum
Motion for rehearing will be overruled.
