Bernard Mitchell v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., a Corporation

242 F.2d 598, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 4699
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 30, 1957
Docket15068_1
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 242 F.2d 598 (Bernard Mitchell v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., a Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bernard Mitchell v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., a Corporation, 242 F.2d 598, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 4699 (9th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

LEMMON, Circuit Judge.

An alien who lost a valuable trained dog through a railroad’s admitted carelessness is here complaining that he was cavalierly hustled out of the court below by a summary judgment.

A full trial, with ample opportunity for the cross-examination of witnesses, can no doubt clear up many, if not all, of the uncertainties, contradictions, and errors that have crept into this case.

Poor Pudsy died from lack of ventilation in a locked baggage car. His master’s lawsuit should not be permitted to die from lack of ventilation in a summary-locked court of law. Let there be light.

1. Statement of Facts

A summary of the appellant’s statement of facts, which the appellee concedes “is generally correct”, follows:

For the purpose of exhibiting a trained black and white fox terrier named “Pudsy”, the appellant and his wife, accompanied by the dog, left their home town in Ireland to come to the United States, in June, 1952. The intention was to show “the dog on television, in the movies and displaying him to the children of the United States”.

The appellant had purchased in Ireland his railroad tickets from New York to Los Angeles, but the ticket for the dog was solely to New York, since the agency in Ireland had never shipped a dog as far as California.

In New York the appellant inquired at the railroad station “all about the shipment; * * * he had never shipped [the dog] on this train before so he wanted to know”. The appellant “asked the man further if he would be able to get in beside the dog whenever he wanted to and the agent of the railroad told him that he would. In New York no slip of valuation was signed.”

The appellant purchased a dog crate, which he was told would be needed for shipping the animal.

In Chicago, the appellant asked his wife “to find out the particulars of what I have to do with this dog before I give *600 him over”. He then went to a rest room, taking the dog and the crate with him.

In the meanwhile, the appellant’s wife went to the baggage counter at the Chicago Passenger Terminal to make the inquiries.

When the appellant came back, “the man who was talking to his wife called him over by the baggage counter and asked [him] if it was his dog, and he told him, ‘Yes’.”

The appellant informed the baggage man of the Chicago and North Western Railway Company that Pudsy was a valuable trick dog, that he had brought him all the way from Ireland, and that he wanted “to see him safe”. The baggage clerk advised the appellant “that the company would be careful with the dog and that he should put him in the crate”. After putting the dog into the crate, the appellant said:

“Will I be able to get in to see him? I want to accompany this dog on the train all the way down to Los Angeles. Can I do that? I want to know who is in charge to look after the dog while he is on that train and I want to be there. I want to be there to look after that dog and to give him any attention that he wants, such as fresh air or a little water or a little something or ventilation and maybe a little walk, if the train stops. If I get that opportunity, I want to know all that. Can I do that?”

The man answered, “Yes, you will be able to do that.”

The appellant then asked whether there would be a man in charge and he was told that there would be, and that the appellant “would be able to get in to see Pudsy”.

The appellant followed the dog to the baggage car, and, after straightening the crate, which was upside down, on the baggage wagon, assisted in lifting the crate into the baggage car. He inquired whether he would be able to “get in with the dog and would there be a man in charge of the baggage car looking after the dog. He was told that there would be and in answer to his further inquiry as to whether he could get in and look after his dog * * * [h]e was informed by the agent of the [appellee Chicago and North Western] that he would be able to get in to see his dog”.

In an affidavit filed by the appellant in opposition to the motion for a summary judgment, the following statements appear:

“That the said dog, ‘Pudsy’, was not carried as ordinary baggage under [the appellant’s] ticket, but a separate charge was paid to the Chicago Northwestern System for the carriage of the said dog named ‘Pudsy’. That said dog, ‘Pudsy’, was not baggage carried on a passenger train as free baggage, checked through on a passenger fare. That a fare of Eight Dollars and Thirty-three Cents ($8.33), was paid for the transportation of the dog, * * *. That said dog * * * was delivered to the [appellees] in a strong crate fitted with a handle.”

At the time of the shipment of the dog, the appellant did not sign any valuation slip, nor did he have any information of any such slip being signed by anyone until after he arrived in Los Angeles.

In this connection, it should be pointed out that E. R. Foster, a baggage check clerk of the appellee Chicago and North Western at the Chicago Passenger Terminal of that company, made a detailed affidavit to the effect that the appellant himself stated to him that he desired to check his dog through from Chicago to Los Angeles on the “City of Los Angeles No. 103”, commencing that evening; that the appellant exhibited a passenger ticket entitling him to passage on that train; that in accordance with the provisions of Western Baggage Tariff No. 24-13, Foster asked the appellant to make out the valuation slip required and saw him do so in his own handwriting:

“I actually saw Mr. Bernard Mitchell write in the figure ‘25’ in the line under the printed statement, *601 ‘Is valued at not exceeding’, and also saw him write out his name and address in the blank spaces farther down on the valuation slip. I then punched Ms ticket to indicate that baggage had been checked on the ticket and returned the ticket to him.” [Emphasis supplied.]

The appellee grudgingly concedes that there are “certain alleged contradictions between the affidavits filed in support of the Motion for Summary Judgment and the interrogatories and affidavits submitted by the Appellant and also the depositions of Appellant and his wife”; that “There are some discrepancies in this respect”; and that Foster’s “recollection was apparently faulty and apparently it was really Mrs. Mitchell who performed this act in the presence of her husband”.

Our own independent study of the record convinces us that the above contradictions are not only “alleged” and “apparent”, but are real and, palpable. Whether they are material will be discussed hereinafter.

Continuing our narrative, we find that it was Mrs. Mitchell who signed what “purported to be a valuation slip”. She was asked by the baggage clerk to fill in her “husband’s name and destination” on the ticket. She did so. She deposed that the baggage check clerk also told her:

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Bluebook (online)
242 F.2d 598, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 4699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bernard-mitchell-v-union-pacific-railroad-co-a-corporation-ca9-1957.