Blankenship v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad

142 S.W. 471, 160 Mo. App. 631, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 14
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 8, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 142 S.W. 471 (Blankenship v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blankenship v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad, 142 S.W. 471, 160 Mo. App. 631, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 14 (Mo. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

GRAY, J. —

This suit was instituted to recover the value of two horses that were killed while being shipped from St. Louis to Matthews, in this state. The horses were delivered to the company at Broadway station, St. Louis, and for their shipment an ordinary box car was used, and in order to allow proper ventilation, one of the doors was left open and three strips of flooring were nailed across the open space to- prevent the horses from falling out of the car. The plaintiff offered testimony tending to prove that he called for a grain door, but was told by the agents of the defendant that none could be had, and that the flooring would be sufficient. Some place between St. Louis and Matthews two of the horses fell out of the car and defendant admits their loss. In fact the sole contention of the defendant was, in the trial court, and now is, that by a special contract, entered into at the time of the ship- ■ ment, defendant’s liability is limited to $100' per horse. The trial court took this view and instructed the jury that plaintiff was only entitled to recover.$100 per head for his horses, and a verdict was returned in accordance with the instruction, and judgment entered thereon, and plaintiff appealed to this court.

The defendant offered in testimony the special contract relied on, and containing the following stipulations :

“THIS AGREEMENT, made in duplicate at St. Louis, Bdy. station this 23rd day of December, 1909, between the St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad Company, herein called the ‘ Company, ’ and E. H. Blankenship, herein called the ‘Shipper;’ Witnesseth, that [636]*636in consideration of the reduced rate upon which this shipment is transported, 'and of the mutual promises herein1 set forth of the parties hereto, it is agreed between said parties as follows:

“1. The Company shall transport the following cars of live stock, and the parties in charge thereof, viz., one car, said to contain nine head of horses consigned to E'. H. Blankenship, consignee, from St. Louis station to Matthews, Mo., station on the line of this Company; and if the destination is beyond the line of this Company, shall deliver the same at said station to a carrier whose line may form a part of the route to Matthews, Mo., the place of destination; at the reduced rate of 18c per cwt., or — which is less than the rate for shipments at carrier’s risk.....

“12. The valuations of the live stock which are agreed upon are the actual cash values of the same at the time and place of shipment, but in no case, however, to exceed one hundred dollars ($100') for each horse or pony, gelding, mare or stallion, mule or jack; fifty dollars ($50) for each ox, bull or steer; thirty dollars ($30') for each cow; ten dollars ($10') for each calf or hog; three dollars ($3) for each sheep or. g-oat. In case of death, loss or total injury of the live stock from any cause for which the Company may be liable, payment shall be made therefor at said valuations, and in case of partial injury the amount of damages paid shall not exceed the proportions said partial injury shall bear to death, loss or total injury.”

The plaintiff offered testimony that when he applied for the car, and at the time the shipment was made, the agent handed him the contract to sign and stated that it was the kind of a contract that all skippers signed, and the kind he would have to have if he shipped his horses over the road.

In behalf of the defendant, a Mr. Bather, tariff clerk of the defendant company, testified that the distance from St. Louis to Matthews was 174 miles, and [637]*637the regular tariff rate eighteen cents per hundred pounds, and that the minimum weight on a thirty-six foot car was 23,200' pounds; that this rate, was based on horses of the valuation of $100; that where the declared valuation exceeded the $100, an. additional freight of ten per cent per hundred pounds or per car for each 100 per cent or fractional part thereof of additional value, was added.

The agent who executed the contract in behalf of the defendant, testified that to the best of his knowledge he had no.conversation at all with the plaintiff; that he tendered him the contract and he signed it; that he never had any one question one of the contracts and “that everybody signed it in a jiffy. I have never had any kick on the contract yet at this time; it has been signed right on the jump. ’ ’

The defendant .admits that the .rate charged is in excess of the rates allowed under the laws of this state for such shipments, but claims that in as much as the Acts of 1905 and .1907 repeal all existing statutes of this state regulating freight charges, and that an injunction has issued restraining the authorities of this state from enforcing the rate provisions fixed in the acts above mentioned, there is no law in Missouri fixing freight rates, and therefore, the defendant is allowed to fix reasonable rates.

An injunction has been issued, as above stated, and the court has held that said acts are unconstitutional and invalid, [St. Louis & San Francisco R. R. Co. v. Hadley, 168 Fed. 317.] Under the law as it existed prior to 1905, the defendant could not have charged more for shipping the carload of horses than it did charge, and therefore, there was no reduction in charges if that statute is in force. But the Act of 1905 expressly repealed the prior statute, and it is no longer the law, even though the subsequent acts' are held unconstitutional. [State ex rel .v. Wardell, 153 Mo. 319, 54 S. W. 574.]

[638]*638The plaintiff’s reply alleged that the contract was void,, as he was given no opportunity to ship his horses under a higher rate of freight at carrier’s risk, but was only given the option of shipping under said contract or not at all; that he made inquiry about the contract and was told that it w'as the regular contract which the company required all shippers to sign, and that he would have to sign the same if he shipped Ms horses over the defendant’s road.

In McElvain v. this defendant, 131 S. W. 736, Judge Nixon, in speaking’ for this court construing a similar contract, said: “If a carrier did not allow the shipper the privilege of choosing between a restricted and a full liability, or if the pretended agreed valuation is not such in fact, but simply a cloak for a limitation of liability to a fixed sum which is less than the real value, the contract will not be valid as against a loss due to negligence.

The Supreme Court in Paddock v. The Railroad, 155 Mo. 524, 56 S. W. 453, said: “Upon the whole case if it appears that plaintiff was given his option between signing a regular contract at the legal rate or a special contract at a reduced rate and elected to take: the special contract, he will be bound thereby. But on the other hand, if he was given only an option between contract at an illegal rate and a special contract at a reduced rate, and took the special contract, he will not be bound thereby because it is not based on a valuable or legal consideration. For the sliipper is entitled to know what the legal rate is, and to take his choice between shipping at that price with the responsibility attaching thereto, or to pay the reduced rate and to take the risk specified in such special contract. ’ ’

A contract presented to a shipper after Ms cattle were loaded, and which he was required to sign or unload his cattle, was held void in Railroad Co. v. Reynolds, 17 Kans. 251. In Railroad Co. v. Dill, 48 Kans. 210, 29 Pac. 149, the shipper’s horses were in the car [639]

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Bluebook (online)
142 S.W. 471, 160 Mo. App. 631, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blankenship-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railroad-moctapp-1912.