Cronan v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad

130 S.W. 437, 149 Mo. App. 384, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 918
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 7, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 130 S.W. 437 (Cronan 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
Cronan v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad, 130 S.W. 437, 149 Mo. App. 384, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 918 (Mo. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

GRAY, J.

This is a cause instituted in the Pemiscot County Circuit Court to recover damages from defendant as a common carrier, for failure to furnish plaintiff cars on which to ship poles and piling placed for shipment at James Switch, on defendant’s railroad. Defendant appealed from a judgment for the plaintiff.

Plaintiff alleges in his petition that from the month of October, 1906, to the month of March, 1907, he was engaged in the pole and piling business in said county; that during the time above mentioned, he placed at the station of James, large quantities of cypress poles and piling to be shipped over defendant’s railroad, all of which said poles and piling were placed at the usual place at said station of James, for receiving such freight [388]*388by defendant for shipment; that plaintiff tendered said poles and piling to defendant for transportation, under the terms such freight was handled by defendant, and offered to pay to defendant the regular and customary charges for the transportation of same; that he frequently requested and demanded of defendant to ship-said poles and piling, as aforesaid, and defendant promised to furnish plaintiff the cars so requested by him on which to ship his freight; that during said time he was prepared to handle, load and ship four cars of said poles and piling per day, and requested that number of cars from the defendant; that the defendant wholly disregarded its duties in the premises and failed to furnish said cars so requested by plaintiff, by reason of which failure on the part of the defendant to furnish said cars for the plaintiff, large quantities of poles and piling accumulated at said station, awaiting cars, and on account of the delay and failure of defendant to furnish said cars, said poles and piling became damaged; that during the time said poles and piling were lying at the station waiting for shipment, there was a material drop in the price of the same, and if defendant had furnished the cars as requested and as it agreed to do, plaintiff would have been able to have sold the poles for the sum of $4,684.38 more than he afterwards realized for the same.

Plaintiff further stated that during said time he was required to maintain and keep at said station, a foreman and crew of men ready to load cars when the same were furnished, and that on account of defendant’s failure to furnish the cars, he was to the additional expense of $1275 for such purposes.

The answer in addition to a general denial, affirmatively alleged that defendant furnished plaintiff at the station all the cars necessary for the transportation of its average business with him at that station, and distributed to said station its just and due proportion of cars of the kind requested and required to do business [389]*389at that station, and all that it could spare, considering the average and usual business that was to be done at that station, and if the plaintiff was deterred in shipping the logs and piling alleged in the petition, it was because of an unusual pressure of business at that station, and out of the usual order, and beyond the average and ordinary amount of business at that station, together with an unusual pressure of business and a sudden influx thereof on defendant’s railroad, a status which prevented defendant from supplying cars at all the stations along its railroad to meet the emergency, and that this sudden influx and unusual pressure of business was not anticipated and could not be foreseen in time to provide for that condition; that during the period complained of there were heavy rain falls which caused damage to defendant’s tracks and road, and on account thereof, defendant was unable, a part of the time, to supply the cars it otherwise would have furnished. The reply was a general denial.

Plaintiff offered testimony tending to prove that from the month of October until late in the spring of 1907, he continually made requests for cars, and that the defendant’s agents promised to furnish same; that he ordered four cars a day and got about two a week; that he had teams hauling poles and piling to the station, and at the time he was placing the poles and piling for shipment at the station, the prices were good and he had a sale for his entire product; that he used all the cars he could get and was prepared to load all the poles and piling he had at the station, if defendant had furnished him cars; that there remained on the ground undisposed of, poles and piling of the value of f5855.47; that he disposed of the same to the best advantage and his damages exceeded the amount of the judgment.

As there is some dispute concerning the promise and agreement of the agents of the defendant concerning the cars, we set forth the followng testimony given by the plaintiff:

[390]*390“I took the matter of furnishing cars up with the trainmaster; met him and talked with him about this matter two or three times a month, and sometimes oftener. He always promised me cars and usually would help me right at the time. I talked about this matter to Mr. Brundige, the agent, and to Mr. Turner, the trainmaster, and to Mr. Wright after he succeeded Mr. Turner. They continualíy made me the promise to furnish cars; sometimes they would say, ‘We can’t do it to-day, but in a few days we can give you all you need— keep you going.’ At all times they agreed to furnish me cars on which to ship this stuff. I talked to the agent and the trainmaster about the condition of the poles and piling, that they were being ruined. Talked to the agent about the cars nearly every morning; and when I would talk to him he would say, ‘All right, all I can I will try to help you out.’ Mr. Turner said, ‘I am going to keep you in cars, give you one every day.’ I would speak to the station agent at Hayti about cars, and he would tell me he would give me cars, promised me cars from time to time, and I would go to him and he would say, ‘I can’t do anything for you to-day, possibly not to-morrow; we haven’t anything on the yard now in sight.’ They did not tell me they were short of cars. They would tell me they could not furnish cars to-day, they didn’t have any to-day, but they would almost invariably name a day, particularly the train-master. The agent would not name the day so much as the trainmaster. I explained to Mr. Turner my condir tion there, and the expense and cost I was put to by not being kept with cars; it would cause me to hold a crew there almost continually, from the fact if I let the crew go and they placed a car or two for me, I had to get out and get a new crew, and that delayed the movement of the car as well as delayed the shipment, and was expensive to me. Turner said he realized my position and he was going to put me in the switch limit, and see if he couldn’t give me all I wanted; said he was going to [391]*391take care of me, and he ordered the agent there to take care of me; promised he would furnish me cars. I talked to Mr. Turner and Mr. Elliott, the superintendent; they promised me cars, said they would, give me cars; I talked to them in regard to whether I should take an order, if I dared to take an order.”

In behalf of the defendant, Mr. Hall, a trainmaster of the defendant, testified that there was a sudden increase in the business of the company, and that the company hesitated to permit its own cars to be loaded with freight to be shipped out over other lines and into other states; that they preferred handling such freight with foreign cars, but he did not recall any refusal of the company to load its own cars for foreign shipment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 S.W. 437, 149 Mo. App. 384, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 918, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cronan-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railroad-moctapp-1910.