Dietz v. Southern Pacific Railway Co.

28 S.W.2d 395, 225 Mo. App. 39, 1930 Mo. App. LEXIS 167
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 6, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 28 S.W.2d 395 (Dietz v. Southern Pacific Railway Co.) 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
Dietz v. Southern Pacific Railway Co., 28 S.W.2d 395, 225 Mo. App. 39, 1930 Mo. App. LEXIS 167 (Mo. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinions

This is an action by plaintiff to recover the value of certain baggage claimed to have been lost in the course of transportation from San Francisco, California, to St. Louis, Missouri. The defendants named were Southern Pacific Railway Company, the initial carrier; Union Pacific Railway Company, the connecting or intermediate carrier; and Wabash Railway Company, the terminal or delivering carrier. At the close of plaintiff's case, demurrers interposed by defendants Union Pacific Railway Company and Wabash Railway Company were sustained, following which plaintiff took an involuntary nonsuit as to such defendants. The trial proceeded *Page 44 against defendant Southern Pacific Railway Company alone, and resulted in a verdict of the jury for such company. Timely motions to set aside the involuntary nonsuit and for a new trial were filed by plaintiff, and overruled by the court, and in due course he has brought the case here on appeal.

The petition set up that on September 2, 1920, plaintiff checked the baggage in question in the city of San Francisco, for delivery to him in the city of St. Louis; that at the time of checking the same, he paid to the agent of the Southern Pacific Railway Company the required amount of excess charges, by reason whereof such company undertook to transport his baggage, and deliver the same to him at St. Louis, or upon failure to make delivery, to be liable to him for the full value thereof; that the baggage was not delivered to him by defendants or either of them; and that by reason of the carelessness and negligence of the defendants in failing to make delivery, he had been damaged in the sum of $509.

The defendants filed separate answers, each in the form of a general denial.

Briefly, plaintiff's evidence disclosed that he went to the office of the initial carrier in San Francisco, purchased a through ticket to St. Louis, and after paying the required charges for excess baggage, checked his three articles of baggage, consisting of a black hatbox, a straw-matting suit case, and a chocolate-colored leather suit case. His route was over the Southern Pacific Railway Company to Ogden, Utah; from that point to Kansas City, Missouri, over the Union Pacific Railway Company; and from Kansas City to St. Louis, over the Wabash Railway Company.

After arriving in St. Louis, plaintiff went to the Union Station to get his baggage, and was given the black hatbox and the straw-matting suit case, but instead of the chocolate-colored leather suit case, he was offered a small tan-colored leather suit case, which had the words, "San Francisco," stamped upon its end, and which, when opened, was found to contain a bundle of blankets tied with rope, and a number of horseshoes.

The evidence for defendant Southern Pacific Railway Company was that plaintiff had left three pieces of luggage, consisting, as its baggageman recalled, of a large black suit case, a smaller black one, and a tan suit case, which might have been a straw-matting case; that baggage checks were immediately affixed to each of the three pieces; that there was no other baggage on the counter at the time plaintiff's baggage was being checked; that there was no chance whatever that the checks which had been prepared for plaintiff's baggage could have been placed upon other pieces at the time; and that the check introduced in evidence was the one that had been *Page 45 placed upon the tan or brown suit case which plaintiff had deposited with the baggageman.

Plaintiff offered testimony that the value of the articles contained in the suit case which was never delivered was $409.05, and he admitted that the prayer in his petition for $509 was erroneous.

During the course of the cross-examination of plaintiff by counsel for defendant Southern Pacific Railway Company, inquiry was made at great length concerning thirty-nine separate claims which plaintiff had had over a period of twenty years, some of them being personal injury claims against accident insurance companies with whom plaintiff carried policies, others being personal injury claims against carriers, and others being property claims of a similar nature to the one in suit. While certain of the claims were either refused or abandoned, many of them were concededly paid, and in one instance at least the claim went to final judgment, from which the defendant did not appeal.

In justification of the large number of claims which he had made, plaintiff testified that he had always done a great deal of traveling, both at home and abroad, in consequence of which there had been a correspondingly large number of occasions when it had been his misfortune to sustain personal injury or property loss.

Beginning with the opening statement of counsel to the jury, when reference to the number of previous claims was first made, plaintiff's counsel objected upon the ground that such evidence was irrelevant, improper, and prejudicial; a later timely objection was made that such cross-examination did not bear upon the question of plaintiff's credibility; and finally, at the conclusion of the inquiry, when plaintiff was asked whether it was not true that insurance companies no longer wrote accident policies for him, a motion was made to discharge the jury, upon the theory that merely sustaining an objection to the question was insufficient to cure the error which had been injected into the case.

Plaintiff now argues that the admission, over his objection, of all such evidence, which related wholly to collateral matters, and grew out of other and independent transactions, some of which had occurred twenty years before the trial, and none of which were shown to have been false or fraudulent in any respect or character, was harmful and prejudicial to the point that the judgment in favor of defendant Southern Pacific Railway Company should not stand.

While there is no doubt that as a general rule the cross-examination of a witness, subject to the sound discretion of the court, will be permitted to take a wide range, yet the authorities do place certain definite limitations upon the right of cross-examination in regard to prior claims and proceedings in former trials. *Page 46

As illustrative of this, the decision of the Supreme Court in Craig v. United Railways Co. (Mo. Sup.), 185 S.W. 205, is of importance, where it had before it a case wherein the right of the street railway company to cross-examine the plaintiff about a former trial was involved. The plaintiff had been in two separate accidents, and in each instance had filed a suit for damages for the personal injuries which she had received. She recovered a judgment in the first suit, which was affirmed on appeal; and then in the second suit she pleaded much the same injuries as she had alleged in her first petition. Defendant, over the plaintiff's objection, read her first petition in evidence in the second trial, and upon her appeal from a verdict and judgment for the defendant, she urged this matter as error. Speaking of the limits to which it was permissible for the defendant to go in cross-examining the plaintiff about her former suit, the Supreme Court said:

"Defendant had the right to show the extent of the injuries suffered by plaintiff for which she brought her first suit. For that purpose it was proper for it to read in evidence so much of her petition in that cause as referred to her injuries sued for therein. But it did not have the right to read any other portionof such petition in evidence, nor to cross-examine plaintiff withreference to the facts in that suit, except so far as they showedplaintiff's injuries sued for in that case.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.W.2d 395, 225 Mo. App. 39, 1930 Mo. App. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dietz-v-southern-pacific-railway-co-moctapp-1930.