Doan v. St. Louis, Keokuk & Northwestern Railway Co.

38 Mo. App. 408, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 477
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 24, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 38 Mo. App. 408 (Doan v. St. Louis, Keokuk & Northwestern 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
Doan v. St. Louis, Keokuk & Northwestern Railway Co., 38 Mo. App. 408, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 477 (Mo. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Thompson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The petition in this action states that the defendant is, and was at the times hereafter mentioned, a corporation and a common carrier of goods and chattels for hire between St. Louis and Louisiana in the state of Missouri; that, on the twenty-second day of November, 1888, at St. Louis, in consideration of the sum of six dollars and thirty cents then paid to the defendant by the . plaintiff, the defendant undertook and agreed safely to carry from St. Louis to Louisiana and there deliver to the plaintiff or his order two horses, one a bay horse, and one a golden sorrel horse, sixteen hands high, foaled May 10, 1882, and named Transient, which the plaintiff then and there delivered to the defendant, who received the same upon the agreement and for the purposes before mentioned; that the said horse Transient was valued at fifteen hundred dollars; that the defendant did not safely carry and deliver the said horse Transient pursuant to said agreement, but, on the contrary, the defendant so negligently conducted and so misbehaved in regard to the same in its calling as carrier, that it carelessly and negligently suffered and permitted said sorrel horse Transient to fall out of its car on November 22, 1888, and to be run over and killed by its train, so that said horse was wholly lost to this plaintiff, to his damage in the sum of fifteen hundred dollars.

[411]*411The answer admits that, on the twenty-second day of November, 1888, the defend ant received for shipment from the St. Lonis Union Stock-yards Company, the agent of the plaintiff, two horses from St. Louis to Louisiana, Missouri, said- to ■ be the property of the plaintiff, and that within a few minutes thereafter one of the horses was killed; but the defendant denies that its agents, servants or employes were guilty of any negligence or carelessness in killing the horse. The answer then sets up a special contract of carriage in the following language: “Defendant further answering says, that at the time it received said horse it entered into a valid agreement, which said agreement was for a valuable consideration, a copy of which is hereto attached, marked Exhibit A, and made a part of this answer, by which said agreement, said plaintiff contracted to superintend the loading of said horses, and that said horses were in fact loaded by plaintiff or his agents, and that the injuries complained of were the result of the manner of loading, and not of negligence committed by defendant after said horses were delivered to it as a common carrier. And defendant answering further says that in said agreement it was also further agreed that, if either of said horses were injured or killed, the liability of said defendant company for damages should not exceed the sum of one hundred dollars for each horse injured or killed; so that defendant says, even though it may have negligently carried said horse, and the injury and death of said horse may have been the result of such negligence, that the damage for the same is limited by special agreement to the sum of one hundred dollars.” The answer then denies that the value of the horse was fifteen hundred dollars, and concludes in the usual manner.

The reply consisted of two parts ; ■ (1) A general denial of the new matter set up in the answer. (2) A plea of non est factum as to the special contract set up in the answer.

[412]*412On the issues thus made the cause went to trial before a jury, and there was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of twelve hundred and seventy-seven dollars and ninety-two cents.

The plaintiff adduced evidence to the substantial effect that he had a very fíne blooded horse named Transient, which he desired to send to Louisiana, Missouri, to be there wintered; ‘that he sent along a common horse to keep company with Transient; that the two were taken, in the middle of the day, from his stable in St. Louis, to the St. Louis Union Stock-yards Company, to be by that company loaded upon a car of the defendant for the purpose of being so shipped; that the employe of the plaintiff, who thus took the horse to the St. Louis Union Stock-yards Company, delivered to the agent of that company seven dollars in money, six dollars and thirty cents of which ivas to pay the freight on the horse to Louisiana, and seventy cents of which was to pay for the necessary hay to be put into the car; that the servants of the stock-yards company in the presence of a switchman of the railroad company, then acting as its foreman, loaded the horses into one of the defendant’s cars, and left them untied in the car. The evidence adduced by the plaintiff also showed that the horse Transient in some manner escaped from the car, fell upon the track, and was run over and killed.

Touching the manner in which the horse was killed, the defendant gave evidence tending to show that, at the request of the servants of the stock-yards company, the acting foreman of the defendant, who had control of the making up of its trains, opened the end door or window of the car in which the horses had been placed without being tied; that this end door or window was an aperture commencing about half way up from the bottom of the car eighteen inches wide and thirty inches high; that, after the horses had been thus placed in the car and the side door securely fastened, and this aperture opened to give [413]*413them ventilation, the acting foreman beckoned to the engineer to move the car forward for the purpose of attaching it to the train; that, when the engine started forward with the car, the horse Transient became frightened and actually jumped through this small aperture upon the track, and was run over and killed.

Touching the special contract set up in the answer, we find, on reading the record, that the burden was on the defendant to show that this contract had been executed at the time when the horse -was killed. The horses had been delivered by. the plaintiff’s employe to the stock-yards company, with shipping directions, and with money sufficient to pay the freight and to purchase some hay to be placed in the car. In the view which the court took in one of the instructions which it gave, the stock-yards company was thus constituted the' agent of the plaintiff to do what was necessary in the shipment of the horses, and consequently to sign for him the necessary or usual shipping contract. The defendant’s evidence tended to show that this shipping contract was in fact signed by the clerk of the stockyards company, who also had authority to sign for the railway company, prior to the time when the horse was killed; but, as the burden was on the defendant to establish this fact, it became a question for the jury. The trial court could not treat it as an established fact, since the credibility of the testimony by which it was sought to establish it was for the jury; nor can we so treat it for the same reason.

It is perceived that the plaintiff did not draw his petition upon the mere theory of charging the defendant on its common-law liability as a common carrier, but alleged that the horse was killed through the negligence and misbehavior of the defendant. The plaintiff thus tendered the issue of negligence. The answer denies that the servants of the defendant were guilty of any negligence or carelessness in killing the horse. [414]*414The issue of negligence on the part of the defendant was thus made an issue in the case. But it was not an essential issue.

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Bluebook (online)
38 Mo. App. 408, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doan-v-st-louis-keokuk-northwestern-railway-co-moctapp-1889.