Ficklin v. Wabash Railroad

92 S.W. 347, 115 Mo. App. 633, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 12
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 8, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 92 S.W. 347 (Ficklin v. Wabash 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
Ficklin v. Wabash Railroad, 92 S.W. 347, 115 Mo. App. 633, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 12 (Mo. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

— Action for damages against a common carrier alleged to have been sustained in consequence of. negligence in providing cars for the shipment of live stock and in the transportation of the same to market. Plaintiffs recovered judgment in the sum of $25, and defendant appealed. Allegations in the petition pertinent to the questions submitted to us for determination are as follows:

“Plaintiffs further state that on the 20th day of Feb[636]*636ruary, 1904, they were the owners of 488 head of sheep which they desired to ship from said station at Stan-berry to the market at South St. Joseph, Missouri, on the 22nd day of February, 1904, 'and asked that cars be furnished for such shipment; that defendant failed and refused to furnish said cars on said last-named date, but notified plaintiffs on the 29th day of February, 1904, that sufficient cars for the shipment of said sheep were at Stanberry and that defendant was ready to receive, said sheep for transportation. That plaintiffs immediately drove said sheep to Stanberry and delivered the same to defendant at its stock pens at its station at said city of Stanberry, and defendant received and accepted said sheep at said station and placed the same in its said stock pens and received and accepted said sheep for transportation from said city of Stanberry to the stock yards at the city of South St. Joseph, Missouri; but the defendant failed and refused to furnish cars as it was its duty to do, for the shipment of all of said sheep, but furnished cars only for 417 head thereof, leaving- 71 head of said sheep in its pens at Stanberry; which said 71 head of sheep defendant negligently and carelessly refused to transport to said market at South St. Joseph, Missouri, until the 2nd day of March, 1904, and said defendant negligently and carelessly refused to furnish any cars for the transportation of the same until said last-named date; and said 71 head of sheep did not arrive on said market until the 3rd day of March, 1904, owing to the carelessness and neglect of duty of defendant as aforesaid; that 71 head of sheep if transported with reasonable diligence by defendant would have arrived on said market on the first day of March, 1904, and the 3rd day of March, 1904, the market price of said sheep was greatly reduced and said sheep were sold for a much less amount than if they had reached said market on March 1,1904; that said sheep were greatly shrunken in weight more than they would have been if promptly transpon[637]*637ted; that the appearance of said sheep was affected so as to greatly reduce their market value; that on account of the failure of defendant to ship all of said sheep together, on February 29, 1904, plaintiffs were compelled to pay extra commission charges for the sale of said sheep, and were compelled to pay extra railroad fare to look after said sheep; that on account of carlessness and negligence of defendant and unnecessary, violence in handling its trains carrying said sheep, four of the same were lost and not delivered to plaintiffs nor their agents, and five of said sheep were killed in transportation by rough handling and lack of care as aforesaid.”

In the answer, defendant pleaded the shipping contracts signed by plaintiffs, in which are found a number of stipulations that, if enforcible, limit the liability of defendant in various respects. These restrictive provisions are all based upon the consideration of a “reduced rate” and cannot be sustained for the reason that the evidence, including that offered by defendant, shows an entire failure of the consideration stated. It appears that defendant has but one rate for the carriage of sheep from Stanberry to St. Joseph, which is charged in all cases regardless of the value and number of the animals offered for shipment. It must be presumed that plaintiffs in giving their assent to the special agreements embodied in the contract were moved thereto by the representation and understanding that they were receiving a reduced rate for the rights they released and the duties they assumed. If, in fact, the so-called consideration was a fiction, the benefits and Immunities to defendant founded upon it rest upon nothing and fall for lack of support. Fountain v. Railroad, 114 Mo. App. 676; Summers v. Railroad, 114 Mo. App. 452, 79 S. W. 481; Ward v. Railway, 158 Mo. 226. The shipping contracts will he treated as ordnary bills of lading and defendant held thereunder to the common-law duties and liabilities imposed upon common carriers.

[638]*638Plaintiffs’ evidence shows that four hundred and ninety-two head of sheep were brought from their farm to the station instead of four hundred and eight-eight head, as alleged in .the petition. Before loading, plaintiffs discovered that, instead of providing the two double-decked cars thirty-six feet-in length as ordered, defendant had for their use four single-decked cars, each thirty-four feet long. Plaintiffs protested to defendant’s agent that the cars were insufficient for the transportation of the number of sheep they had, but finally concluded they could be made to answer the purpose and loaded all of the animals into them. Five of the sheep were killed in the process, presumably by suffocation, and plaintiffs removed seventy-five head from the cars and put them back in defendant’s shipping pens and ordered another car for their transportation. The four hundred and seventeen head remaining in the cars were billed out and carried by defendant and its connecting lines to their destination. This number included the five dead. Of the seventy-five returned to the pens, four escaped therefrom and were lost. The remaining seventy-one were held two days waiting a car and were then shipped and carried to market where they were sold. Plaintiffs in the petition claimed damages for the killing of the five; the loss of' the four; loss in weight-; and value of the detained sheep and increased expense incurred from defendant’s failure to furnish the two double-decked cars.

In the instructions given, plaintiffs were not permitted to recover for the dead sheep and, in the event of a retrial of the case, no recovery for them should be allowed in any state of the pleadings under the facts disclosed. Conceding the negligence of defendant in failing to furnish the kind of cars ordered, it was the negligence of plaintiffs in knowingly overloading the cars that was the proximate cause of the killing. Plaintiffs are experiencéd shippers and knew before they began loading that the ears were too small for the whole shipment. They knowingly and voluntarily took the risk of overcrowd[639]*639ing and cannot complain if the result, reasonably to have been anticipated, followed tbeir own want of due care.

Tbe court did instruct tbe jury to find for plaintiffs for the four lost sbeep if they “were lost in transportation by defendant and not delivered to tbe consignee.” This was reversible error. Tbe cause of action pleaded is founded in negligence and with respect to tbe lost sheep it is averred “that on account of tbe carelessness and negligence of defendant and unnecessary violence in handling its trains carrying said sbeep, four of them were lost,” etc. Tbe specific act of negligence charged is “violence in the handling of its trains,” from which but one inference is admissible, that tbe sbeep were lost from tbe.train while in transit as the result of careless operation. There is no evidence to sustain tbe charge. Plaintiffs admit tbe sbeep were lost from tbe pens. Tbe instruction submitted an issue totally at variance with tbe conceded facts.

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Bluebook (online)
92 S.W. 347, 115 Mo. App. 633, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ficklin-v-wabash-railroad-moctapp-1906.