Garrison v. Babbage Transportation Co.

94 Mo. 130
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 94 Mo. 130 (Garrison v. Babbage Transportation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garrison v. Babbage Transportation Co., 94 Mo. 130 (Mo. 1887).

Opinion

Norton, C. J.

This case is before us on plaintiff’s appeal from the action of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis in sustaining a demurrer to his petition. [134]*134The substantial averments of the petition are- as follows : That defendants are corporations, and at the dates mentioned, were common carriers of goods from the city of New Orleans to the city of St. Louis ; that, about the thirteenth of December, 1879, the firm of Minnegerode & Berl, at the city of New Orleans, delivered to the Babbage Transportation Company, 985 tons, 9 cwt., 7 lbs., of old railroad iron belonging to said firm, to be safely carried from New Orleans to St. Louis, and there to be delivered to said firm or its assigns ;■ that said Babbage Transportation Company then received and took charge and possession of ■ said iron, for the purpose aforesaid, and promised and undertook, in consideration of freight to be paid it, to so carry and deliver said iron; and therefor did then issue and deliver to said firm its bill of lading, wherein was recited the receipt by it from said firm for said purpose of 985 tons, 9 cwt., 7 lbs., of old railroad iron.

The petition then states that afterwards, about the nineteenth of December, 1879, and while said iron was in the hands of said Babbage Transportation Company, its officers, directors, and stockholders caused the defendant, the St. Louis and New Orleans Transportation Company to be organized and incorporated as its successor, with the same stockholders, directors, and officers ; that all the capital stock of the new company was gratuitously issued as full paid to the old stockholders in proportion to their respective shares in the old company, and that, immediately thereafter, about the second of January, 1880, said stockholders, officers, and directors, acting for both companies at the same time, transferred and delivered over, and caused to be transferred and delivered by the old company to the new, all the property, franchises, rights, contracts, and business of the old company; that, in consideration thereof, said new company (St. Louis & New Orleans Transportation Company) assumed all obligations, contracts, and liabilities [135]*135of tlie old company, which, liabilities were less in amount than half the value of the property so transferred ; that, besides such assumption, no consideration was given for the transfer; that, in pursuance of the transfer and assumption, the new company, about the second of January, 1880, took charge and possession of all the property, franchises, rights, contracts, and business of the Babbage Company, and without the consent or knowledge of Minnegerode & Berl, or of plaintiff, took charge and possession of the aforesaid lot of iron, till then at New Orleans in the hands of the old company, to be carried by the new company, under the aforesaid bill of lading, and to be delivered as was therein provided.

The petition then states that, after delivery of the iron to the old company, and before its arrival at St. Louis, Minnegerode & Berl exhibited the bill of lading to the plaintiff, and -that plaintiff, upon the faith of the bill, bought the consignment of iron from Minnegerode & Berl as being 9851., 9.cwt., 7 lbs., and for value took from them an assignment of the bill of lading; that, thereafter and before the arrival, plaintiff, upon the faith of the bill of lading, sold said shipment of iron as being 985 tons, 9.cwt., 7 lbs., to the Chouteau, Harrison & Valle Iron Company, at the price of $44.50 per ton, that being the value thereof at the time of its arrival at St. Louis, to be delivered on its arrival at the steamboat-landing at St. Louis, that being the place where it was delivered by the carrier ; that, about the time of the arrival, said Chouteau, Harrison & Valle Iron Company paid plaintiff $43,852.60, the purchase price in full for 985 tons, 9 cwt., 7 lbs.; that before arrival, plaintiff had notified defendants that the bill of lading had been assigned to Mm and the iron bought by him and sold by him as aforesaid; that, about the fifth of February, 1880, defendants notified plaintiff that the iron had arrived at St. Louis, and were requested by plaintiff to deliver it [136]*136to said Chouteau, Harrison & Yalle Iron Company on the landing at St. Louis ; that defendants undertook and proceeded to deliver accordingly and pretended to make full delivery, and did make partial delivery directly to the Chouteau, Harrison & Yalle Iron Company, and on the seventh of February, 1880, represented to plaintiff that they had completed the full delivery on that day ; that plaintiff then paid defendants’ freight and charges on the iron.

The petition further states that no delivery of said iron was ever made by- defendants, and that, soon after said seventh of February, the Chouteau, Harrison & Yalle Iron Company claimed of plaintiff that only 905 tons, 670 lbs., of said iron was delivered, and that there was a shortage of 80 tons, 338 lbs., of the iron called for by the bill of lading, which deficiency, at the price and value of the iron at the time and place of delivery, amounted to $3,566.85, which sum, with interest from the seventh of February, it claimed and demanded of plaintiff, and brought its suit therefor against plaintiff ; that plaintiff notified defendants of the claim and of the suit, and requested defendants to come in and defend the suit; that defendants aided plaintiff in obtaining evidence, but refused to become parties of record to the suit; that plaintiff defended the suit in good faith and to the best of his ability, and employed attorneys to conduct the defence, but that the suit resulted in a judgment against the plaintiff for $3,912.92, and costs, $247.45, of which these defendants then had notice.

The petition states further that the only matter in ■controversy in said suit was the amount of iron delivered by these defendants to Chouteau & Company, as aforesaid ; the plaintiff in that suit claiming that only 905 tons, 670 lbs., were delivered, and this plaintiff, there defendant, contending that 985 tons, 9 cwt., 7 lbs., were delivered ; that when said judgment was rendered, this plaintiff made Ms motion for a new trial, and it being [137]*137overruled, he iu ample time for appeal offered these defendants to take at their cost an appeal from the judgment or to allow these defendants the use of his name for that purpose, which offers were declined; that execution issued on said judgment, and that, under that execution, the sheriff collected of plaintiff, on the fourth of April, 1883, $4,254.92, and that besides that sum the plaintiff had been compelled to pay, in attorneys’ fees and costs of said suit, seven hundred and fifty dollars, making a total of $5,004.92. For this sum with interest, judgment is prayed.

This petition predicates the right of plaintiff to recover from defendants the amount of the judgment, costs, etc., rendered in the suit of Chouteau, Harrison & Valle Iron Company against him, for his failure to deliver eighty tons of iron according to the terms of his •contract, upon the fact that they had notice of the pendency of the suit and opportunity to defend the same. The rule governing in such cases is stated in Strong v. Ins. Co., 62 Mo., at p. 299, as follows : “ Where one is bound to protect another from a liability, he is bound by the result of a litigation to which such other is a party, provided he had notice of the litigation and an opportunity to manage and control it.” The qualification tq this rule, as recognized in the above case, as well as in the case of Gantt v. Ins. Co.,

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Bluebook (online)
94 Mo. 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrison-v-babbage-transportation-co-mo-1887.