Keyes-Marshall Bros. Livery Co. v. St. Louis & Hannibal Railroad

87 S.W. 553, 113 Mo. App. 144, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 204
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 16, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 87 S.W. 553 (Keyes-Marshall Bros. Livery Co. v. St. Louis & Hannibal 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
Keyes-Marshall Bros. Livery Co. v. St. Louis & Hannibal Railroad, 87 S.W. 553, 113 Mo. App. 144, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 204 (Mo. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

— Both these parties are incorporated companies. The action is for the value of two horses alleged to have been injured in transportation over the defendant’s railway by the negligence of the defendant’s servants in operating a train on which the horses were hauled. The case was here on a former appeal and some of the facts are given in the opinion then delivered. [105 Mo. App. 556.] There was a reversal of the first judgment on a technical point. Before the second trial, new issues were framed on which evidence was received and [148]*148rulings made at that trial. In truth the contest was shifted to entirely different grounds by an amended answer. Mr. Marshall, one of plaintiff’s officers, purchased a pair of horses in Pike county from Hawkins Bros., a livery firm of Bowling Green, paying $600 for them. The testimony goes to show the horses were in perfect condition when purchased by the plaintiff and also when received by the defendant company at Bowling Green for transportation to St. Louis. They were loaded on a Sunday afternoon and the train had not' proceeded far when it was derailed at Gilmore, a station on the Wabash railroad. The car in which the horses . were was sawed open, the horses, taken out and kept a few days by a man at Gilmore and then shipped to St. Louis. There were some scratches on them when taken out of the car, but no other visible injuries. When they got to St. Louis they were wild and nervous and the heart of one of them could be heard to beat two feet away. This horse died soon afterwards from congestive chills, the veterinarian testified. The other horse proving to be unsafe for city use, was shipped back to the country and subsequently sold for $112.

The original answer was a general denial. After •the cause was returned by this court for another trial, an amended answer was filed containing a general denial and two special defenses based on the receipt or bill of lading issued by defendant’s agent when the horses were consigned to it for shipment. One of the defenses is that the plaintiff failed to give notice in writing of its claim to the general freight agent of the defendant, within ten days after the loss or damage to the horses was sustained. A clause in the bill of lading provided for notice. We hold that the defendant, by filing and going' to trial on an answer which set up no defense based on failure to give notice, but relied on a denial that it had injured the horses, waived the defense of lack of timely notice. The point is made too late.

Defendant’s counsel takes the position that.the re[149]*149quirement of notice of claim could not be waived by his client except by acts adapted to induce the belief that the notice would not be insisted on and done before the ten days had expired in which the notice was to be given.' The argument is that under such circumstances notice of claim is held to be waived because the claimant failed to give it from being misled. No doubt conduct of that sort within the time limit will raise an estoppel against the defense of want of notice; or, if one pleases so to say, will waive the defense. Really the rule of law which then governs the decision rests on the principle of estoppel. But a waiver may occur as well after as before the time limit expires, if the party entitled to notice chooses to waive it. The essential fact is then one of intention on the part of the party entitled. If it is fairly inferable from the facts that said party intended to waive instead of insist on notice, he will not be heard to defend on the ground that no notice was given; and where the facts conclusively establish such an intention the defense may be overruled by the court. Suppose the first answer had stated that the railway company waived the right to notice; could it have set up such right as a defense in the second answer? No one will say it could; but according to the argument now advanced it might; inasmuch as it can be denied a defense on that ground only in case it induced the plaintiff not to give notice. In the case of Dezell v. Casualty Co., 176 Mo. 258, 75 S. W. 1102, the majority opinion says that if, .after the time for giving notice has expired, the party entitled to notice does anything to show an intention to waive notice, it will be adjudged to have done so. In support of his position we are cited by defendants counsel to the cases of Hamilton v. Railroad, 80 Mo. App. 597; Exchange Bank v. Ins. Co., 83 S. W. 535, 109 Mo. App. 654. In each of those cases the court dealt with acts performed after the time for giving notice had expired and held that the defense of lack of notice was available. But the acts under review had no tendency either to [150]*150raise an estoppel or to show an intention on the part of the defendant to waive. The facts with which we are dealing are very different. The railroad company denied all liability and defended at the first trial exclusively. on the merits of the case. After it had been ruled on the first appeal that the plaintiff had a prima facie case on the merits, defendant for the first time set up the purely technical defense of lack of notice. That course of conduct was inconsistent with an intention to rely on lack of notice and compels the conclusion that defendant cherished no such intention. We recognize the rule that a party sued may interpose in one answer as many consistent defenses as it has, and so decided in Carp v. Ins. Co., 104 Mo. App. 502, 79 S. W. 757. This we understand to be the doctrine of the majority opinion in the Dezell case, supra. But we hold that if a defendant in a case like this says nothing about want of notice of claim in its answer, but defends solely on the merits at the first trial, and its defense of non-liability on the merits proves precarious, it cannot afterwards raise the technical defense now presented. This we understand to be the doctrine of both the majority and minority opinions in the Dezell case, as it is of many other cases cited therein; notably Thwing v. Ins. Co., 111 Mass. 93, 110; Ins. Co. v. Dierks, 43 Neb. 745; Ins. Co. v. Hildebrand, 54 Neb. 306. Our view is that a defendant may be denied such a defense as is now asserted for acts done subsequent to the time in which notice was to be given, provided those acts contain the elements of an estoppel or show an intention to waive notice. Whether the denial should be rested on estoppel or on waiver will depend on the character of the ,acts. Fink v. Insurance Company, 60 Mo. App. 673; s. c., 66 Mo. App. 513; Equitable Life Society v. Winning, 58 Fed. 541. To exonerate the defendant from liability on the ground of want of notice at this stage of the case, would be to lose sight of the palpable fact that the de[151]*151fendant never intended to rely on that point until after its defense on the merits looked unpromising.

The other special defense is that the horses were shipped at a reduced rate in consideration of an agreement that in the event of injury or damage to them the shipper would not hold the defendant liable for more than $75 for each horse. We copy the portions of the bill of lading material to this defense :

“ST. LOUIS & HANNIBAL RAILWAY COMPANY'S LIVE STOCK CONTRACT.
“Executed at Bowling Green Station, September 28, 1902.
“This agreement entered into by and between the St. Louis & Hannibal Railway Company, party of the first part, and Hawkins Bros., party of the second part, this 28th day of Sept., 1902.
“Witnesseth, that whereas, the St.

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Bluebook (online)
87 S.W. 553, 113 Mo. App. 144, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keyes-marshall-bros-livery-co-v-st-louis-hannibal-railroad-moctapp-1905.