Kirby v. Union Pacific Railroad

146 P. 1183, 94 Kan. 485, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 112
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 6, 1915
DocketNo. 19,290
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 146 P. 1183 (Kirby v. Union Pacific Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirby v. Union Pacific Railroad, 146 P. 1183, 94 Kan. 485, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 112 (kan 1915).

Opinion

[486]*486The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

F. L. Kirby shipped a carload of emigrant goods and live stock from Crescent, Okla., to Buffalo Park, Kan., over the Santa Fe and Union Pacific railroads. The original destination was Hill City, Kan., but at Salina, Kan., where the Union Pacific received the car from the Santa Fe, Kirby ordered the destination altered to Buffalo Park. At Salina a new shipper’s contract was signed by Kirby and the Union Pacific, and a new way bill was made out to cover the balance of the journey. One of the live stock was a mare worth $200, but listed in the contract of shipment at the value of $100. By the terms of his contract, Kirby was permitted to travel, without extra charge, in the trains of the carriers transporting the car, and cared for his stock personally en route. Between sundown and dark on October 30, 1912, Kirby fed and watered the mare in question while the car was in the switch-yards of the Union Pacific in Salina, and the animal was apparently all right and ate and drank at that time. Next morning when Kirby entered the car at Ellis on the way to Buffalo Park the mare was dead.

Kirby sued the company, charging negligence, and recovered the value of the mare, fixed by the jury at $200. The company appealed, and here contends:

“I. The evidence not only fails to establish any negligence on the part of the appellant, but shows positively that the shipment was handled with due and proper care, and that the loss of appellee’s mare was not caused by any negligence on the part of appellant.

“II. The shipment was made finder a limited liability contract, and if appellee is entitled to recover any amount in this action his recovery must be limited to $100.00, the value of the mare as fixed in the contract.”

No appearance is made in this court by appellee.

There is not much evidence to support the allegation of negligence, and yet we think it was sufficient to per[487]*487mit its submission to a jury. The appellee testified that the mare was all right at nightfall in Salina; that the railway company used his car with a switch engine in making up the train, “putting it up against others and jamming it around”; and that he protested to the yardmaster.

“Q. What did you tell him? A. I told him they were using my car too rough, I had stock in there, they were using it too rough, they were liable to injure it, and he said to tend to my business, he was tending to his, and to go and get in the caboose.”

At Ellis the next morning when Kirby entered the car he found the mare dead, and a partition between the live stock and the other goods was torn down and some colts tied to the partition had it under their feet; that the colts had “got over among the chickens and killed part of them”; that “part of the chickens had got out and others were loose in the car.” These circumstances were some evidence of want of due care in handling appellee’s car. Kirby testified:

“I went over to that side of the car and found my mare was dead. . . . There was about a half-gallon clot of blood by her nose.”

A post-mortem examination disclosed no bruises or other internal injuries; there was some discoloration which might have been caused by a disease; and there is some reference in the testimony of the station agent at Ellis, who'was present at the post-mortem, of “a puncture in the bov/els large enough to put your thumb in”; but whether that was discovered by the examination or made by the veterinarian is not clear. The evidence for the defense controverted the appellee’s tes- ' timony, and avowed due care throughout the journey from Salina to Ellis, and squarely denied that Kirby’s car had been negligently used in switching in the Sa-lina yards; appellant denied that Kirby had spoken to the yardmaster or. any of the employees who were present in the yards while the train was being made [488]*488up, and denied the colloquy with Kirby. In view of this, it seems that the court was justified in submitting these disputed matters of fact to the jury under proper instructions. Appellant does not complain of the instructions, and on this point they seem entirely fair to the appellant. In part they read:

“It was the duty of the company in this case to exercise all reasonable care in transporting this animal and in handling its train in such transportation. It did not insure the plaintiff against loss by injury to the animal in handling its train so long as it handled it with such carefulness as any other like company would have handled it while in the exercise of reasonable carefulness. It could not relieve itself from the results of negligence, and it did not seek to do so in the contract of shipment received in evidence. There must be some bumping of cars in the handling of freight in transportation, and this is likely to cause animals to slip or even fall at times unless so closely packed together as to cause each to hold the other up. So it is that the law requires that the company shall avoid this if it can be done in the exercise of reasonable diligence and carefulness in handling its train.”

We are not disposed to disturb a finding of negligence based on the evidence when safeguarded by such an instruction.

A more serious question arises under appellant’s second assignment of error. Was the transportation of Kirby’s car and contents from Salina to Buffalo Park an independent shipment originating and ending in Kansas and governed by local law, or was it a part of the service of interstate carriage from Oklahoma and governed by the laws and rules pertaining to interstate commerce?

As long ago as the case of The Daniel Ball, 77 U. S. 557, (1870), the supreme court of the United States held that a vessel operating wholly between points in Michigan was amenable to the regulations of interstate commerce when she was used as an instrumentality of that commerce. Mr. Justice Field said:

“So far as she was employed in transporting goods [489]*489destined for other States, or goods brought from without the limits of Michigan and destined to places within that State, she was engaged in commerce between the States, and however limited that commerce may have been, she was, so far as it went, subject to the legislation of Congress. She was employed as an instrument of that commerce; for whenever a commodity has begun to move as an article of trade from one State to another, commerce in that commodity between the States has commenced. The fact that several different and independent agencies are employed in transporting the commodity, some acting entirely in one State, and some acting through two or more States, does in no respect affect the character of the transaction. To the extent in which each agency acts in that transportation, it is subject to the regulations of Congress. . . . And we answer further, that we are unable to draw any clear and distinct line between the authority of Congress to regulate an agency employed in commerce between the States, when that agency extends through two or more States, and when it is confined in its action entirely within the limits of a single State. If its authority does not extend to an agency in such commerce, when that agency is confined within the limits of a State, its entire authority over, interstate commerce may be defeated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 P. 1183, 94 Kan. 485, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirby-v-union-pacific-railroad-kan-1915.