Lamar Manufacturing Co. v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad

93 S.W. 851, 117 Mo. App. 453, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 83
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 93 S.W. 851 (Lamar Manufacturing Co. v. St. Louis & San Francisco 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
Lamar Manufacturing Co. v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad, 93 S.W. 851, 117 Mo. App. 453, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 83 (Mo. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

Action against a common carrier brought by the consignees and owners of certain merchandise to recover damages for injury thereto, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendant. Plaintiffs had judgment and defendant appealed.

[457]*457Plaintiffs, retail merchants in Lamar, purchased the goods of a wholesale concern in St. Joseph. The latter made two shipments of them, both over the line of the St. Joseph & Grand Island Railroad Company. The first was delivered to the carrier at St. Joseph in the afternoon of May 26, 1903, and the second.two days later. The line of this carrier terminates at Kansas City and from there the goods when shipped were routed over defendant’s road to their destination. The petition is in two counts, one for each shipment; and the negligence charged with respect to the first shipment is, “that by the default and miscarriage of the defendant and by reason of its unreasonable delays and its careless and negligent handling of said goods it failed to deliver said goods to plaintiffs in good order, but on or about the 25th day of July, 1903, defendant delivered said goods at Lamar” so damaged and spoiled that their value was less than the freight charges upon them. The allegations relating to the second shipment are the same excepting as to the date of delivery, which was July 5, 1903.

The defense is that the goods were damaged not by any negligence of defendant, but by the Act of God, that is, they were caught in the extraordinary flood of 1903 that wrought such havoc in the bottonis of the Missouri and Kansas, rivers at Kansas City. At the conclusion of the evidence, defendant requested the giving of a peremptory instruction in its favor, which the court refused and the issues of fact submitted to the jury very clearly appear in this extract from the instruction given. ;

“And, if you shall further believe from the evidence that said goods were destroyed or damaged while in the possession of defendant and that they were so destroyed or damaged by reason of negligence on the part of defendant, then your verdict should he in favor of the plaintiffs. But, if you shall believe from the evidence that said goods were so destroyed or damaged by reason of a sudden and extraordinary flood after coming into the possession of the defendant at Kansas City .(if [458]*458they did so come into its possession), yonr verdict should be in favor of the defendant unless you shall further believe from the evidence that defendant became aware of the impending and approaching flood in time to have removed the goods to a place of safety by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence. If you shall believe from the evidence that the'defendant did become aware of the impending and approaching flood, if there was one,-in time to remove them'to a place of safety by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence, then the flood does not excuse it, and'your verdict should be for the plaintiffs.”

Defendant’s contention is that there is no evidence in the record accusing it of negligence; that all of the evidence points to the Act of God as the proximate cause of the injury and therfore the case should not have gone to the jury.

We think it is fairly inferable from the facts appearing in the evidence introduced by plaintiffs that both shipments of goods were in the possession of defendant for carriage to their destination during Saturday, May 30th, and thereafter; that defendant had negligently delayed forwarding them and that, had the usual and reasonable diligence been employed, the goods would have escaped the flood; but all this may be true and still the facts in proof fall short of showing that the injury was the direct and. not a remote result of defendant’s negligence. As was well stated by Ellison, J., in the case of Moffatt v. Railroad Co., 113 Mo. App. 544, 88 S. W. 117. “Whenever the negligence of the carrier mingles with the Act of God as a co-operative cause, the carrier is liable provided the resulting loss is within the probable consequences of the negligent act; otherwise it will be too remote and disconnected to be considered the probable cause.” In the exercise of reasonable care, of which negligence is the antonym, human foresight and prudence cannot foresee and guard against the. sudden, unheralded and overwhelmingly powerful outbursts of natural forces and, because neither time, place, nor de[459]*459structive power of such visitations may be anticipated, people cannot be expected to act with reference to them and therefore negligence which, by chance, places persons or property within their destructive reach, should not be deemed a co-operative cause of injury. This subject was thoroughly considered in the Moffatt case and needs no further discussion on this occassion.

But, when an extraordinary natural disturbance gives warning of the time and path of its approach and of its general magnitude and power, they (such as common carriers), whose business places them in charge of the safety of persons and of the property of others, are charged with the duty of exercising care, commensurate with the exigencies of the situation, to protect those, whom they serve, against injury from the approaching danger. A breach of such duty is negligence and, if injury results, must be regarded as a proximate and not a remote cause of the injury. We so held in the recent case of Pinkerton v. Railway, 117 Mo. App. 288.

In the application of these principles to the facts of the case in hand, it is important to consider upon whom devolves the burden of proof with respect to the issue of concurring negligence. In showing the delivery in good order of the goods to defendant for transportation and the failure of defendant to deliver them in like order at their destination in a reasonable time, plaintiffs presented a prima facie right to a recovery for the damages sustained. It then devolved upon defendant to excuse itself from liability by showing, as it did, that the injury was the direct result of the Act of God under consideration, but the defendant was not required to go further and show affirmatively that it was guilty of no negligence. The burden of proving the concurring negligence of defendant was upon the plaintiffs. That is, it was incumbent upon them to show that defendant knew, or by the exercise of due care might have known, of the ■coming, of a flood of sufficient volume to submerge their freight house and yards in time to have removed the [460]*460property of plaintiffs and others out of danger. [Read v. Railroad, 60 Mo. 199; Davis v. Railway, 89 Mo. 310.]

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Bluebook (online)
93 S.W. 851, 117 Mo. App. 453, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamar-manufacturing-co-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railroad-moctapp-1906.