Lancaster Wight v. Schreiner

212 S.W. 19, 202 Mo. App. 459, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 134
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 9, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 212 S.W. 19 (Lancaster Wight v. Schreiner) 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
Lancaster Wight v. Schreiner, 212 S.W. 19, 202 Mo. App. 459, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 134 (Mo. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

STURGIS, P. J.

This is a suit to recover from the shipper an alleged balance due for freight charges on a shipment of hay from Golden City, Missouri, to New Orleans, Louisiana. The trial court denied plaintiff’s right to recover and it appeals.

The facts are not disputed. The defendant delivered to the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad, hereafter called the Frisco, at Golden City, Missouri, two car loads of hay for shipment to Leonhardt Company, consignee, at New Orleans. The defendant shipper made inquiry of the station agent at Golden City and ascertained that there was in force a through tariff rate, duly approved by the Interstate Commerce Commission, of thirty-one cents per hundred pounds from Golden City to New Orleans. This through route was via Frisco Railroad to Wister, Okla., thence via Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway, hereafter called the *462 Rock Island, to Alexandria, thence via Louisiana Railroad and Navigation Company, hereafter called the L. R. &■ N. Co. to New Orleans. The defendant designated' this route of shipment and received from the initial carrier, the Frisco Railroad, a receipt showing the goods to be shipped, consigned to Leonhardt Company, “destination, New Orleans, Route L. R. & N. at Shreveport, Shippers routing.” Instead of shipping t-he hay over the route so designated the shipment was made by the Frisco Railroad to Memphis, Tenn., thence via the Rock Island Railroad to Alexandria, La., and thence via the Texas & Pacific Railroad, plaintiff here, to New Orleans. The plaintiff railroad as terminal carrier delivered the hay to the consignee at New Orleans and collected the amount of the approved through tariff rate of thirty-one cents per hundred, amounting to $157.14. More than, a year thereafter the plaintiff brought this suit, alleging that the freight charges due on this hay “as shown by the authorized tariffs then in effect and on file with the Interstate Commerce Commission amounted to $288.93, which defendant promised and agreed to pay; that defendant has paid the sum of $157.14, leaving a balance due of $131.79 which defendant owes but has refused to pay.”

This claim arises solely from the fact that the hay in question was misrouted. The Frisco Railway, carried it to Memphis, Tenn., instead of Wister, Okla. It was delivered to the Rock Island at Memphis instead of at Wister. The Rock Island delivered it to the Texas Pacific at Alexandria instead of to the L. R. & N. at that •point or at Shreveport. There seems not to have been any approved through tariff rate from Golden City, Missouri, to New Orleans over the route the hay was actually shipped and the rate now demanded of defendant is the deficiency in the sum of the duly approved local ■rates, to-wit, from Golden City via Frisco to Memphis, nineteen cents, from Memphis to Alexandria via Rock Island, twenty-three cents,,, and from Alexandria to New 'Orleans via Texas & Pacific, fifteen cents, making a total *463 of fifty-seven cents per hundred weight instead of the through rate of thirty-one cents via the Shreveport route. The correctness and due approval by the Interstate Commerce Commission of these various local rates over the route the hay was actually shipped, as well as through rate of thirty-one cents had the hay been shipped via the route designated by the shipper, are not disputed.

This defendant, the shipper, had nothing to do with the actual shipment of the hay after delivering it to the initial carrier and designating the proper routing. No explanation is offered as to why the hay was misrouted by the Frisco Railroad in carrying it via Memphis rather than via Wister — the two routes being wholly divergent. There is nothing to show that either the shipper or consignee had any knowledge or means of knowledge of the hay having been shipped via Memphis' and the Texas & Pacific Railroad instead of via Wister and the L. R. & N. Company. The plaintiff road' is not a part of the through route designated by the shipper over which the established through rate applied and no explanation is offered as to why this hay was delivered by the Rock Island to plaintiff at Alexandria instead of to the L. R. & N. the properly-designated route, at that point even after being shipped to that point via Memphis instead of Wister. There was elearfy a misrouting of the shipment both by the Frisco road in carrying it via Memphis and by the Rock Island in delivering it to the Texas & Pacific at Alexandria instead of to the L. R. & N.

Nor is it shown that plaintiff is innocent in this respect. It is not so claimed in the pleadings. Neither the bill of lading nor the way bill issued by the initial carrier is in evidence but defendant put in evidence a receipt issued to him by such carrier which sets forth the terms of shipment and states that a bill of lading has been issued. Tim form and substance of this receipt are like the usual bill of lading and such receipt states that the route is “via L. R. & N. at Shreveport” and *464 that same is the “shipper’s routing.” • Section 20 of the Interstate Commerce Act requires the initial carrier to issue a bill of lading and provides a penalty for issuing a false bill of .lading. We should not assume that the bill of lading for this hay, or what is more important the way bill used by the carriers, contained a different routing than that designated by the shipper and contained in the receipt. As said in St. Louis S. W. R. Co. v. Spring River Stone Co., 59 L. Ed. 805, 809, in reference to the contents of way bills used by carriers: “In the circumstances, the initial carrier was charged with the duty of making these notations and for the purposes of ‘this suit the shipper might assume compliance with that duty — he was not required to establish actual performance.” The- shipper had no control over this shipment aftér delivering it to the initial carrier and did not know and had no means of knowing, or of controlling if he did know, the route over which the shipment was actually made. He designated the proper route and there his duty and responsibility ended. If, as we must presume, the bill of lading and way bill designated the routing of this shipment, as did the receipt issued, as “Route L. R. & N. at Shreveport” then plaintiff knew that it was aiding in misrouting the shipment on its receiving it at Alexandria. Drake v. Railroad, (Tenn.) 148 S. W. 214, where it is said:

“It was negligence on its part not to know of that agreement before it received the goods. It was within its legal right to insist upon a showing from its co-defendants of their authority to offer the goods to it for transportation. A common carrier is not bound to accept for transportation goods from any person other than the owner, or the duly authorized agent of the owner.”

It is also significant that the plaintiff collected on delivering the shipment, not the sum of the local rates over the. route actually travelled, but the proper through rate via. the through route, showing that it *465 had knowledge of the through rate either from the bill of lading and way bill or from the published through rate over a route of which its own line, was, not a part.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
212 S.W. 19, 202 Mo. App. 459, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lancaster-wight-v-schreiner-moctapp-1919.