McGrew v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.

109 Mo. 582
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 109 Mo. 582 (McGrew v. Missouri Pacific Railway 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
McGrew v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co., 109 Mo. 582 (Mo. 1891).

Opinion

Black, J.

The petition in this case contains-, thirty-eight counts. The substantial averments of the-first are that plaintiff gave defendant due notice that-he would need and require four coal cars at his coal mine on the nineteenth of November, 1886; that defendant furnished one car, but failed. and neglected to furnish the other three; by reason of all which he is-damaged in the sum of $17.50. The other counts are of a like character, and are all founded upon a failure of defendant to furnish cars on different days from November 20, 1886, to January 25, 1887, for the transportation of coal from Lexington to Kansas City.

After a general denial, the answer avers in substance, that defendant had its road fully equipped with cars to do all the business ordinarily transacted thereon; that if the plaintiff did not receive all the cars which he-ordered the failure to furnish them was due to these facts: First, an unusual and extraordinary demand for coal cars'; second, an extraordinary and unusual drought which prevailed along the road, and by reason of which the defendant could not obtain water, and was compelled to use a great number of coal cars to haul water to supply the engines; third, a long and severe spell of cold weather, by reason of which the transportation of freight was greatly retarded.

The plaintiff’s evidence tended to prove all theaverments of the petition. The evidence for the defendant shows that it furnished 'the plaintiff two hundred and sixty-five cars during the dates covered by the petition, but this evidence also shows that defendant did not furnish the plaintiff all the cars which he called for and demanded. The defendant’s evidence also tends to establish all of the affirmative defenses set up in the answer.

The court, at the request of the defendant, gave to the jury the following instructions: “2. The jury are-[587]*587instructed that the law governing this case is that the defendant, as a common carrier of freight, is only obliged to provide cars sufficient to haul such freight as would ordinarily be tendered it for transportation. It is not bound to anticipate an unusual increased demand for cars at any particular portion of the year, or to keep on hand cars beyond its ordinary requirements to anticipate any sudden and temporary use.”

“7. The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence in this case that the increase in the volume of business and the extremely dry and cold weather, and the great scarcity of water, rendered it impracticable for defendant to furnish all the cars called for during the period of time sued for in this case, and that defendant did distribute the cars it could and did furnish amongst those who wanted them, in as fair and equitable proportion as was reasonably practicable, and that plaintiff did get a fair and reasonable number of such cars for the shipment of his coal during said time, he has no good cause of action against defendant, and' the jury must find for the defendant on each and all the counts in the amended petition filed in this case.

“8. The court instructs the jury that the liability of the defendant as a common carrier for failure to furnish cars when demanded by one who desires to have property transported is not absolute and unlimited like the liability for the prompt carriage and safe delivery of property after it passes into the possession and under the absolute dominion of the carrier; but that the liability for a failure to furnish cars when demanded depends upon the reasonableness of such demand and of the notice thereof, upon the practicability or impracticability of furnishing the number of cars so demanded at the times and places required, as well as upon the ability of the carrier to furnish the same with[588]*588out discriminating against others requiring cars; and, that if all or either of such facts and circumstances are shown to have existed at the times when the plaintiff in this case demanded the cars in question then they or either of them constituted a reasonable excuse for the failure to furnish all the cars called for by the plaintiff, and he is not entitled to recover on either count in his amended petition in this case.”

“11. Although the jury may believe from the evidence in the case that the defendant had a sufficient number of coal cars in its possession and under its control between the nineteenth day of November, 1886, and twenty-sixth day of January, 1887, inclusive, to have given plaintiff all the cars he demanded; yet, if the jury shall further find from the evidence that the defendant’s motive power was so crippled and impoverished by a severe drought covering said period, making a great scarcity of water, or by the extreme cold weather covering said period, making the freight offered for shipment unusually difficult of shipment, or an unusual and unexpected amount of freight offered for shipment, and that owing to the existence of either one or all of the said causes the defendant ■ could not furnish the plaintiff a greater number of cars than it did furnish, without doing injustice to and discriminating against other shippers at Lexington, Missouri, and other shipping stations along the defendant’s railroads, then the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, and your verdict must be for the defendant on each count in plaintiff’s petition.”

On these and other instructions, the jury found a verdict for defendant on all of the counts, and the plaintiff appealed from a judgment rendered thereon.

1. To an understanding of the various objections made to the defendant’s instructions, it should be stated here' that the first instruction, given at the request of [589]*589the plaintiff, points ont distinctly the issues made on the petition, and then the issues tendered by the answer. The second states, hypothetically, facts which, if found to be true, lead to a verdict for plaintiff, unless the jury shall believe, from the evidence,, that the failure to furnish such cars was caused by an unusual influx of business, or by an unusual drought which prevailed over the territory through which the-defendant’s line ran, or an unusual and unprecedented spell of cold weather, and unless one or aíl of these-causes combined to prevent defendant furnishing the-said cars.” This instruction, it will' be seen, points out in clear terms 'the defense and only affirmative-defense available to the defendant.

The objection made to the defendant’s second and eighth instructions is that they are mere abstract propositions of law, not applicable to the case made by the pleadings and evidence. While the second instruction states the law in an abstract form, still it states it correctly. There is no claim made that it does not-correctly state the law, and the law; as stated, is applicable to the case. This instruction is followed immediately bv the one numbered 7, which recites the facts and. gives application to the law as it is stated in the second, so that the objection to the second instruction is-clearly not well taken.

2. The eighth instruction begins with an abstract' assertion which has no application to the case in hand, for it was not necessary to give the jury any instructions as to the law in cases where the carrier fails to-make prompt delivery of goods intrusted- to it for carriage. This matter is, however, introduced for the-purpose of pointing out a well-known distinction between a failure to properly deliver property received, for transportation and a failure to furnish cars when [590]*590demanded.

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Bluebook (online)
109 Mo. 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgrew-v-missouri-pacific-railway-co-mo-1891.