Missouri Pac. Railroad Co. v. Armstrong

44 S.W.2d 1093, 184 Ark. 1076, 1932 Ark. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 11, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 44 S.W.2d 1093 (Missouri Pac. Railroad Co. v. Armstrong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri Pac. Railroad Co. v. Armstrong, 44 S.W.2d 1093, 184 Ark. 1076, 1932 Ark. LEXIS 9 (Ark. 1932).

Opinion

Smith, J.

The controlling facts out of which this case arose are undisputed and are as follows. Appellee is the proprietor of a small nursery about five miles from Prescott, at which city G. A. Hayes was the station and freight agent during the months of November and December, 1928, for both the Missouri Pacific and the Prescott & Northwestern railroads. Both railroads used the same depot, freight offices and employees.

On November 22,1928, appellee ordered twenty bushels of peach seed to be shipped him from Concord, Georgia, and on the same day he called on Mr. Hayes, the railway agent, and advised him of the order and told him that it was getting late and an early delivery of the seed was essential for their planting’ and germination, and Hayes was told .the damage which would result in, delay, and he advised appellee that, unless there was delay in transit, the seed would arrive in eight or ten days. Appellee also advised the railway agent of a similar order of peach seed from Toldo., Arkansas, a station on the Prescott & Northwestern Railroad, of which road Hayes was also the agent, and that this shipment of seed would come over that road.

The seed from Georgia were shipped on November 27,1928, and were delivered in Prescott on December 8th thereafter. The order from Tokio arrived about the same time. Mr. Hayes did not advise appellee of the arrival of the seed, and they remained in the freight house until Deoemberi 28th, when appellee was advised by the Agricultural Agent of the Prescott & Northwestern Railroad that the seed were at the freight house. Appellee immediatoly called for and received the seed and planted them in the usual manner, hut on account of the delay in their receipt, and the consequent delay in planting, the seed did not germinate in time for budding, this being the use for which Hayes, as agent, had been advised the seed were intended. The seed were planted, and in May such of the sprouts as had come up were plowed under and the land was planted in cotton.

On March 1,1930, suit was brought against the Prescott & Northwestern road, and on March 8, 1930, an amendment to the complaint was filed making the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company a party defendant. On the............day of April, 1930, the Missouri Pacific filed a petition to sever and to remove to the Federal court, whereupon the cause was dismissed as to that defendant. At the October, 1930, term of the court the case against the Prescott & Northwestern road was tried, and there was a verdict for the plaintiff on account of the Tokio shipment and a directed verdict for the railroad as to the Georgia shipment. Upon motions for a new trial being filed, both verdicts were set aside, and on November 3, 1930, an amended and substituted complaint was filed against both railroad companies, alleging damages in the sum of $3,000 as to the Georgia shipment, and $700 as to the Tokio shipment. There was a trial with verdict and judgment against the Prescott & Northwestern Company for $50 on account of the Tokio shipment and against both railroads for $500 on account of the Georgia shipment, and this appeal is from that judgment.

A number of questions have been raised for the re.versal of the judgment which we find it unnecessary to discuss, for the -reason that the cause of action was barred when the suit was filed from which this appeal comes.

This cause of action is predicated upon the failure of the railroad agent to give the consignee notice of the arrival of the seed. No claim is made that the shipment was delayed in transit or that the seed were damaged, but there was a failure of the railroad agent to notify the consignee of 'the arrival of the shipments.

A cause of action for a failure to give notice of the arrival of a shipment is conferred by § 897, Crawford & Moses’ Digest, which provides that railroad companies shall, within twenty-four hours after the arrival of a shipment, give notice, by mail or otherwise, to the consignee of the arrival of the shipment, with the weight and the amount of freight charges due thereon. Spears v. Mo. Pac. Rd. Co., 183 Ark. 945, 39 S. W. (2d) 727.

This section of Crawford & Moses’ Digest is § 3 of act 193 of the Acts of 1907 (acts 1907, p. 453) which was an act entitled “An Act to regulate freight transportation by railroad companies doing business in the State of Arkansas.”

By § 21 of this act, which appears as § 913, Crawford & Moses’ Digest, it is provided that if any railroad company shall violate any of the provisions thereof, and “shall not do or permit to be done any act, matter or thing in this act required to be done,” such railroad company shall be held to pay to the person injured thereby the actual amount of damages so sustained. But the section further provides: “No action aforesaid shall be sustained unless brought within one year after the cause of action accrued, or within one year after the party complaining shall have come to the knowledge of his or her right of action. Provided that no action shall be brought after two years from time right of action accrues, and as many, causes of action as may have accrued within the year to any one person, firm or corporation, including damages, forfeitures, demurrage, etc., may be joined in the suit or complaint.”

The plain meaning of the language quoted is that a person having a cause of action conferred by this act 193 shall institute suit to enforce it “within one year after the party complaining shall have come to the knowledge of his or her right of action, ” and within two years in any event.

The plaintiff’s cause of action accrued not later than December 28,1928, the date on which the seed were actually delivered. The plaintiff knew then, if not before, that the shipments had been received and that no notice thereof had been given.

We had occasion to construe this limitation upon the time within which suit might be brought for noncomplianca with the provisions of the act of 1907, supra, in the case of St. L. I. M. & S. R. Co. v. Paul, 118 Ark. 375, 176 S. W. 327. There a demand had been made in writing upon a carrier to furnish cars 'for the shipment of stave bolts, but the suit was not commenced until more than a year after the damage had occurred and the shipper’s cause of action had accrued by reason of the carrier’s failure to furnish cars as demanded. It was there said that, in the absence of legislation limiting the period -within which such suit might be brought, the period of limitations thereon would be three years, but that the Legislature had by this act 193 passed a comprehensive act to regulate freight transportation by railroads in this State, and that the right of the State to enact appropriate legislation regulating the business of common carriers had been often recognized in the decisions of this and other courts, and was a right which had been freely exercised.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 S.W.2d 1093, 184 Ark. 1076, 1932 Ark. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-pac-railroad-co-v-armstrong-ark-1932.