Nye-Schneider-Fowler Co. v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.

179 N.W. 503, 105 Neb. 151, 1920 Neb. LEXIS 27
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1920
DocketNo. 21056
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 179 N.W. 503 (Nye-Schneider-Fowler Co. v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nye-Schneider-Fowler Co. v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co., 179 N.W. 503, 105 Neb. 151, 1920 Neb. LEXIS 27 (Neb. 1920).

Opinion

Flansburg, J.

Plaintiff is a stock shipper, and brings this action to recover for damages to hogs during shipment to South Omaha over defendant’s railroad. Various shipments of hogs are involved. The shipments occurred during a period of two years, 1916 and 1917, and the claims are represented by 71 [153]*153separate causes of action. The jury returned a general verdict on all causes of action for $802.27, and defendant railroad company appeals.

Plaintiff introduced evidence to show that the hogs were delivered to defendant in good condition, and that when received by the consignee at South. Omaha 59 hogs were dead and a number crippled. The shipments were made without a caretaker.

Plaintiff relies, for a prima facie case, upon the presumption that all damage to the hogs during shipment was caused by the negligence of the defendant railroad.

Testimony was introduced by defendant to show the damage was from disease and natural causes, for which it would not be liable, and contends that in those instances, where such testimony was introduced, the legal presumption that the defendant had been negligent and caused the damage would expire; that such presumption is not and does not take the place of evidence, and that the court should have withdrawn those items from the jury, since in those instances there was no issue of fact to be submitted.

Where it appears that live stock, unaccompanied by a caretaker, is received by a railroad company in good condition and delivered later to the consignee in a damaged condition, a prima facie case is made against the railroad company, and the burden is upon it to show that such damage resulted from some cause which would exempt it from liability. Information as to the cause of damage during shipment is peculiarly within the knowledge of the railroad company, and the company ig therefore required, as a matter of expediency, to produce the proof of the cause of damáge, and to show Avhether or not the cause is one for which it can or cannot be held responsible. Church v. Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co., 81 Neb. 615; Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. Slattery, 76 Neb. 721; 10 C. J. 379, sec. 581. A railroad company, under our decisions, is an insurer of live stock carried by it, except for such damage as results from the act of God, the public enemy, the fault of the owner, or the natural propensities of the animals. In the absence of any evidence, it is presumed that the damage was [154]*154not the result of any one of those causes. Such presumption, however, is not evidence, and is destroyed when actual evidence is introduced of the facts out of which the damage occurred. When evidence of such facts appears and is sufficient to sustain a finding, the presumption expires.

Doctor Everett, a veterinarian, testified, in behalf of the defendant, that he inspected the hogs at destination, and that some of the hogs had been killed by smothering, caused by their piling on one another. Other testimony was to the effect that hogs might pile on one another to keep warm in cold weather, or in an endeavor to get fresh'air in hot weather, but there was also testimony showing that hogs could be made to pile by severe and unusual bumping of the cars. Other veterinarians testified that death from smothering could not be determined from casual inspection. Whether these dead hogs were smothered and, if so, the actual cause of smothering were questions, under the evidence introduced, open to reasonable dispute, and were for the jury. Doctor Everett further testified that certain of the hogs had died from cholera, but his opinion on that matter was disputed by the testimony of other veterinarians who said that cholera could not be detected by such a casual examination as Doctor Everett made. He further testified that certain of the hogs had died from congestion of the lungs, as determined from a post mortem examination. His testimony on that point stands alone, and, since there is evidence to show without controversy that those particular hogs died from natural causes, the claims covering them should have been withdrawn from the j’ury. These are items 6, 48, 58, and 95, upon which claim was made of 1168.86.

Doctor Everett again testified that certain of the' hogs, which seemed' to be crippled, had a disease known as arthritis, and humped up and walked on their toes in a manner peculiar to that disease. Thére is some dispute in the testimony as to whether arthritis is a rheumatic or tubercular disease, but Doctor Everett’s testimony that [155]*155the crippling of the hogs was due to this disease is not controverted. The presumption, then, that the hogs were crippled as a result of some act of the defendant would no longer obtain, and the claims upon those hogs should also have been withdrawn. They were items 16, 20, 29, 39, 47, 49, 51, 79, and 85, upon which a total claim of $41.40 was made. It also appears that one hog, claimed to be crippled (item 19), was suffering from a disease and partial paralysis, brought on by such disease. The amount of claim on this item was $3.75. Before the judgment in this case can be allowed to stand, a remittitur should be filed covering the amounts of these claims which should have been withdrawn. '

The defendant contends that plaintiff’s proof is based upon incompetent evidence. The Union Stock Yards Company, into whose yards the hogs were delivered, keeps a record of the number and condition of the hogs when taken from the cars. This book record was introduced in evidence by the plaintiff, over defendant’s .objection, to show that the hogs in question were received, some dead and some crippled. The plaintiff’s case must stand or fall upon the competency of this proof.

A number of employees of the stock yards company get data for this record. One employee is known as a “car checker.” He is supplied with what is called a “chute book.” He enters in this book the number of the car opposite each chute, and then turns the book over to the ' yard-master, who goes into the chute and counts the animals unloaded from the car, and enters the result of his count in this book. .He also enters the name of the shipper and consignee and point of origin of shipment, which information he hears read by another from the waybills of the railroad company.

Another employee, known as the “cripple checker,” carries a book called the “cripple record,” and counts and enters in this book the number of crippled animals in each car.

Another employee, known as the “dead hog checker,” keeps what is called a “dead stock record.” He goes into [156]*156each car and counts and enters in this book the number of dead animals found and records the number of the car. The “stock yards record book” is the book which was introduced in evidence, and it contains a complete record of each individual shipment received. It contains the name of the railroad, number of car, name of shipper and consignee, number of animals, and number of “cripples and deads.” The information as to the number of animals in each car and the number of “cripples and deads” is taken by the office clerk from the so-called “chute book,” “cripple record,” and “dead stock record,” just described. It is a complete compilation made up immediately from the data contained in these memoranda books, with other data, and is the first complete and permanent record of the shipment, based upon the data so collected. The preliminary books mentioned seem to be in the nature of memoranda, gathered for the purpose of making the stock yards record book.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
179 N.W. 503, 105 Neb. 151, 1920 Neb. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nye-schneider-fowler-co-v-chicago-northwestern-railway-co-neb-1920.