Parsons-Applegate Co. v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad

118 S.W. 101, 136 Mo. App. 494, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 82
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 29, 1909
StatusPublished

This text of 118 S.W. 101 (Parsons-Applegate Co. v. Louisville & Nashville 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
Parsons-Applegate Co. v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad, 118 S.W. 101, 136 Mo. App. 494, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 82 (Mo. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

Action against a common carrier brought by the consignee and owner of a carload of tomatoes to recover damages for an unreasonable delay in the transportation alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendant. The cause is here on the appeal of defendant from a judgment against it of six hundred dollars.

Material facts disclosed by the evidence of plaintiffs are as follows: Plaintiffs are partners engaged in dealing in fruits and vegetables in Kansas City, under the firm name of Parsons-Applegate Company. They bought a carload of tomatoes in Jacksonville, Florida, which was received by the Seaboard Air Line Railroad Company on April 21, 1905, for transportation from Jacksonville to Kansas City. A through bill of lading was issued on that date in which plaintiffs were named as consignees and the route of the shipment was specified as “via L. & N. and Frisco,” which meant that the initial carrier, the Seaboard Air Line, would haul the car to Montgomery and there deliver it to defendant, the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, for transportation to Birmingham, Alabama, and delivery at that place to the St. Louis & San Francisco Railway Company (commonly called “the Frisco”). The latter company was to transport the car.to Kansas City. The property was to be carried as perishable freight and the evidence shows that the Frisco has the shortest [497]*497line of railroad between Birmingham and Kansas City and operates fast trains for the carriage of such freight. Further, it appears from the evidence of plaintiffs that had the car in question been transported within a reasonable time over the route specified, it would have arrived in Kansas City on April 28th, and the tomatoes would have come into the possession of the consignees in first-class condition for the market. On and after April 28th, the day the car should have reached its destination, plaintiffs made daily inquiries at the Frisco station in Kansas City to ascertain if the car had arrived. They also telephoned to the stations of other railroads that handled freight from the southeast, hut did not think to telephone to the “Rock Island” station as they did not know that freight from Florida might be brought in over the St. Louis line of that company. About noon of May 3, plaintiffs received a telephone message from the “Rock Island” that the car was on its unloading track. They immediately unloaded the car and found the ¡tomatoes over-ripe and damaged. The car contained 472 crates which could have been sold on the market April 28th at $4 per crate. Between that date and May 3rd, the market for tomatoes of that class in good condition, declined seventy-five cents per crate. It was found that all the crates contained spoiled tomatoes and it was necessary to sort over the whole shipment. The expense of sorting them was $50;' the spoiled tomatoes, amounting to fifty crates, were a total loss and the remainder of the shipment suffered a depreciation of seventy-five cents per crate from the decline in the market.

It is conceded that instead of delivering the car to the Frisco at Birmingham, defendant hauled it over its own line to East St. Louis and there delivered it to a terminal railroad which hauled it to St. Louis and delivered it to the Rock Island. This was a longer route by ninety-three miles than the Frisco and in[498]*498volved a change of roads at St. Lonis which the evidence, in the light most favorable to plaintiffs shows is likely to consume much time, especially when the yards at this important center are in a congested condition. The evidence of defendant is to the effect that the car arrived in Kansas City at about 6 o’plock p. m., April 28th, that it was sent to the unloading track at 7 o’clock the next morning, that plaintiffs were notified by telephone between 2 and 4 o’clock in the afternoon that the car was ready to be unloaded, the slight delay in giving notice being caused by an error in the billing in the name of one of the plaintiffs. Further, the witnesses for defendant state that the transportation was accomplished in a reasonable time and in nine hours less than would have been consumed had the shipment been sent over the Frisco. In explanation of this statement, it is asserted that a delay of thirteen hours would have been encountered at Birmingham on account of the fact that the fast train on the Frisco was not scheduled to leave until thirteen hours after the arrival of the car at Birmingham. The allegations of the petition of particular concern to us in the present inquiry are as follows:

“That said defendant in violation of said instructions did not carry said tomatoes to Birmingham and there deliver the same to the Frisco Railroad Company, as directed, but on the contrary, in violation of said shipping instructions and without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiffs, the defendant diverted said car from the route aforesaid, and carried same around by Nashville, Tennessee; Evansville, Indiana, and St. Louis, Missouri, and at St. Louis said car was delivered to the Rock Island Railroad Company and hauled by it to Kansas City.

“That it required five days longer to carry said car over said last-named route than it would have required to carry the same over the route directed by plaintiffs, so that said car instead of arriving in Kansas City on [499]*499the 28th day of April, 1905, did not, in fact, arrive until May 3, 1905.

“That said delay was caused by the wrongful and neglectful act of the defendant in failing and refusing to follow the shipping instructions of plaintiffs aforesaid, and in diverting said car as aforesaid.

“That said load of tomatoes consisted of four hundred and eighty-six crates; that tomatoes in Kansas City on the 25th day of April, 1905, were worth, in the market the sum of four dollars per crate; that on May 3, 1905, the market had declined so that the market value of tomatoes on said day was three and twenty-five one-hundredths dollars; that on account of the delay in the transportation of said tomatoes caused by the diversion aforesaid, said tomatoes had, many of them, rotted and spoiled so that over fifty crates of said tomatoes of the value of two hundred dollars, were wholly lost to plaintiffs, and plaintiffs were put to great trouble and expense in sorting the spoiled from the good tomatoes, which said trouble and expense amounts to fifty dollars, so that plaintiffs allege that by reason of the premises, they have sustained damage in the sum of six hundred fourteen and fifty one-hundredths dollars.” The answer is a general denial.

At the request of plaintiffs, the court instructed the jury “that if you find from the evidence that the defendant changed the routing of the car of tomatoes consigned to plaintiffs without the consent or knowledge of plaintiffs, and instead of transferring said car to the St. Louis and San Francisco R. R. Co. at Birmingham, transported said car by its own line to St. Louis and there transferred it to the Rock Island which carried said car to Kansas City, M'o., and because of said change in the routing there was an unreasonable delay in the delivery of said carload of tomatoes to plaintiffs, and because of said delay said tomatoes were damaged in quality and the market price of the same declined, then you will find for the plaintiffs and as[500]

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Related

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112 S.W. 1002 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1908)

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.W. 101, 136 Mo. App. 494, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parsons-applegate-co-v-louisville-nashville-railroad-moctapp-1909.