Reading v. Chicago Burlington & Quincy Railroad

145 S.W. 1166, 165 Mo. App. 123, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 456
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 2, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 145 S.W. 1166 (Reading v. Chicago Burlington & Quincy 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
Reading v. Chicago Burlington & Quincy Railroad, 145 S.W. 1166, 165 Mo. App. 123, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 456 (Mo. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

NORTONI, J.

This is a suit for damages accrued to plaintiff on laecount of defendant’s negligence in maintaining its stock pen. Plaintiff recovered and defendant prosecutes the appeal.

It appears defendant maintains a stock pen for the accommodation of shippers at a siding or station on its railroad at Reading, about seven miles from Louis[126]*126iana, Missouri. Plaintiff is a farmer and ships cattle and hogs over defendant’s railroad from Reading station several times each year. Defendant maintains no office and has no agent at Reading but all shipments of stock from that point are negotiated through its freight agent at Louisiana, seven miles distant. •

On June 29, plaintiff telephoned defendant’s agent at Louisiana that he desired to ship a carload of hogs from Reading on the evening of the following day, and requested a car for that purpose. Defendant’s agent assured him that the car would be furnished in due time, and on the following morning plaintiff, together with others, drove the hogs about three miles from his home to Reading station. As the weather was warm, the hogs, eighty-two in number, were removed from plaintiff’s farm to defendant’s stock pen in the early part of the day. It appears that by 10:30 o’clock plaintiff had delivered all of the eighty-two hogs in good order and condition in defendant’s stock pen at Reading to await the arrival of the car in which they were to be loaded in the cool of the evening for the freight due there about 9 :00' p. m. After having placed the hogs in the stock pen, plaintiff returned to his home and telephoned defendant’s freight agent at Louisiana, Missouri that the hogs were delivered in the pen and to bill them out. In response to this message, defendant’s agent answered, “All right,” and took a memorandum over the telephone of the number of the hogs, their character, the consignee and their destination at East St. Louis. About the middle of the afternoon, thirty-four of the hogs were found dead from overheat, and another diéd soon after.

The petition charges that defendant so carelessly and negligently maintained its stock pen at Reading as to prevent ventilation and the circulation of air therein and that it is because of this negligence the .hogs came to their , death. It is averred that defendant negligently piled railroad ties along and adjacent [127]*127to one side of the stock pen and permitted tall weeds and grass to grow np and stand thick adjacent to all the remaining sides thereof so as to prevent the free circulation of air within the pen. The evidence tends to prove that plaintiff drove his hogs carefully from home in the early part of the day and permitted them to cool off thoroughly before placing them in the pen about ten o’clock in the forenoon. If the evidence is to be accepted as true, as it was by the jury, the hogs' were certainly sound and in good order when plaintiff delivered them to defendant in the pen. The evidence tends to prove, too, that a condition of excessive heat prevailed in the stock pen because the circulation of air was largely impeded therein as a result of the thick growth of weeds and the pile of ties complained of in the petition. There is evidence, too, that these weeds and ties were negligently permitted to grow and stand around and adjacent to the stock pen.

It is argued the judgment should be reversed because it is said the delivery of the hogs to defendant was not complete at the time they died. Touching this-argument, it may be said that defendant should be required to respond for the consequences of its, negligence in the circumstances of the case at any event; for, though the hogs were not delivered to defendant in the sense that it had ¡acknowledged receipt therefor by issuing a. bill of lading or had undertaken the task of loading them on the car, which more properly rested with plaintiff, the evidence is conclusive to the effect that its agent in charge invited plaintiff to place the hogs in the pen to await the arrival of the car which had been ordered the day before. No one can doubt that it is the duty of defendant, common carrier of live stock, to maintain yards or stock pens for the accommodation of those desiring to ship animals over its road. The duty to maintain such, stock pens includes, too, >an obligation which the law annexes that they shall be maintained rea[128]*128sonably safe for the purpose intended. Therefore, if a shipper is invited by defendant to corral his hogs or cattle in such pen to await the arrival of a car, as a corollary of such invitation, the law casts the obligation on it to respond for such damages as may result to the shipper through negligence in the construction or maintenance of the stock pen. [See Lackland v. C. & A. R. Co., 101 Mo. App. 420, 74 S. W. 505; Cooks v. K. C. & Ft. S. R. Co., 57 Mo. App. 471; Kincaid v. K. C., etc. R. Co., 62 Mo. App, 365.]

But aside from all of this, there is an abundance in the testimony of both plaintiff and defendant’s agent to constitute substantial evidence to the effect that the shipment of hogs had been actually received by defendant about 11:15 o ’clock in the forenoon. Touching this matter, plaintiff testified that he notified defendant’s agent through the telephone that he had delivered the hogs in defendant’s stock pen to await the arrival of the car; that defendant’s agent took the number and character of hogs, the name of the consignee and the place of destination and informed plaintiff he would bill them out accordingly. Defendant’s agent testified substantially the same as to this matter, but says he did not actually make out the billing until 5:00 o’clock in the afternoon. It is true plaintiff admits that he was to come later in the day, in accordance with the custom, and load the hogs into the car from 4he stock pen, but, be this as it may, enough appears to support the finding of the jury that an actual delivery had been made to defendant before the hogs died, for, though 'a delivery implies a change of possession from the shipper to the carrier and that the shipper has relinquished control of the property, for the time being, to the exclusive possession of the carrier, such may be found from the evidence here, notwithstanding the custom which required plaintiff to perform the physical act of loading the hogs on the car after it arrived. We say this on the evidence of plaintiff, that he noti[129]*129fied defendant’s agent he had delivered the hogs to it -in the stock pen, and the agent said “All right,” and that he took the number and character of the hogs together with the name of the consignee, for the purpose of issuing the billing. From such direct testimony and other facts and circumstances in evidence, it was certainly competent for the jury to find that possession of the hogs had been delivered to defendant, and this question was especially presented to the triers of the facts by instructions on both sides. [See Lackland v. C. & A. R, Co., 101 Mo. App. 420, 74 S. W. 505; Mason v. Mo. Pac. R. Co., 25 Mo. App. 473 ; 6 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2 Ed.), p. 461.]

Touching the matter of plaintiff’s contributory negligence, if any, most assuredly it may not be declared as a matter of law on the proof here so as to entirely preclude his right of recovery. It may have been careless for him to corral eighty-two fat hogs in a dry pen on a heated June day without looking more closely to the matter of ventilation, but, unless the situation was so obviously dangerous that no reasonably prudent man would place that number of like hogs in the pen for the time being, plaintiff’s negligence is not to be declared as a matter of law.

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Related

Humphreys v. St. Louis & Hannibal Railway Co.
178 S.W. 233 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1915)
Reading v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad
173 S.W. 451 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1915)
Morrison Grain Co. v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.
170 S.W. 404 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1914)
Feldewerth v. Wabash Railroad
164 S.W. 711 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
145 S.W. 1166, 165 Mo. App. 123, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reading-v-chicago-burlington-quincy-railroad-moctapp-1912.