Schaff v. Roach

1925 OK 613, 243 P. 976, 116 Okla. 205, 46 A.L.R. 296, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 370
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 14, 1925
Docket15491
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1925 OK 613 (Schaff v. Roach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schaff v. Roach, 1925 OK 613, 243 P. 976, 116 Okla. 205, 46 A.L.R. 296, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 370 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

FOSTER, C.

The defendant in error, Govan Roach, as plaintiff, recovered a judgment in the district- court of Oklahoma county against plaintiff in error, Chairies E. Schaff, as receiver lor the properties of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company, as defendant, for the sum of $470.93, the alleged value of certain, goods, wares, and merchandise, which ha¿i been delivered to the -plaintiff in error by the Mound City Paint & Color Company of St. Louis, Mo., foy transportation and delivery to the defendant in error at Oklahoma City, Okla. Parties will be hereinafter referred ito as they appeared in the trial court.

It was charged that after the goods arrived at their destination in Oklahoma City, plaintiff requested defendant to make delivery of said -goods, wa(res, and merchandise at its freight depot in Oklahoma City, which delivery was refused bv the defendant, whereby it became liable to him for ihe value of said goods, which were later destroyed in a fire which burned the defendant’s freight depot in said city.

The answer of the defendant was a general denial. It further pleaded tba-t at the time of the destruction of said goods by fire, its liability as a carrier had been reduced to- that of a warehouseman and that as such warehouseman it was without negligence. In a cross-petition it also sought to recover the freight charges on the shipment amounting to $45.72.

The cause was tried to the count and a jury, resulting in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff fo-r the sum of $479.93, being the amount sued for, less the freight charges found to be due and-owing to ithe defendant.

Motion for a new trial ¡was filed by the defendant, heard and overruled, and it appeals. Several errors have been assigned as grounds for reversal. All of them are predicated upon alleged er,ro-r by the trial court in giving certain instructions to the jury and in refusing to give other ¡requested instructions.

It is first contended, in the very able brief of the defendant, that the court erred in refusing a peremptoivy instruction requested by the defendant in its instruction No. 1. It is established by the record, practically without dispute, that the plaintiff ordered from the Mound City Paint & Color Company of St. Louis, Mo., a quantity of goods, wares and merchandise, consisting of paints and varnishes of the value of $525.65, and that in due course of business the shipper delivered the -goods to the defendant for carriage and delivery to the .plaintiff at his address in Oklahoma City; that the carrier issued what is known as a straight bill of lading,. which did not require, under the rules and regulations of -the defendant, a *206 surrender o.f" such bill of lading upon delivery of the goods to the consignee at destination. The shipment was what is known as an open shipment, by virtue of which the title to the goods passed to the consignee. The goods arrived at Oklahoma City on Monday, September 19, 1921. Tlhe bill of lading, for some reason, was delayed and did not reach the defendant for some weeks after the arrival of the goods at their destination. On the day following the arrival of the goods, the defendant’s cashier mailed to the plaintiff, a post card notice of the arrival of the goods and deposited the same in the U. S. post office, addressed to the plaintiff at the address shown upon the freight receipt accompanying the shipment, and indorsed upon the freight receipt a notation to that effect. This notice, however, for some reason, never reached the plaintiff, whose address had been changed from that given by the bill of lading and the freight bill. Hearing, in some manner not disclosed by the record, that a shipment of goods had arrived at the defendant’s freight depot for him, the plaintiff testified that on the 21st or 22nd day of September, 1921, he called upon the defendant’s cashier at its freight depot in Oklahoma City, gave his name itto the agent, and. asked him if he had any freight here, whereupon the agent, without referring to. the freight bill, asked plaintiff if he had a bill of lading. Plaintiff replied that he did not have a bill of lading, whereupon " the agent said: “You twill have to get a bill of lading, I am busy.” The agent then turned around' and proceeded to wait on somebody else. Plaintiff then testified that he left the freight depot, relying upon the statement of the agent that it would be necessary to have a bill of lading in order to get the goods, and that on the following Saturday, September, 23rd, without again calling for the shipment, the goods were destroyed by fire which consumed the entire freight house of the defendant in Oklahoma City. Plaintiff further testified that his purpose in going to the depot Was .to get the freight; that he had the money to pay the freight, and that no question was raised by the agent as to. a lack of proper identification. The testimony of defendant’s cashier was to the effect that to the best of his recollection no sucii conversation as that detailed by the plaintiff, occurred in connection with the request for the delivery of the shipment. It was, however, for the jury to determine whose testimony it Would believe in this particular, and the jury having by its verdict found that the plaintiff’s version of the transaction was correct, such finding is binding and conclusive in this court on appeal, if no prejudicial errors appear in the instructions given by the trial court to the jury, or in its ruling upon law questions presented during the trial.

There was evidence introduced to the effect that the plaintiff, at a time when the freight was actually in the station of the defendant company, called at the freight depot during business hours for the purpose of receiving it; that he was able and willing to pay the freight charges in any-reasonable amount; that he stated his name and told the agent for whom he wanted the freight; that the cashier in charge of the defendant’s office, without requesting any further showing of his identity, brushed plaintiff aside with the remark that it would be necessary for him to produce a bill of lading, iwith the result that ithe plaintiff did not call at the depot again before a fire, which some two days later consumed the depot and destroyed the prop erty. Whether or not the defendant’s cash ier negligently required of the plaintiff certain unnecessary things and acted in a negligent manner in the performance of his duty was properly submitted to the jury, an(] the jury by its verdict found such issue in favor of plaintiff.

Authorities are cited by the defendant railway company in support of the rule that, where the liability of the defendant railway company is only that of a warehouseman, ¡the burden of proof is on the plaintiff to establish a negligent failure to properly care for the 'goods, and that since there is no proof in the record that the fire which destroyed plaintiff’s property was caused by the negligence of the employes of (he defendant railway company, the trial court should have directed a verdict for the defendant.

From such examination as we have been able to maike of 'these eases, we think it may be said that they go no further than to hold that where the loss is due entirely to fire, and the only negligence relied on by the plaintiff for a recovery is that of a failure by the carrier to exercise reasonable precautions as a warehouseman to prevent it, the mere fact that the goods were destroyed by fire does not sustain the burden of proof and authorize the submission of the case to the jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 613, 243 P. 976, 116 Okla. 205, 46 A.L.R. 296, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schaff-v-roach-okla-1925.