Shoptaugh v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad

126 S.W. 752, 147 Mo. App. 8, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 525
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 21, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 126 S.W. 752 (Shoptaugh v. St. Louis & San Francisco 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
Shoptaugh v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad, 126 S.W. 752, 147 Mo. App. 8, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 525 (Mo. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

Action for damages for defendant company’s failure to furnish plaintiff sufficient cars to ship 120,000 feet of oak logs of the value of $1920, and 60,000 feet of cypress logs of the value of $840, from the station of Terry to Chaffee, Missouri, during the months of July, August, September and October, 1907. Plaintiff averred he frequently demanded of defendant’s agent at Hayti, a station three miles from Terry, and the right place to apply, cars in which to ship the said logs, the agent promised to furnish them, but did not; by reason of this omission of duty the logs became damaged and depreciated in value and caused plaintiff a loss of $920, for which he prayed judgment. Besides a general denial, the answer said defendant furnished plaintiff all the cars at the station of Terry needed to transact the average business done with him there and consistent with defendant’s duty to its other patrons at said station and elsewhere along its line; that if plaintiff was prevented from making timely shipments of his logs by lack of cars during the interval mentioned, it was on account of the unusual pressure of business at the station, together with the unusual pres[13]*13sure of business on defendant’s railroad at other places, which prevented defendant from supplying cars at different stations necessary to meet the emergency — an emergency which could not be foreseen in time to prepare for it; that defendant made a just distribution of cars at Terry with reference to its duty as a common carrier to all its patrons. It is also averred an extraordinary freshet rendered it impossible for a considerable period to supply cars at Terry or elsewhere on the line of defendant’s railway or to haul shipments for plaintiff. The new matter in the answer was put in issue by a reply denying the averments.

It is enough to say of the testimony in this case that it proved plaintiff needed four cars a day, which were not furnished as demanded during the period mentioned, and he suffered loss in consequence; further, that he demanded cars frequently and the agent sometimes promised to furnish them but did not, and at other times said they could not be obtained. For defendant the evidence tended to prove there was a great and unexpected increase of transportation business over the country generally during the months in question, and many railroad companies fell behind fifty to sixty per cent in supplying their patrons with shipping facilities, defendant among others; car manufacturing companies were behind with their orders and railway companies could not obtain more cars to handle the accession of business; the officers of this company who were charged with looking after the matter, distributed as rapidly and equitably as possible, cars to the different stations along its lines, including the line over which plaintiff shipped and to the different patrons at each station; they had 150 flat cars on the line to use for the carriage of logs in the district where plaintiff shipped and 175 coal cars were used for hauling logs out whenever they hauled coal into the district; in making this distribution plaintiff was treated like other shippers and his due proportion of cars of the kind he needed was al[14]*14lotted and furnished Mm as promptly as possible; as lumber was high in price, there was an enormous increase in the demand for cars to carry timber; there was a “car famine” in 1907. Another witness said there were 127 stations from which defendant took out logs in the Terry district and from forty to forty-five cars to distribute daily thereon. On this issue of' fact the testimony for plaintiff went to prove there had been a deficiency of cars at the station of Terry for two or three years anterior to the summer and fall of 1907, and plaintiff and others engaged in the same business had been unable often during that period, to procure cars when they needed them. Some .of the testimony for plaintiff went to prove there was a better supply of cars during the summer and fall of 1907 than for some time before, though the supply always had been inadequate. The effect of this evidence, if believed, was to show the deficiency of cars was not due to an extraordinary accession of business, but because defendant failed to keep on hand enough cars to supply the ordinary demands of shippers. The verdict was in plaintiff’s favor for $507.96, and defendant appealed.

Defendant filed a motion to compel plaintiff to make his petition more specific, saying the petition averred plaintiff had placed for shipment at Terry, during the months mentioned, 120,000 oak and 60,000 cypress logs, but had failed to state what quantities of logs he had placed at said station for shipment on different dates, where the same were to be shipped, the character of the cars required for them, the market price of the timber for which cars were required, either at the point of shipment or point of destination, when he made application for cars, or how many he desired for each shipment; all of which particulars defendant alleged should have been given and the court was prayed to require plaintiff to give them. This' motion was overruled and .an exception saved. The other points raised on appeal are that the court erred in not sustaining [15]*15a demurrer to the case made by plaintiff, in receiving testimony from tbe witnesses for plaintiff tending to prove there was no unusual shortage of timber cars on defendant’s line of railroad at the station of Terry and other stations in the vicinity, during the months mentioned, but there had been an inadequate supply of cars for two or three years before; erred also in disregarding the testimony of the witnesses for defendant, and all competent testimony, which went to prove the cause of plaintiff’s not being supplied with cars as he needed them, was the unusual and great increase of business on defendant’s railroad and the lines of other companies in 1907.

The petition was specific enough as to the quantity of logs, their value and the two hinds offered for shipment by plaintiff during the four months from July to October, 1907, inclusive. It also alleged that on numerous occasions plaintiff asked for cars but failed to get them, and defendant failed to furnish plaintiff cars in which to ship the logs mentioned or any of them, and in consequence they (the logs) became damaged and decreased in value, as the market meanwhile declined. The effect of those allegations was to state a case for not furnishing cars to haul any of the logs during the months named, and this was “a plain and concise statement of the facts constituting a cause of action.” [R. S. 1899, sec. 592.]

The motion for a more definite petition asked to have one fact given which the petition already gave, i. e., the place to which the logs were to be shipped. In the petition nothing was said about the logs being delivered for separate shipments on different dates, but the motion took this for granted in asking that plaintiff be required to set forth the quantity he had on hand “for each particular shipment and the dates thereof.” The court could not know the logs were tendered on various days for separate shipments; hence said part of the motion was bound to be overruled. In the petition [16]*16it is averred plaintiff “frequently and on numerous occasions made demand of defendant and on its duly authorized agents for cars on which to load and ship said logs, and defendant promised to furnish them but did not do so,” etc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 S.W. 752, 147 Mo. App. 8, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shoptaugh-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railroad-moctapp-1910.