St. Louis S. F. R. Co. v. Shepard

1913 OK 707, 139 P. 833, 40 Okla. 589, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 101
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 9, 1913
Docket2978
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1913 OK 707 (St. Louis S. F. R. Co. v. Shepard) 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
St. Louis S. F. R. Co. v. Shepard, 1913 OK 707, 139 P. 833, 40 Okla. 589, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 101 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

TURNER, J.

This is a common-law. action to recover damages for the failure to- deliver, within a reasonable time, certain live stock which plaintiff had delivered to defendant, a common carrier, to be transported for hire from Ft. Worth, Tex., to Kansas City, Mo.; the alleged injury growing out of the shrinkage of the cattle and a decline of the market. After the fourth paragraph of the petition had been eliminated by demurrer, defendant answered, and set up two special contracts, and pleaded certain alleged exemptions therein contained to defeat the action. There was trial to a jury, and judgment for plaintiff, and defendant brings the case here.

As the plaintiff’s -right to recover depends upon his ability to show negligent delay on the part of the carrier, and as we need not cite authorities' in supjport of the proposition that none of the provisions of the contract limiting the common-law liability of the carrier are available as a defense against its negligence, we lay the contracts out of the case.

*591 It is first assigned that the court erred in overruling the demurrer thereto at the close of plaintiff’s evidence. The contention is that the evidence was insufficient to take the question of negligence to the jury. There is no dispute as to the facts. The evidence discloses that on May 13, 1909, plaintiff, at Ft. Worth, Tex., notified defendant that he had six cars of cattle' ready to ship over its road to Kansas City; that, pursuant thereto, defendant furnished cars, and the cattle were loaded at 5 :45 that afternoon, and left Et. Worth for their destination at 7:35 p. m., after a delay of 1 hour and 50 minutes. They arrived at Sherman, Tex., at 3 :15 a. m. the following morning, and, after a delay of 1 hour and 50 minutes, occasioned by the defendant’s dispatcher erroneously reporting the arriving time of the train, in consequence of which defendant failed to call the train crew until after the train arrived in Sherman, they left Sherman at 5:05 a. m., arriving at Denison at 5:40 a. m. and at Francis at 11:10 a. m. There were three stops' between Denison and Francis, aggregating a delay of 1 hour and 10 minutes, exclusive of which the train averaged a little over twenty miles per hour. They left Francis at 11:45 a. m., after a delay of 35 minutes, for Sapulpa. Between those points there was an unexplained stop of 38 minutes at Weleetka, 50 minutes at Okmulgee, and another at Hamilton Switch. They arrived at Sapulpa at 5 :50 p. m., consuming 6 hours and o minutes from Francis to Sapulpa, a distance of 101 miles, making an average of about seventeen miles per hour straight running time, or, deducting the stops, an average of about 22 miles per hour. After a delay of 30 minutes at Sapulpa, the train left at 6 :20 p. m. for Alton, a distance of 90 miles, ar7 riving there at 11 p. m., making 29 hours and 15 minutes that the cattle were on the cars. There they were unloaded at about 1 o’clock the morning of the 15th and placed in a pen 80x120 feet, with a mud hole in the middle of it, located on the main street of the town, where people continually passed, causing the cattle to run back and forth through the mud hole, and where they were so crowded they could not lie down. At 7 o’clock that evening they were again loaded and permitted to stand in the cars until 9 :30 p. m. before the train pulled out for Kansas City, *592 'where they arrived at 3:15 p. m., May ICth, the transit consuming 68 hours. The record further discloses that the plaintiff in writing had requested defendant to extend the 28-hour period for the cattle to be on the car without unloading to 36 hours, and that 36 hours was a reasonable time in which to transport them from the starting point to their destination. The cost of their feed at Afton was $21, which plaintiff paid. The cattle were sold on the market Monday, May 17th, 40 cents lower than was the market on which they would have been sold had they arrived within a reasonable time.

The undisputed facts disclosing, as the}- do, that 36 hours was was a reasonable time in which to deliver the cattle at their destination, and that 68 hours was consumed in the transit, the delay was apparently unreasonable, and hence there was no error in the court holding, as it did, in effect, that the evidence was sufficient to make a prima facie case for plaintiff, and to take the question of negligence to the jury.

In St. L. & S. F. R. Co. v. Perry, ante, 138 Pac. 1027, in the syllabus we said:

“If in a common-law action to recover damages for the breach of a shipping contract,,whereby defendant undertook to safely transport certain cattle, it is shown that defendant failed to deliver the same in a safe condition within a reasonable time, a presumption of negligence arises, and the onus is upon the defendant to excuse itself from negligence.”

And this, too, whether the shipping contract was in writing or not. See, also, Bosley v. Baltimore, etc., R. Co., 54 W. Va. 563, 46 S. E. 615, 66 L. R. A. 871, where the court, quoting approvingly from Elliott on Railroads, vol. 4, sec. 1483, says:

“There is no fixed rule of law determining what will or will not constitute an unreasonable delay in all cases. The carrier is in all instances bound to use ordinary care and diligence to avoid unreasonable delay, but many elements must be taken into consideration in determining whether there was or was not unreasonable delay in the particular instance. The fact that there was unusual delay does not always show a breach of duty. * * * Where the delay is an unusual one, and is not explained, it is held to be prima facie evidence of negligence, but that in case *593 where there is only a slight delay the rule is different”

—and in the same opinion:

“Is the judgment right upon the evidence? Did the defendant deliver the cattle at the place of destination safely, and within a reasonable time? An unusual delay in their delivery having been proved, it devolves upon the defendant to show that the delay was from a cause for which it was not responsible.”

McMillan v. Chicago, etc., Ry. Co. et al., 147 Iowa, 596, 124 N. W. 1069, was an action to recover damages for negligence in the transportation of a horse, resulting in the death of the animal. The facts were that plaintiff shipped a car load of horses from the fair at Des Moines, Iowa, to be exhibited at the Minnesota State Fair at Hamline. They were shipped under a written contract with the C., R. I. & P. Ry. Co., for the transportation over its lines to' Minneapolis and delivery of the car there to the proper connecting company; the liability of said company being limited to its own line. After the car reached Minneapolis, it was without delay taken from that company by the Minnesota Transfer Company for the purpose of being switched to the connecting track of the latter company with the other defendant, the Great Northern Railway Company, by which it was to be conveyed to the proper place for unloading at the State Fair grounds at Hamline.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 707, 139 P. 833, 40 Okla. 589, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-s-f-r-co-v-shepard-okla-1913.