State Ex Rel. Hines v. Randles

247 S.W. 808, 212 Mo. App. 413, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 107
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 29, 1923
StatusPublished

This text of 247 S.W. 808 (State Ex Rel. Hines v. Randles) 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
State Ex Rel. Hines v. Randles, 247 S.W. 808, 212 Mo. App. 413, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 107 (Mo. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

*415 BRADLEY, J.

This is a suit upon the bond of a ferryman for damages for the loss of two mules that backed off the ferry boat and were drowned. The cause was tried before the court and a jury. Plaintiff recovered and defendant sureties appealed.

Plaintiff alleged that between September 26th and December 26, 1921, defendant Randles was duly authorized and licensed to, and did keep, operate, manage and control'a ferry boat plying back and forth across Black River at Poplar Bluff; that to secure the faithful performance of his duties as such ferryman and as required by law defendant Randles as principal and defendants J. J. Young, M. Martin and Will Calaway as sureties executed to the State of Missouri a ferryman’s bond in the penal sum of $500, which bond is set out in full in the petition.,' Plaintiff further alleged that defendant Randles was guilty of a breach of said bond, and that Randles and the sureties were liable to plaintiff for said breach; that defendant Randles negligently and carelessly used and operated the ferryboat without any guards at the ends of said boat to prevent horses, mules or other animals that might become frightened while on *416 said boat from backing or1 running therefrom into the river. Plaintiff further alleges that on the-day of October, 1921, he drove his team of mules, hitched to a wagon, upon said boat for the purpose of being transported across the river, and that after he had paid his fare for himself, team and .wagon, and while the boat was being propelled across the river his mules without fault on his part suddenly began backing, and on account of the fact that defendant Randles had negligently failed and neglected to keep guard rails or gates at the ends of said boat, said mules backed from said boat while hitched to the wagon and were drowned. Defendants answered by a general denial, and a plea of contributory negligence wherein it is alleged that plaintiff’s loss was occasioned by his own negligence in failing and neglecting to unhitch his mules from the wagon after being directed so to do, and because of his own negligence in backing the mules off after they became frightened. No reply was filed so far as appears, but no mention is made of this omission.

The evidence showed that there was no guardrail, gate or other thing at the end of this boat to prevent plaintiff’s mules from backing off. The boat was thirty-five feet long and twelve* feet wide, substantially built, and had guardrails at the sides, and when defendant first began operating he had guards for the ends. The last end guardrail had, however, been lost in the river the night before plaintiff’s mules were drowned. At either end of the boat there was an apron which was raised and lowered by a lever. These aprons served as a kind of gangway upon which teams, wagons, etc., entered and left the boat. These aprons where attached to the boat were fifteen inches above the floor of the boat and in addition to serving as a gangway they served to some extent to prevent a team from backing a wagon off. The boat was taken across the river by pulling upon a cable stretched across the river, and upon which- cable ran pulleys connected with the boat. Plaintiff had no bed or wagon box on his wagon and drove on the boat *417 sitting on the hounds. A piece of plank or piece of a railroad tie, plaintiff’s witnesses \say it was a piece about 2 x 12 and about eighteen inches long, was placed under one of the rear wheels of plaintiff’s wagon to act as a scotch. The river was seventy-five or eighty feet wide at the place, and when the boat had gone twenty or twenty-five feet on the way across the mules became frightened at the creaking of the pulleys on the cable and backed off the boat and were drowned.

Defendant Randles did not appeal, and the cause is here on the appeal of the sureties on Randles’ bond. Defendant sureties assign error as follows: (1) In refusing their instruction in the nature of a demurrer at the close of the case; (2) in excluding evidence, and (B) in the instruction given for plaintiff.

Defendant sureties contend, that plaintiff is not within that class of persons who may sue upon the bond. Defendant sureties say in their brief: “This is a penal bond, and, from the whole context of the law with reference to ferries, it is perfectly apparent that it is not for the benefit of plaintiff. In order to enable plaintiff to sue on this bond, he nor the class to which he belongs, not being named therein, it must clearly appear, by the terms of the bond, that he is of the class covered by the condition of the bond.” The bond sued on:, signatures omitted, is as follows: “Ferryman’s Bond. Know all men by these presents: That we, H. J. Randles as principal, and J. J. Young, M. Martin and Will Calaway as sureties, are held and firmlv bound unto the State of Missouri, in the sum of Five hundred dollars for the payment of which we bind ourselves and our heirs, executors, and administrators firmly by these presents.

“The condition of the above bond is such, however, that whereas the said Harve J. Randles has been authorized and licensed by the county court of Butler county to keep a ferry across Black River at Poplar Bluff, from September 26th to December 25th, for a *418 period of three months from this date. Now, therefore, if the said H. J. Randles shall faithfully perform the duties required by law at such ferry, then this obligation to be void; otherwise to remain in full force and effect. Dated at Poplar Bluff, this 26-th day of September, 1921.”

Section 5540, Revised Statutes 1919, provides that every ferryman shall keep at his ferry “a good boat or boats, in good repair, suitable to the water, and sufficient hands to attend on all occasions.” Section 5541, Revised Statutes 1919, provides that “every ferryman failing to give due attention shall, for every offense, forfeit five dollars, and for failure to keep such boat in good repair, shall forfeit thirty dollars to the county where the ferry is situated; and he shall be liable for all damages that any person may sustain thereby, to be recovered by civil action in any court having jurisdiction.” Section 5548, Revised Statutes 1919, provides that “upon the failure of the ferryman to perform any duty herein required the attorney general or prosecuting attorney for the county shall commence and prosecute an action on the bond given by the ferryman, and the recovery of any penalty shall be no bar to any action on such bond.” There is no question about the ferryman being liable for negligence generally, but the question here is: Can suit be maintained on a ferryman’s bond for the negligence of the principal in conducting the business of a ferryman?

The bond required by our statute and given under it was for the faithful performance of the duties required by law, Section 5540 requires that the ferryman shall keep a good boat, in good repair and suitable to the water. The defendant had a good boat when he commenced, but did he continue to keep a good boat, in good repair, and suitable to the water? The river was about ten feet deep, and plaintiff’s mules backed off and were drowned because there was no end guard or gate and because of the depth of the river. Under these facts we think that the ferryman breached his bond in failing to *419

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Bluebook (online)
247 S.W. 808, 212 Mo. App. 413, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hines-v-randles-moctapp-1923.