State Ex Rel. Pabst Brewing Co. v. Ellison

226 S.W. 577, 286 Mo. 225, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 105
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 31, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 226 S.W. 577 (State Ex Rel. Pabst Brewing Co. v. Ellison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Pabst Brewing Co. v. Ellison, 226 S.W. 577, 286 Mo. 225, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 105 (Mo. 1921).

Opinion

WILLIAMSON, J.

This is a certiorari case, in which we are asked to quash the record of the Kansas City Court of Appeals in the suit of the Pabst Brewing Company against the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company, hereinafter called the Milwaukee, and the Southern Railway Company, hereinafter called the Southern.

The facts revealed by the opinion of the respondents are few and simple.

The Pabst Brewing Company desired to ship 170 half-barrels of a beverage called “Pablo,” from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to Globe, Arizona, and for that purpose delivered this shipment to the Milwaukee, as the initial carrier, which, in turn, delivered it to the Southern.

The Brewing Company had long been engaged in brewing beer and the beverage in question was shipped in half-barrels, of a kind commonly used for the shipment of beer. Each half-barrel had pasted over the bunghole an internal revenue stamp such as was required by the United States Government to be placed upon beer so shipped, and each of these stamps bore printed upon its face the word “Beer.”

At the time the Milwaukee received this shipment for transportation it issued to the Brewing Company a bill of lading in the usual form,, which specified among other things, that the Milwaukee had received from the *229 Brewing Company 170 half-barrels of “Pablo” for transportation to Globe, Arizona; that the contents and condition of the contents of these half-barrels were unknown, and the further statement that the shipment in question was “170 half-barrels of Pablo, unfermented, non-alcholic beverages.” The goods in question were duly delivered by the Milwaukee to the Southern, and by the latter carrier were transported to Lordsburg, New Mexico. At that time prohibition obtained in Arizona in its most arid form, and beer and all manner of intoxicants were prescribed by constitutional provision, legislative enactment, and judicial decision. At Lordsburg, which was the last station before reaching Arizona, the Southern opened the car containing this shipment and made an examination of the contents of several of these half-barrels. The “chemical experts” employed for that purpose ascertained that the vessels in question contained a liquid which “looked, foamed and smelled like beer.” (As to taste, the record is dark.) Thereupon the Southern declined further to transport these goods, notified the Brewing Company of that fact and of its reason for so refusing, namely the law aforesaid, and desired to be informed what disposition the Brewing Company would make of the shipment. It was finally agreed, without prejudice as to any legal rights of the parties, that the Southern should empty the contents, which had spoiled by reason of the delay, and return the containers to the Brewing Company, which was done. Thereupon the Brewing Company sued the two railway companies for damages for the loss of the beverages thus destroyed.

At the trial a verdict was rendered in behalf of. the defendants. The trial court granted a new trial, and the defendants appealed to the Kansas City Court of Appeals. The latter tribunal remanded the cause with directions to the trial court to set aside the order granting a new trial and to enter judgment upon the verdict for the defendants..

*230 Conflict. *229 Relator contends that the decision of the Kansas City Court of Appeals is in conflict with various con *230 trolling decisions of this court upon the ground that ^le Uicts stated made out a prima-facie case in behalf of relator, which it was entitled to have submitted to a jury, whereas, respondents in their opinion hold that the trial court should peremptorily have instructed the jury to find for defendants.

Pertinent portions of the Court of Appeals’ opinion are as follows:

“We recognize that in all instances involving the constitution of a state, as it relates to the domestic policy of such state, we should follow the construction given to that instrument by the courts of that state.
‘‘On that basis there is a question in the case which may be divided into two parts: first, whether the liquid called 'Pablo’ was beer without regard to whether it contained alcohol in intoxicating quantities; and, second, if it was not beer, was it so shipped by plaintiff as to deceive the defendant Southern Pacific Railway Company into the belief that it was beer, and thereby justify such company in refusing to take it into the State of Arizona.
“As to the first, plaintiff insists that the evidence showed the liquid called ‘Pablo,’ is an unfermented nonintoxicating carbonated beverage, manufactured by an entirely different process from that used in making beer. That to make beer it must go through fermentation and be made from malt.
“On the other hand, defendant claims that the evidence showed plaintiff had maintained a large brewery and had made beer with intoxicating alcoholic properties for perhaps seventy-five years and that only in the last three or four years had it produced what it now called ‘Pablo.’ It was shown that Pablo had the color, foam and smell of beer, and that it was made in plaintiff’s brewery by much the same process except it did not contain alcohol or malt.
“We need not pursue the first branch of the subject further than to say that the state of the evidence *231 was such, as to make a jury question whether ‘Pablo’ was beer as defined by the Supreme Court of Arizona, or was it an unfermented, non-intoxicating carbonated beverage made without the ingredients which distinguish beer.
“But as to the second branch of the question, we think it so clearly established that plaintiff shipped the liquid in such manner, as, connected with its appearance, deceived defendants and justified the Southern Pacific Company in refusing to carry it into the State of Arizona, that the trial court should have directed a verdict for them. In this connection plaintiff makes claim of facts which the record does not justify, in that it states that defendant, the Milwaukee Railroad, received the liquid knowing that it was not beer, but was ‘Pablo,’ a non-intoxicating liquor, and agreed to transport it. The fact was to the contrary. .
“Plaintiff also undertakes to avoid the condition in the bill of lading that the contents of the car was unknown, by the claim that there was stamped on the bill that the shipment was ‘170 half-barrels of Pablo, un-fermented, non-alcoholic carbonated beverages.’ But the meaning of the two statements evidently is that plaintiff stated that the shipment was a non-alcoholic beverage, while the carrier, in effect, refused to accept such statement and itself stated that the contents were unknown. The sum of it all being that here was a shipment which the shipper declared was a lawful one, but which turned out, to every appearance, to be unlawful.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
226 S.W. 577, 286 Mo. 225, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-pabst-brewing-co-v-ellison-mo-1921.