Stolle Stone Co. v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.

175 S.W. 250, 189 Mo. App. 683, 1915 Mo. App. LEXIS 227
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 6, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 175 S.W. 250 (Stolle Stone Co. v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.) 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
Stolle Stone Co. v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co., 175 S.W. 250, 189 Mo. App. 683, 1915 Mo. App. LEXIS 227 (Mo. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

NORTONI, J.

This is a suit for damages on account of an alleged breach of contract. At the conclusion of the evidence introduced on the part of plaintiff, the court directed a verdict for defendant. Plaintiff prosecutes the appeal, and the question for consideration relates to the propriety of the ruling mentioned.

It appears that plaintiff maintains a stone quarry near defendant’s railroad in St. Louis county and did so in 1901. A switch track owned by defendant connected with plaintiff’s stone quarry, but it became dilapidated and out of repair. Plaintiff, desiring to [686]*686transport stone from its qnarry over the switch,- approached defendant with a view of inducing the reconstruction of a portion of the track. As a result of the negotiations between the parties concerning this matter, they entered into a written contract on September 25, 1901, which was duly signed by both. By the terms of the contract, defendant undertook and agreed to put the spur track for a distance of 450 feet from the Carondelet Branch of its railroad in safe operating condition .so as to accommodate the traffic of plaintiff quarry company, and plaintiff agreed to pay in advance to defendant the sum of $300 to be used in part payment for constructing the track. It is provided further, in the contract that, in event and after plaintiff had shipped sufficient freight from its quarry over the spur track to yield defendant $1000 in freight charges, defendant would then refund ten per cent of the amount thereafter collected by it on freight bills until said $300 without interest should be repaid to plaintiff. This contract was entered into on September 25,1901, and it is averred that defendant breached it in 1911 — ten years thereafter — through taking up the spur track and moving it away without the consent of plaintiff and without repaying $300 of it. Because of such alleged breach, damages are prayed in the first count of the petition in the sum of $300.

The evidence tends to prove, and, indeed, is conclusive, that the parties entered into the written contract, as above stated, which will be hereafter set forth in full; that plaintiff paid to defendant the $300 cash in accordance with the terms of the contract and defendant put the spur track in proper condition for use at the time. There is no complaint with respect of this and the case concedes that both parties fully complied with the original undertaking therein — that is, that plaintiff paid the $300 and that defendant put the track in proper condition. It appears, too, that the’track was permitted to remain for about ten years — or until [687]*6871911 — when defendant removed it entirely. There is no evidence, however, in the record tending to prove that plaintiff paid defendant as much as $1000 in freight during the time or that it paid freight in any amount so far as that matter is concerned. Indeed, the theory of the case presented to the trial court and pursued here in nowise proceeds upon the hypothesis that plaintiff had become entitled to $300 under the terms of the contract because defendant had failed to comply with its bargain to reimburse it after having collected $1000 freight charges from plaintiff on shipments originating from the quarry. The alleged breach of the contract relied upon for a recovery relates rather to what is assumed to be an implied obligation on the part of defendant to maintain the track for plaintiff’s use indefinitely, for it is averred that defendant removed the track without plaintiff’s consent in 1911, to its damage, etc., in the sum of $300. There is certainly no express stipulation in the contract as to how long defendant should maintain the track or even permit it to remain situate there, and neither is it provided when it might be removed.

Omitting the signatures of the parties, the contract sued upon in full is as follows:

4 4 This Agreement, made and entered into this 25th clay of September, 1901, by and between The Missouri Pacific Railway Company, a railway corporation owned and organized under the laws of the State of Missouri, party of the first part, and the Stolle Stone Company, a corporation organized under the laws of Missouri, party of the second part:
44"Witnesseth, That:
“Whereas, what is known as the Glendale Quarry Spur on the Carondelet Branch of the Missouri Pacific Railway is not in proper condition for the running and operating of cars over it; and
4 4 Whereas, the said party of the second part is desirous of making shipments of stone and other ma[688]*688terial -apon said track for a distance of about four hundred and fifty (450) feet on said spur to its connection with said Carondelet Branch:
“Now, therefore, in consideration of the undertaking by said party of the first part to put the said spur track for a distance of 450 feet from said Carondelet Branch as above stated in safe operating condition, so as to accommodate the traffic of said Stolle Stone Company, the said party of the second part, the Stolle Stone Company, hereby agrees to pay to said party of the first part before the work of repairing said track shall begin the sum of three hundred dollars ($300) to in part cover the costs of putting said track in proper condition; and the said party of the first part hereby agrees, after and in the event it shall receive one thousand dollars ($1000) in freight paid by said Stolle Stone Company in shipments originating on said Glendale Quarry Spur on the Carondelet Branch aforesaid, to refund ten (10) per cent of the amounts thereafter collected on freight bills until said $300, without interest, shall be repaid to said party of the second part. ’ ’

When we attend to the wording of the contract and consider the evidence given on the part of plaintiff, it appears that defendant performed the full measure of its obligation expressly assumed by putting the spur track in proper condition in 1901. The preamble to the contract recites, first, that the track was out of repair ; and, second, that plaintiff desired to make shipments over it. It then proceeds, “Now, therefore, in consideration of the undertaking by said party of the first part (defendant) to put the said spur track for a distance of 450 feet from said Carondelet Branch, as above stated, in safe operating condition, so as to accommodate the traffic of said Stolle Stone Company.,r The stone company (plaintiff) agreed to pay $300 in advance. The provision then follows to the effect that, in event and after plaintiff had paid defendant as [689]*689much as $1000 in freight charges, it should be reimbursed to the amount of $300 so advanced, by receiving a refund of ten per cent of the amounts subsequently collected on the freight bills. But as before said, the latter provision is immaterial, for there is no evidence whatever in the record tending to show a right of recovery with respect to this subject-matter, and, indeed, the suit does not proceed on that theory at all.

By a careful reading of the entire contract it is revealed that no covenant whatever is to be found therein through which defendant undertakes to maintain the spur track at all or to permit it to remain situate there for any definite time. The spur track and the materials of which it was constructed, though situate on plaintiff’s land, were the property of defendant, for all of the evidence shows this to be true.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 S.W. 250, 189 Mo. App. 683, 1915 Mo. App. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stolle-stone-co-v-missouri-pacific-railway-co-moctapp-1915.