Walton, Jr. v. A.B.C. Fireproof Warehouse Co.

151 S.W.2d 494, 235 Mo. App. 939, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 37
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 151 S.W.2d 494 (Walton, Jr. v. A.B.C. Fireproof Warehouse 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
Walton, Jr. v. A.B.C. Fireproof Warehouse Co., 151 S.W.2d 494, 235 Mo. App. 939, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 37 (Mo. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

*942 BLAND, J.-

This is an action to recover damages for the loss of household goods belonging to the defendant in error, plaintiff below, which he alleges were delivered to the plaintiff in error, defendant below, as a common carrier.

Plaintiff below recovered a verdict in the sum of $688.35, 'but remitted therefrom the sum of $13.41, the aniount of the transportation charges. A judgment was entered in favor of plaintiff below in the sum of $674.94. Defendant below has brought the case here by writ of error. This is the second appeal in the case. [See Walton v. A. B. C. Fireproof Warehouse Co., a corp., 124 S. W. (2d) 584.] Hereinafter the parties will be referred to as they were designated in the court below.

The goods in question were delivered to the defendant in Kansas City for shipment to Joplin but it turned them over to a trucking company at Kansas City, known as the Sunflower Lines, Inc., which contracted with defendant to transport them to Joplin. Defendant took a bill of lading from the trucking company, in which defendant was described as the shipper and plaintiff the consignee. At Arma, Kansas, the Sunflower Lines truck, in which the goods were being transported, collided with a train and most of the goods were destroyed. The bill of lading showed the declared value of the goods to be 10 cents per pound and the Sunflower Lines, Inc., attempted to *943 settle on this valuation and, in this connection offered, in full settlement, tbe amount of $78.79. Plaintiff refused to accept this amount on the ground that he was entitled to the full value of the goods, which, he claimed to be $688.25.

Defendant is engaged in the storage, packing and the forwarding of goods and carrying goods as a common carrier. It owns three warehouses in Kansas City.

When the case was here before plaintiff was seeking to recover on the ground of negligence. After the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded, plaintiff amended his petition so as to allege the delivery of the goods in good condition to the defendant, a common carrier, and the failure of defendant to redeliver them. In other words, the amended petition attempted to recover on the insurer theory of liability. In the last trial, as in the former one, the case was defended on the ground that the defendant received the goods as a warehouseman, not as a common carrier and, as such, acted as plaintiff’s agent in selecting a carrier to transport them from Kansas City to Joplin.

Plaintiff was employed by the Universal Credit Company, located in Kansas City, and had been transferred by it to Joplin. The employer customarily provided the moving of household effects of their employees when they were transferred and it did so in this instance.

J. A. Clark, the manager of the local office of the Universal Credit Company in Kansas City, made all arrangements for the shipment of plaintiff’s goods. The employer had often used the defendant to transport goods of its employees when the latter were transferred.

Defendant insists that the court erred in refusing its instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, offered at the close of all of the evidence, for the reason, among others, that there was no evidence that the defendant accepted plaintiff’s goods as a common carrier for shipment to Joplin or that it undertook, by contract, to ship the goods as a common carrier in this instance, or, that it held itself out so as to lead the public or, more particularly, Clark, in this instance to believe that it was undertaking to act. as a common carrier. There is no evidence of any expressed contract wherein defendant agreed to carry to Joplin the goods in question as a common carrier and, if there is any evidence to support a theory of the relationship of shipper and common carrier between the parties hereto, it must be based upon inferences to be drawn from the testimony. The arrangement was made between Mr. Clark, for the plaintiff, and Mr. Thomas, on behalf of defendant, assisted in some minor respects by Mr. Newman, an employee of the defendant.

Mr. Thomas was secretary-treasurer of the defendant company and had known Mr. Clark for a period of 3% or 4 years. On occasions Mr. Clark had called Mr. Thomas to procure the defendant to transport goods of the employees of the Universal Credit Company.

*944 •Mr. Clark, testifying for the plaintiff, stated that on the occasion in question he called Mr. Thomas on the telephone and requested him to go to plaintiff’s apartment in Kansas City and examine the goods to be shipped and give the witness an estimate of the cost for shipping them to Joplin. After having the goods inspected Mr. Thomas called Mr. Clark on the telephone and, according to the latter, he told him, to the effect, that defendant’s vans did not regularly make trips to Joplin and unless defendant took the goods down with other goods the charge would be about $60 but, if shipped with other goods, it would be around $30 to $35. Thereupon, Mr. Clark directed Mr. Thomas to get the goods and take them to defendant’s warehouse and that he would advise Mr. Thomas in a day or two when to ship them. Mr. Clark further testified that, in about two or three days, he was in Joplin and ascertained that an apartment there had been procured by plaintiff. Thereupon, he called defendant by long distance telephone and asked to talk to Mr. Thomas, but the latter was out, so he talked to Mr. Newman, another employee of the defendant, and requested him to ship the goods the following morning, if possible. When Mr. Newman asked him for details about the shipment, Mr. Clark replied: “Mr. Thomas knows all about it, just leave it to Mr. Thomas.” Mr. Thomas, upon being advised by Mr. Newman of this conversation, called the Sunflower Lines, a common carrier hauling by truck, and requested it to come to defendant’s warehouse in Kansas City and get the shipment for its night haul to Joplin. This was done by the trucking company.

Mr. Thomas, who testified for the defendant, stated, concerning the second conversation with Mr. Clark, to the effect that he called the latter over the telephone and told him that the charge for packing the goods will be $12, for hauling them to defendant’s warehouse $7, and that if the defendant sent the goods either by railroad or by a merchandising truck hauling concern, making the trip every day, the freight would be about $15; that if Mr. Clark wanted “it in our own van, we had two methods, one where we sent out our trucks any day on special shipments, or taken when, we were making a regular trip, the rates would be different;” that the charge for special shipment would be $60.55 and for a regular trip it would be $28.27; that he gave him estimates on all three methods of handling the shipment and recommended the Sunflower Lines “because of the fact it was cheaper;” that he told Mr. Clark that the Sunflower Lines had connections with the Tommie’s Transfer Company in Joplin and that company, when the goods arrived in Joplin, could take the shipment to plaintiff’s house and unpack it for him; that if the goods were shipped either by railroad or freight truck the goods would be moved at a 10 cents per pound valuation; that Mr. Clark told him to get the goods and take them to defendant’s warehouse and hold them there for further instructions.. , ;

*945 Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
151 S.W.2d 494, 235 Mo. App. 939, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walton-jr-v-abc-fireproof-warehouse-co-moctapp-1941.