Warner v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad

137 S.W. 275, 156 Mo. App. 523, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 338
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 8, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 137 S.W. 275 (Warner v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad) 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
Warner v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad, 137 S.W. 275, 156 Mo. App. 523, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 338 (Mo. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

GRAY, J.

This is a suit instituted against the defendant, a railroad company, to recover damages which plaintiff alleges accrued to him on a shipment of lambs and sheep over the road of the defendant, from Conway.i Mo., to the stockyards at East St. Louis, Ill., in August, 1910.

The facts are practically undisputed, and may be stated as follows: On the 13th day of August, 1910, the plaintiff notified the defendant’s agent at Conway, that he would.need, on August-15, double-deck cars sufficient to carry a shipment of 59 sheep and 177 lambs from Conway to said stockyards, and that he desired to ship said stock for the August 16th market. At the time this request was made, the plaintiff knew the defendant only had one train a day upon which stock was shipped from Conway, and that that train was due at Conway at 6:47 a. .m. In fact, the demand for cars was made, and this suit was brought for the purpose of testing the reasonableness of the schedule that defendant had in force for operating its trains at the time the demand was made.

The stock was about ten or twelve miles from Conway and had to be driven to the station for loading. The weather was so warm that such stock had to be brought in during the forenoon, and accordingly plaintiff delivered his stock at the defendant’s pens about [529]*529eleven a. m. on the morning of the 15th. The agent had the cars which were to carry plaintiff’s sheep, locked, so that the sheep could not he loaded during the day. In the evening, however, the cars were unlocked and placed at plaintiff’s disposal. The sheep were loaded and left for St. Louis on the morning of the 16th, the cars containing them having -been attached to the regular 6:47 train. The stock reached the stock yards in East St. Louis that night, and was unloaded and sold the next day.

The plaintiff’s evidence shows that leaving the stock in the defendant’s pens at Conway during the afternoon of the 15th, and all night of the 16th, had a tendency to worry the animals and thereby caused a shrinkage or loss of flesh; that the stock when shipped on the morning train, arrived in St. Louis at night and was unloaded and at once went to the troughs to drink, but would not drink but little after that, and therefore, when viewed by the buyer after ten o’clock the next day,, presented a shrunken and rough appearance, and a less price was obtained on account thereof.

During the night of the 15th, the evidence shows two freight trains passed through Conway. One of these trains carried thirty carloads of stock, and did net stop, and the other carried five carloads of stock with other freight, and stopped and set out a car that had become disabled. Conway was not a stopping place for either of these trains, and the one stopped only for the purpose of setting out a car that was dangerous to permit to longer remain in the train.

The plaintiff offered testimony tending to prove that prior to March 13, 1910, the company had maintained a schedule and provided a train for shippers at Conway, at about the hour of eleven o’clock a. m. that they could load their stock on that train and it arrived at the stockyards the next morning, was unloaded, went to the' troughs to drink, filled up on water and presented a round and plump appearance to the buyer.

[530]*530The 'above contains a fair statement of plaintiff’s pleading and his evidence.

The defendant showed that its system consisted of 5000 miles of railroad, extending from St. Louis, Mo., through this state,- into Arkansas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Texas and Mississippi; that the company maintained a single track railroad between St. Louis and Springfield; that at certain points along its railroad it had divisions where engines and train crews were changed and trams made up and dispatched; that it had adopted over its entire system, a rule that required a local pick-up train tor start from a division point in the morning, and do local work and gather cars of stock and carry'them to the first division point where all stock thus picked up was consolidated into a through fast stock train, and carried to market without stopping to pick up other cars or do further switching; that Conway was between Springfield and Newburg, the first division point east of Springfield ; that in August, 1907, it maintained a local pick-up train between Springfield and Newburg; that this train left Springfield at 3 :40 in the morning, and arrived at Conway at 6:47 a. m., and was adquate to carry all the freight between Springfield and Newburg, and that the stock so picked up by said local train was consolidated at Newburg into one of the said fast stock trains and carried to the stockyards.

The defendant’s testimony further showed that all the stock carried over its system, except that received at division points, was carried one day on the local pick-up train'and no longer; that plaintiff was treated the same as others, and was not discriminated against, but under the schedule adopted and in force, ’ all shippers were treated exactly alike.

The evidence further shows that the fast stock train between Springfield and St: Louis, was known as No. 30,' and it often consisted of as many as eight sections, owing to the number of cars of cattle to be transported; that much of this stock came from Oklahoma and other [531]*531southern points, and that defendant carried it from Springfield to St. Louis on its fast stock trains without stopping, in order to get the'stock to market inside of the twenty-eight hour law enacted by Congress.

The defendant offered further testimony showing that its method of handling stock for the St. Louis market was the same as it handled shipments to Kansas City and other points. • It was shown that stock coming from Thayer, the first division south of Springfield on the Memphis route, was carried to Springfield on the local pick-up train, and whether it was shipped to Kansas City or St. Louis, was carried from Springfield on a fast stock train; that the first division point west from Springfield on the Kansas City route, is Ft. Scott, Kansas; that all stock delivered for shipment between Springfield and Ft. Scott, was gathered up by local freight and carried to Ft. Scott, and there consolidated into a fast stock train and rushed through to Kansas City.

The defendant further showed that it had daily reports to its superinteudent as to the amount of stock that would be offered for shipment, and that arrangements were made to have the engines and crews ready at division points, to carry the stock through on fast trains; that if its fast stock trains had to be stopped at Conway to receive plaintiff’s stock, then it was likewise bound to stop them at all local points to receive stock, and that it could not do so and get the stock to market within a reasonable time. *

The defendant claimed that its schedule in force prior to March 13th, was unsatisfactory; that the.train left Springfield about eight o’clock in the morning, and there was so much to be done between Springfield and Newburg that the train crew was often unable to get the train to Newburg in time for its St. Louis connections, and on account thereof, the stock did not get to St. Louis in time for the following day’s market; that in order to meet this difficulty, it started the train from Springfield [532]*532ahead of time, but even then it interfered with the trains west bound, so that the arrangement was unsatisfactory end the new schedule adopted.

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Bluebook (online)
137 S.W. 275, 156 Mo. App. 523, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warner-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railroad-moctapp-1911.