Wyatt v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.

158 S.W. 720, 173 Mo. App. 210, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 679
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 28, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 158 S.W. 720 (Wyatt 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
Wyatt v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co., 158 S.W. 720, 173 Mo. App. 210, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 679 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

FARRINGTON, J.

—Plaintiff obtained judgment for $ 509.50 as damages to twenty-three head of mules belonging to him and which he shipped from Webb City, Mo., to East St; Louis, 111. Defendant brings its appeal to this court, alleging error in the refusal of the trial court to give a peremptory instruction in its behalf, and in the action of the court in admitting testimony touching the handling and caring for the animals subsequent to their arrival in East St. Louis.

[214]*214.The facts are that at about ten o’clock a. m., November 16,1910, the defendant at its depot at Webb City received for shipment from plaintiff twenty-three head of mules, making one carload, and that they reached their destination—East St. Louis, 111.—be-tween three and four o’clock on November nineteenth after being about seventy-eight hours in transit. There is evidence on the part of the plaintiff showing that the usual time for such shipment is twenty-four hours. No one accompanied the carload of mules, but the plaintiff went to East St. Louis on the night of November seventeenth, arriving on Friday morning, the eighteenth. He testified that the condition of the track was good and that there were no wrecks that obstructed the track or traffic; and there was slight evidence that on the morning of the eighteenth plaintiff saw his carload of mules on a sidetrack at Tipton, Mo., a station on defendant’s line. When plaintiff reached East St. Louis, his mules were not there, and on inquiring of the Missouri Pacific agent was told that his mules could not be found in East St. Louis and that he did not know where they were. Plaintiff then called the agent at Webb City by telephone and he likewise told plaintiff he did not know where the mules were, but said he would try and locate them. There is evidence to support a finding that the mules when they reached East St. Lords on Saturday afternoon were in a run-down, stiff and guant condition; that they were in an unsaleable condition' and not worth over fifty or sixty dollars each. The plaintiff testified that he was a stock man and had been handling stock at frequent intervals in East St. Louis for the past ten or twelve years; that he knew what the market price for the kind of mules he had shipped was on Friday, the eighteenth, which wa¡s the day on which-his mules would have been offered for sale had they reached their destination in the usual time. The evidence shows that plaintiff notified defendant’s agent at East St. [215]*215Louis of the time the mules arrived and informed him of the condition they were in on arrival. There is evidence showing that as the mides arrived on Saturday afternoon between three and four o’clock, it was impossible for plaintiff to place them on the market before the following Monday, and that on that date, owing to their run-down and weakened condition, he was unable to get any bids or to make any sale. There is also substantial testimony to the effect that the mides when shipped from Webb City were good, fat animals, in good, saleable condition, and plaintiff testified that if they had been carried to East St. Louis in the usual time, there was a good market for this class of mules and that the market price on such mules was from one hundred seventy-five to one hundred eighty dollars per head—that this was their market value in East St. Louis, 111., on Friday morning, November the eighteenth. Plaintiff kept the mules in East St. Louis for ten days and fed them at an expense of eighty-six dollars, and during this time sold fourteen of them for about one hundred fifty-five dollars per head. The remaining nine were in such condition after having been kept there ten days that they had no market value at that place. Plaintiff shipped them back to Webb City where he kept them and fed them and put them in condition for sale and finally sold them for about one hundred sixty-seven dollars per head.

The court, over defendant’s objection, admitted evidence as to the expense of shipping the mules back to Webb City. The admissibility of this evidence becomes apparent in view of the fact that there was testimony to the effect that these nine mules could not be sold in East St. Louis, and by shipping them back to Webb City, and after getting them restored, was possibly the cheapest way out of the loss; and to make the loss as small as possible‘was the duty imposed upon the plaintiff. [13 Cye. 78.—]

[216]*216Testimony as to the condition the mules were in after they were returned to Webb City was also objected to by the defendant, and likewise as to evidence concerning the amount expended on them after they reached Webb City. While it is true that the measure of damages was the difference between the value of the mules on their arrival in East St. Louis in their weakened condition, and the value of the mules had they reached East St. Louis in the usual time, still such testimony as was admitted, while it would not fix the measure of damages, was certainly an element from which the jury could reasonably infer what the value of the mules was when they reached East St. Louis, and was as admissible for that purpose as was the testimony of witnesses to show the condition of the mules before they were shipped from Webb City as tending to show the condition they would have been in had they reached their destination in the usual time.

Appellant contends that in a suit charging negligence-on the part of the defendant, mere proof of delay is no evidence of negligence, and cases cited in appellant’s brief uphold this theory. However, in this case, where no one accompanied the mules, and because of the delay being wholly within the knowledge of the railroad company, coupled with evidence of the unusual delay of fifty-four hours—with evidence to the effect that other trains were running over the track— that no wrecks or obstructions were visible—with slight evidence of the mules having been sidetracked at Tip-ton—that the agents of the company who were applied to at both ends of the line did not know where the mules were—certainly brings this case within the rule laid down in other cases in this State that in such a shipment and with such an unusual delay, only slight evidence of negligence is sufficient to support a finding that the delay in transportation was unreasonable. Such facts as detailed are sufficient to raise a fair inference of negligence—which is enough. See, Lay v. [217]*217Railroad, 157 Mo. App. 467, 138 S. W. 884; Witting v. Railroad, 101 Mo. 631, 14 S. W. 743; The Otis Co. v. Railway Co., 112 Mo. 622, 20 S. W. 676; Fulbright v. Railroad, 118 Mo. App. l. c. 486, 94 S. W. 992; Wright v. Railroad, 118 Mo. App. 392, 94 S. W. 555; and the recent case of Muir v. Railway Co., 154 S. W. 877, where the Kansas City Court of Appeals, speaking through Trimble, J., used this language: “In this ease no specific acts of negligence are alleged or shown. But the question is: Has the delay been shown, with such circumstances and under such surroundings as to raise the inference that the delay had its origin in negligence? From the very nature of the relation of carrier and shipper, circumstances that even slightly tend to show this are sufficient, especially where the knowledge of what caused the delay is with the carrier and not the shipper. ” In that case the defendant stood on a demurrer to the evidence and offered no explanation for the unreasonable delay. So, in this ease, while the defendant did offer some testimony, it made no attempt to explain the delay of fifty-four hours. We therefore hold that sufficient facts and circumstances are. shown from which the jury could reasonably infer negligence.

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Bluebook (online)
158 S.W. 720, 173 Mo. App. 210, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wyatt-v-missouri-pacific-railway-co-moctapp-1913.