Glasscock v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.

GILL, J.

This action was begun before a justice of the peace, and is for the recovery of damages for defendant’s failure to carry and deliver on time three carloads of cattle shipped from Gallatin, Missouri, to Chicago, Illinois. It seems that the cattle were loaded at Gallatin on the evening of Tuesday, Novembér 23, 1897, and in the regular and usual course of business ought to have been delivered at the Chicago stock yards on Thursday morning, November 25 at 5 to *1177 o’clock, but that because of a delay of several hours the cattle did not arrive at Chicago until about eleven o’clock a. m., and too late for the market of that day, thereby causing them to be carried over to the morning of November 26, when, because of a lower market and shrinkage, plaintiff was damaged.

At a trial in the circuit court plaintiff had a verdict and judgment for $156.95 and defendant appealed.

I. The main objections.relate to the sufficiency of the statement filed with the justice and the court’s instructions to the jury.

We fail to see any substantial objection to plaintiff’s statement. After the formal allegations that defendant is a corporation and a common carrier, it is in effect alleged that defendant received plaintiff’s cattle at Gallatin, and for certain freight charges undertook to carry and deliver the same at Chicago “without delay and in good condition. That defendant, disregarding its duties as such carrier, negligently and carelessly failed to ship said cattle to Chicago without delay, but negligently and carelessly allowed said cattle to be laid out on the road and detained a long time, and by reason thereof said cattle did not reach Chicago until 11 o’clock a. m. on the twenty-fifth day of November, 1897, when they should have reached there at 6 o’clock a. m. of that day, and plaintiff was unable to get them on that day’s market, and was compelled to put them on a bad market the next day at a loss of $91.75, and causing a loss by the shrinkage of said cattle in the sum of $55.20; that plaintiff was compelled to feed said cattle at a cost of $10, all to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $156.95; that said damage was caused by the negligence of defendant in failing to deliver said cattle without delay, wherefore plaintiff asks judgment for $156.95, and costs.”

*118This was sufficient to apprise the defendant of the nature of plaintiff’s complaint and to bar another action, which' is all that is required of the informal pleadings before a justice of the peace. While as a petition in a court of record, the complaint was perhaps subject to some verbal criticism in not expressly alleging that the delay was for an unreasonable time, as suggested by defendant’s counsel, we yet think the complaint ample when measured by the requirements in suits before justices of the peace.

II. As to the instructions complained of, defendant’s counsel, we think, are hardly fair in some of their criticisms. Plaintiff’s number one does not declare that the defendant was legally and absolutely obliged to deliver the cattle at Chicago “without delay,” but only imposes the duty on defendant “to so transport said cattle with diligence and within a reasonable time without delay, and if the jury further believe from the evidence that defendant negligently and carelessly failed to ship said cattle without delay, and negligently and carelessly permitted said cattle to be laid out and detained on the road an unreasonable length of time, and that by reason thereof plaintiff was unable to get them on the market on the twenty-fifth day of November, 1897, in proper time and was thereby compelled to hold them over until next day the jury must find for the plaintiff,” etc.

III. Plaintiff’s third instruction — wherein it is declared “that when a common carrier undertakes to transport live stock it is held under the law to have undertaken a business Which calls for diligence and dispatch commensurate with the trust,” etc. — is a mere abstraction and should not have been given. But we think that it could have done no harm to the defendant. The other instructions fully and fairly covered the issues and the jury could not, we think, have been misled as to the law governing the case. Espe*119cially is this so since said third instruction was correct as an abstract proposition.

IY. It is further objected that the court erroneously instructed the jury as to the measure of damages. Said instruction reads:

“If the jury find for plaintiff, in estimating his damages they may take into consideration the difference in the reasonable market price of said cattle on said market on the said twenty-fifth day of November, 1897, and the reasonable market value of said cattle on said market on the next day (provided they find that said cattle did not arrive in time for the market of the twenty-fifth of November), on the day on which plaintiff was compelled to sell them, together with the shrinkage and extra cost of feeding the same, if any, caused by having to hold said cattle over.”

Defendant’s counsel is right in the contention that in this character of cases it is generally correct to say that plaintiff, if he recover at all, is entitled to the “difference in the market value at the time the cattle should have arrived and the time they did 'arrive.” In view, however, of the facts of this particular case, the above instruction was just and right. It is predicated on evidence which showed that November 25 was Thanksgiving day, that the cattle market at the Chicago stock yards uniformly closed at noon on said holiday, and did so on the day when plaintiff’s cattle arrived. But plaintiff’s cattle were not in time for the market of that day, and he was compelled to hold them over for the market of the following day. If the plaintiff was, by the fault of the defendant, deprived of the market of November 25 by reason of an unreasonable delay in delivering the cattle, he ought then to be allowed to dispose of them the first market day thereafter and hold defendant for any loss he may have reasonably suffered. So in a similar case the measure of *120damages was defined by us to be “such as would coyer tbe shrinkage in tbe cattle, if any, occasioned by tbe delay, and tbe difference, if any, between tbe price at wbicb tbe cattle were sold by reason of tbe unreasonable delay, and tbe price at wbicb tbey could liave - been sold bad there been no such delay.” Douglass v. Railway Co., 53 Mo. App. loc. cit., 476.

We conclude then that tbe court properly gave plaintiff’s second instruction and correctly modified defendant’s third instruction so as to harmonize it with that of tbe plaintiff.

This disposes of every substantial objection contained in tbe record, and since we discover no reason for disturbing the judgment it will be affirmed.

All concur.